Corn Exchange National Bank & Trust Co. v. Burkhart

165 A.2d 612, 401 Pa. 535, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 558
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 1, 1960
DocketAppeal, No. 38
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 165 A.2d 612 (Corn Exchange National Bank & Trust Co. v. Burkhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corn Exchange National Bank & Trust Co. v. Burkhart, 165 A.2d 612, 401 Pa. 535, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 558 (Pa. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Jones,

The defendant appeals from a judgment for the plaintiff bank in the sum of $112,198.10 entered by the court below following a trial without a jury. The action was in assumpsit for the recovery of damages for the defendant’s alleged breach of warranty of title as the lessor in two certain bailment leases which, simultaneously with their execution, were assigned by the defendant to the plaintiff bank.

The appellant’s principal assignment of error is the trial court’s rejection of the defendant’s offer to prove that the bank knew at the time it took the lease assignments that the defendant was not the real owner of the machinery covered thereby, but that the lessee was, and that the fictional lessor-lessee relationship adopted for the transaction was at the instance of the bank in [538]*538order that it could discount the leases and thus receive a return on loans, which the bank was to make for the benefit of the actual owner (viz., the putative lessee of the machinery), which would be twice the legal interest rate that could be charged if the loans were made direct to the actual owner and secured directly by his chattel mortgage.

The complaint, which was filed in the court below on August 11, 1954, alleges that on May 11, 1948, the defendant Burkhart executed a bailment lease agreement with one Jesse M. Lingenfelter under which Burk-hart leased to Lingenfelter four heavy mining shovels for a down payment of $24,600 and payment, thereafter, of monthly instalments of $6,866.67 each until the full purchase price of $65,800 was paid; that the $24,600 down payment stipulated by the lease was never paid to Burkhart by Lingenfelter; that by a writing of the same date Burkhart assigned the bailment lease to the bank for a consideration of $40,000; that the assignment contained an express warranty of title to the shovels in Burkhart; that Burkhart did not, in fact, have title to the shovels; that the bank purchased the bailment lease from Burkhart in good faith and without knowledge of any defect in Burk-hart’s title; that Lingenfelter, after making four monthly instalment payments, defaulted leaving a balance due of $13,733.32; that the bank repossessed two of the shovels from Lingenfelter and sold them for $4,000, crediting that amount to the balance owed by Lingenfelter under the lease; that the two remaining shovels were worth more than the balance owing on the lease but that the bank had been unable to obtain possession of them; and that the bank was therefore damaged in the amount of $9,733.32, owing by Lingenfelter under the lease, for which sum with interest the bank claimed of the defendant Burkhart.

[539]*539The complaint further alleges that on August 17, 1918, the defendant Burkhart executed a second bailment lease agreement with Lingenfelter under which Burkhart leased to Lingenfelter three heavy mining shovels for a down payment of $9,500 and payment thereafter of monthly instalments of $10,300 each until the full purchase price of $71,300 was paid; that the $9,500 down payment stipulated by the lease was never paid to Burkhart by Lingenfelter; that by a writing of the same date Burkhart assigned the bailment lease to the bank for a consideration of $60,000; that the assignment contained an express warranty of title to the shovels in Burkhart; that Burkhart did not, in fact, have title to the shovels; that the bank purchased the bailment lease from Burkhart in good faith and without knowledge of any defect in Burk-hart’s title; that Lingenfelter defaulted and made no payments to the bank under the lease; that the shovels were worth more than $60,000 but that the bank had been unable to obtain possession of them; and that the bank had been damaged in the sum of $60,000, being the amount which it had paid for the bailment lease, for which sum, with interest, the bank claimed of the defendant Burkhart.

The defendant’s answer admitted his execution of the bailment agreement with Lingenfelter on May 11, 1918, and his assignment of it on the same date to the plaintiff bank. The answer also admitted that Burk-hart did not own the shovels described in the bailment lease and alleged that the lease was a fictitious arrangement in that Lingenfelter, the putative lessee, was and had been the actual owner of the shovels and that the plaintiff bank knew this all along. Burkhart further alleged that Lingenfelter had applied to the bank for a loan with the shovels as security; that Vincent E. Furey, a vice president of the bank, who acted [540]*540in tlie matter for and on behalf of the bank, had explained to Lingenfelter that the bank could not charge a high enough rate of interest if it made a loan directly to him secured by a chattel mortgage of the shovels; that'Eurey advised Lingenfelter to procure the signature of some dealer as the lessor in a bailment lease of the shovels so that the bank might thereby discount the leases and thus obtain a higher rate of interest on the money loaned; and that he (Burkhart) had executed the bailment lease as an accommodation for the bank and Lingenfelter without receiving any consideration therefor.

The answer likewise admitted that Burkhart did not own the shovels described in the bailment lease of August 17, 1948, and alleged that his signatures on the lease and the assignment were forgeries. At trial the defendant called the president of the local Cambria Finance Company, who testified that he had known Burkhart for 25 years and that, in his opinion, the questioned signatures were not Burkhart’s, and also the cashier of the First National Bank of Ebensburg, who had 35 years of experience in the banking business and who testified that, in his opinion, the signatures were not Burkhart’s. In refutation, the bank called a handwriting expert who testified that the signatures were Burkhart’s. On this conflicting testimony, the trial judge, sitting as a jury, found that the signatures were genuine — a fact which is necessarily to be accepted on this appeal.

The vice president of the bank testified at trial that it was he who represented the bank in the transactions involved in this case. He also testified to a series of negotiations with Lingenfelter in respect of the bailment leases and the monies advanced by the bank on account of them and stated that he had never contacted nor met the defendant Burkhart.

[541]*541The plaintiff introduced in evidence a promissory note dated May 11, 194S, signed by Lingenfelter and made payable to the order of Burkhart in the amount of $41,200 (being the amount of the purchase price of the first bailment lease less the specified down payment) to be paid in monthly instalments of $6,866.67. This note was attached to the May 11, 1948, bailment lease. The note contained an endorsement by Burk-hart to the order of the plaintiff bank toithout recourse.

The plaintiff also introduced in evidence another promissory note dated August 17, 1948, signed by Lingenfelter and payable to the order of Burkhart in the amount of $61,800 (being the amount of the purchase price in the second bailment lease less the specified down payment) to be paid in monthly instalments of $10,300. This note was attached to the August 17, 1948, bailment lease and, likewise, contained an endorsement by Burkhart to the order of the plaintiff bank without recourse.

The plaintiff offered in evidence two cashier’s checks payable by the plaintiff bank and drawn to the order of Burkhart, one in the sum of $40,000 and the other in the sum of $60,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 A.2d 612, 401 Pa. 535, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corn-exchange-national-bank-trust-co-v-burkhart-pa-1960.