Ellsworth Et Ux. v. Husband

181 A. 90, 119 Pa. Super. 245, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 189
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 7, 1935
DocketAppeal, 58
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 181 A. 90 (Ellsworth Et Ux. v. Husband) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellsworth Et Ux. v. Husband, 181 A. 90, 119 Pa. Super. 245, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 189 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

This is an action brought by the plaintiffs, grantors in a deed, to recover from defendant, the grantee, a sum which plaintiffs allege they were compelled to pay in settlement of a mortgage subject to which the conveyance was made. The issue raised was submitted to a *247 jury which found for the defendant and the court subsequently entered judgment n. o. v. for plaintiffs. Questions of substantive law and practice are raised on this appeal and it will be necessary to refer to the pleadings and proofs in some detail to show the precise questions raised.

Elijah M. Ellsworth and wife conveyed to Thomas Husband a parcel of land and, as a part of the consideration moving from purchaser to seller, made the conveyance “subject to the payment” of a mortgage of six thousand dollars given to Ralph Major and wife, for the payment of which mortgage the plaintiffs were personally liable. Defendant failed to pay the mortgage as he had agreed to do and the mortgagees, by a proceeding begun by a writ of scire facias, foreclosed the mortgage with the result that the premises were conveyed by the sheriff to the mortgagees for a consideration of $109.90, a sum sufficient to pay the costs of the sale but leaving nothing to apply on the mortgage indebtedness. The mortgagees then entered the judgment bond which the mortgage was given to secure and caused an execution to be issued against plaintiffs for a balance then due amounting to $6,585. The facts so far stated were proven by documentary evidence, deeds, mortgages, and court proceedings and are not in dispute. Plaintiffs thereupon settled with the mortgagees for the sum of $2,300, paying $1,500 in cash and giving a judgment note for the balance of $800. To establish such payment the plaintiffs produced a cancelled check for $1,500, a receipt from the mortgagees for $2,300 in full satisfaction of the mortgage, and Dr. Ellsworth testified that the note for the balance of $800 was delivered to the mortgagees but had not been paid at the time of the trial. We understand from the argument on behalf of defendant that these additional facts are not disputed. The plaintiffs made claim for the amount so paid with interest.

The defendant in his affidavit of defense alleged a *248 number of matters which he made no effort to sustain by proofs, but relied at trial upon evidence intended to show that plaintiffs did not in good faith make the alleged settlement with the mortgagees for $2,300. To establish this defense the defendant, over the objection of plaintiffs, offered the evidence of two real estate experts to the effect that the land, at the time of the sheriff’s sale, was worth more than $8,000 and consequently more than the amount of the deficiency judgment and, by cross-examination of one of the plaintiffs, showed that defendant had paid for the property originally a sum likewise more than the amount of the deficiency judgment and that considerable improvements had been made on the buildings located on the land after such purchase; and also evidence that counsel for the plaintiffs, by .their direction, prior to the sale by the sheriff wrote to the defendant advising him of his default and of the claim by the mortgagees, stating in such letter: “The Majors intend to look to Ells-worth and wife for the payment of this mortgage, or such part of the above amount as is left after crediting thereon the fair market value of the property which they purchased at the sheriff’s sale. I have an impression that the whole matter may be settled with the Majors upon the payment to them of approximately $2,500 in cash, and they retain title to the property.” It also appeared from the proofs that neither plaintiffs nor defendant bid at the sheriff’s sale or made any other effort to secure a greater price for the land than was bid and thus decrease the amount of the deficiency judgment. The trial judge, in his charge presenting the issue to a jury, said, inter alia: “If, from the evidence, you find that Ellsworth in good faith made this settlement with Major in satisfaction of the claim of Major against him, then this plaintiff, Ellsworth, is entitled to recover that sum, $2,300, with interest from March 4, 1931, from this defendant.” The jury found *249 for the defendant and the court subsequently entered judgment for plaintiffs n. o. v.

The liability of the plaintiffs to the mortgagees on their judgment bond, under the circumstances, was measured by the difference between the balance due on the bond and the sum realized on the sale of the land under the sheriff’s sale in the foreclosure proceedings, and as nothing was realized the plaintiffs were liable for the balance due, to wit, $6,585. This principle is well settled in this and other states: Lomison v. Faust, 145 Pa. 8, 23 A. 377; Mollenauer v. Smith, 51 Pa. Superior Ct. 517; Bohde v. Lawless, 33 N. J. Eq. 412. This is true though the land has been improved since the mortgage was given and the land was sold to the mortgagees for a trifle: Lomison v. Faust, supra; and even though the plaintiffs failed to defend the foreclosure proceedings and neglected to bid upon the property at the sheriff’s sale: Greenspan v. Margolis, 70 Pa. Superior Ct. 373. The plaintiffs having conveyed the land to the defendant subject to the payment of the $6,000 mortgage, which represented a part of the consideration to be paid by defendant to plaintiffs, and defendant having defaulted in the payments he agreed to make, the defendant became liable to the plaintiffs when they were called upon to pay the sum for which they were liable to the mortgagees and in good faith paid such sum: Greenspan v. Margolis, supra; Britton v. Roth, 313 Pa. 352, 356, 169 A. 146; Lowry v. Hensal, 281 Pa. 572, 127 A. 219. The Act of June 12, 1878, P. L. 205 (21 PS 655), is not applicable, as that act applies “to relations between the grantee and the holder of the incumbrance”: May’s Estate, 218 Pa. 64, 70, 67 A. 120. It follows, as the court below held in its opinion entering judgment for the plaintiffs, that the evidence received as to the market value of the land at the time the sheriff’s sale took place was irrelevant.

Where a grantee takes land subject to an encumbrance, the amount of which has been deducted from *250 an agreed price, “the covenant to be inferred from it is that of indemnity for the protection of the grantor,” but he cannot recover until it appears that he has suffered an actual loss: Faulkner v. McHenry, 235 Pa. 298, 301, 83 A. 827; for the indemnity is against loss by reason of liability and not by reason of mere liability. “In order to entitle an indemnitee to recover upon a contract of indemnity against a loss or damage involving payment, it is sufficient that he has given Ms own note in settlement of his liability, where such note is accepted as a payment, although the note so given has not yet been paid”: 31 G. J. 440. “That an obligation such as a note or a mortgage may operate as payment when so intended by the parties has been recognized by us in Kemmerer’s App., 102 Pa. 588, and Phila. v. Stewart, 195 Pa. 309, and by the Superior Court in Hummelstown Brownstone Co. v. Knerr, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 465”: Borowsky v. Margulis, 310 Pa. 420, 424, 165 A. 491. The payment and the amount were shown primarily by the production of a receipt from the mortgagees to the plaintiffs in the following form: “4th March, 1931.

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Bluebook (online)
181 A. 90, 119 Pa. Super. 245, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellsworth-et-ux-v-husband-pasuperct-1935.