Courtney v. Ryan Homes, Inc.

497 A.2d 938, 345 Pa. Super. 109, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8327
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 16, 1985
Docket705
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 497 A.2d 938 (Courtney v. Ryan Homes, Inc.) 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
Courtney v. Ryan Homes, Inc., 497 A.2d 938, 345 Pa. Super. 109, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8327 (Pa. 1985).

Opinion

WIEAND, Judge:

This is an appeal from an order denying a petition to strike and/or open a judgment entered by confession pursuant to a warrant of attorney contained in a mortgage note on which the petitioner was admittedly in default. Because *112 the judgment is not defective and because the petitioner failed to show facts constituting a meritorious defense to the indebtedness, we affirm. However, we agree with the appellant that the court erred when it rendered an advisory opinion regarding the amount of land subject to the lien of the judgment.

On November 3, 1977, Ryan Homes, Inc. (Ryan) paid $10,000.00 for an option to buy two tracts of land in the Borough of Economy, Beaver County, from Paul E. Courtney, Esquire, Lewis J. Mercandante, Jr. and Ben J. Mauro, trading as Northview Estates Development Company (Northview Estates). The option agreement provided that if Ryan exercised its option, it would purchase the entire tract consisting of 123.44 acres for a consideration of $2,700.00 per acre. Ryan exercised the option, and closing was held on June 13, 1979. Ryan paid to Northview Estates the sum of $86,656.96 on account of a total purchase price of $333,299.87 and received a credit for the prior payment of $10,000.00 made as consideration for the option. A purchase money mortgage and accompanying note were executed by Ryan in favor of Northview Estates for the unpaid balance of $236,642.91. The note contained a schedule of payments requiring Ryan to pay three annual installments of $78,880.97 each on the first, second and third anniversary dates of the closing, with interest payable quarterly at a rate of seven percent per annum. The note contained a confession of judgment clause as follows:

In case default be made in the payment of the within obligation or any other sum due hereunder or under the aforesaid mortgage and maker fails to cure such default after receiving thirty (30) days’ written notice thereof, maker hereby empowers any attorney of any court of record within the United States of America to appear for maker and, with or without declaration filed, confess judgment against the Undersigned in favor of any holder hereof, for the unpaid balance of the principal debt together with all other sums due hereunder, costs of suit and an attorney’s commission of Five Hundred Dollars *113 ($500.00) or five percent (5%) of the total indebtedness, whichever is smaller, on which judgment or judgments one or more executions may issue forthwith upon failure to comply with all of the terms and conditions of this note and the aforesaid mortgage. Maker hereby forever waives and releases all errors in said proceedings, waives stay of execution, the right of inquisition, and extension of time of payment, agrees to condemnation of the mortgaged premises levied upon by virtue of such execution, and waives all exemptions from levy and sale of the mortgaged premises that now is or hereafter may be enacted into law.

Clauses in both the mortgage and note provided that Ryan’s liability was limited to the amount which could be recovered from the real estate securing the mortgage obligation and that Ryan should not be liable for any deficiency therein. The mortgage also provided for releases of real estate from the lien of the mortgage at the rate of one acre for each $2,700.00 paid. Specifically, the mortgage recited:

It is the understanding and agreement between the parties that the mortgagor shall be entitled from time to time during the term of this Mortgage, to have portions of the mortgaged premises released from the lien of this Mortgage as hereafter provided. The Mortgagor, having paid unto the Mortgagee a sum equal to twenty-nine percent (29%) of the total price of the mortgaged premises upon the delivery hereof, the Mortgagee shall at the request of the Mortgagor at any time following the recording of this Mortgage, in consideration of said prior payment and without further consideration release that part of the mortgaged premises selected by the Mortgagor (hereinafter called the “initially released parcel”), provided that said part of the mortgaged premises so selected shall consist of one (1) parcel containing twenty-nine percent (29%) of the total acreage of the mortgaged premises.
The Mortgagee shall, from time to time during the term of this Mortgage, at the request of the Mortgagor and *114 upon the payment by the Mortgagor of a release price per acre of an amount determined by dividing the total number of acres of the mortgaged premises into the total consideration paid therefor released from the lien of this Mortgage additional portions of the mortgaged premises selected by the mortgagor.
The Mortgagor may, in making principal payments due under this Mortgage, defer the selection of that part of the mortgaged premises which the Mortgagor would be entitled to have released.

On the first anniversary, Ryan paid $78,880.97, the full installment then due. When this was added to the amount paid at closing, the total amount paid on account of principal as of June 13, 1980 was $175,537.93. The unpaid balance, therefore, was $157,761.94. On January 26, 1981, Ryan requested and received from Northview Estates a release of 21.2066 acres. This was almost forty-four acres less than the 65 acres Ryan was entitled to have released pursuant to the mortgage provision requiring releases of one acre for each $2,700.00 paid on account of the total purchase price. Release of the remaining acreage was deferred. On June 12, 1981, one day before the second anniversary of the mortgage, Ryan requested the release of an additional 43.798 acres from the lien of the mortgage. The second annual installment of $78,880.97 due on June 13, 1981, however, was not paid when due. Therefore, North-view Estates refused to sign the release which it received from Ryan. 1 Ryan has not made any further payments, and Northview Estates has refused to release any land in addition to the 21.2066 acres released on January 26, 1981. 2

On January 13, 1983, Northview Estates filed a complaint in equity in the Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County, at No. 53 of 1983 D.S.B., to recover damages from Ryan for *115 breach of contract, unjust enrichment and waste. Ryan filed a counterclaim requesting an order directing performance of the release provisions of the mortgage. Both the complaint and counterclaim are undecided and still pending in the Court of Common Pleas of Beaver County.

On January 25, 1983, Northview Estates gave Ryan written notice that Ryan was in default of payments required by the note and stated that if default were not cured within thirty days, judgment would be confessed for the unpaid balance. When payment was not made, Northview Estates filed a complaint in confession of judgment for $172,066.09, 3 and judgment was confessed pursuant to the warrant of attorney contained in the note. The complaint averred that Ryan had defaulted in payment according to the terms of the note and had failed to cure the default within thirty days after receipt of written notice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
497 A.2d 938, 345 Pa. Super. 109, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtney-v-ryan-homes-inc-pa-1985.