Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Gizynski

93 Pa. Super. 152, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 27, 1927
DocketAppeal 294
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 93 Pa. Super. 152 (Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Gizynski) 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
Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Gizynski, 93 Pa. Super. 152, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294 (Pa. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Gawthrop, J.,

This is an appeal from an order discharging plaintiff’s rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. The action is in assumpsit against an accommodation endorser of certain negotiable promissory notes. The averments in the statement of claim material for our consideration are as follows: On or about July 10, 1925, Ranier Trucks Inc., leased an automobile truck to one Kosior for a term ending June 10, 1926, and as part of the transaction and for the securing of the payment of the rent reserved by the lease, Kosior executed and delivered to Ranier Trucks, Inc., nine promissory notes, each of which represented an installment due pursuant to the terms of said lease. On or about said date defendant endorsed *154 said notes and waived demand, presentment, protest and notice. On or about July 28, 1925, and before any of said notes fell due, Ranier Trucks, Inc., assigned the lease for a valuable consideration to Farmer & Ochs Company, a joint stock association of the State of New York, duly authorized to do a banking and financing business, and endorsed and delivered each of said notes for value to Farmer & Ochs Company, which took the same without notice of any defect therein and became a bona fide holder thereof. On or about July 31,1925, Farmer & Ochs Company assigned said lease to plaintiff. Each of said notes was duly presented for payment at maturity at the place where the same was made payable, and payment was duly demanded and then and there refused. Thereafter, on or about December 3, 1926, said notes were assigned in writing and transferred to plaintiff by Farmer & Ochs Company for a valuable consideration, and plaintiff has continued to hold and own the same. The defenses set up in the affidavit of defense were, first, that before and at the time of the execution of said lease Ranier Trucks, Inc., by its representative and agent, in order to induce Kosior to enter into said lease, orally agreed to make certain alterations in the truck without charge to Kosior, but had failed and refused to do so; second, that defendant’s endorsement of the notes was for the accommodation of the maker and that Ranier Trucks, Inc., had knowledge thereof; that in order to induce defendant to endorse said notes Ranier Trucks, Inc., agreed with defendant in a writing (duly pleaded) that in the event Kosior failed to meet the notes at maturity, Ranier Trucks, Inc., would repossess the truck' and deliver it to defendant “to work out same as per agreement of endorser”; that defendant’s agreement was to continue payments according to the terms of said lease, upon completion of which payments the truck was to become the property *155 of defendant; that there had been a default by Kosior in the payment of the notes and defendant notified Kosior and Farmer & Ochs Company, the holder , of the notes, and Kanier Trucks, Inc., but that the latter had failed and refused to turn the truck over to defendant. The answer to the averment of paragraph eight in the statement of claim that on July 28, 1925, Banier Trucks, Inc., endorsed and delivered the notes for value to Farmer & Ochs Company, which took the same without notice of any defect therein, is: “8. Denied. Farmer & Ochs Company took the notes referred to with notice of the matters set forth in paragraph five and six thereof.” The other defense set up was that the truck “has been sold for a much larger sum than the amount claimed as due,to wit: for not less than $3,200. On June 2, 1927, plaintiff filed a reply to the new matter set up in the affidavit of defense. On June 21,1927, it filed a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense on the ground that none of the defenses averred were good against a holder of the notes in due course; that Farmer & Ochs Company was a holder in due course; that plaintiff as assignee took the rights of its assignor therein; and that the averment in the affidavit of defense as to notice to Farmer & Ochs Company was' insufficient.

The court below discharged the rule upon the ground that plaintiff had waived its right to move for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense by' voluntarily putting the case at issue by filing a reply, holding that plaintiff was not required to reply in view of the fact that defendant did not set up a counter-claim or. set-off. In our view this was error. While it is true that no set-off or counter-claim was pleaded in the affidavit of defense and plaintiff would not have been required to file a reply, as the law stood prior to the approval of the Act of March 30, 1925, P, L. 84, amending sections two and six of the Prae *156 ticé Act, nineteen fifteen, the amending act provides that in cases governed by the Practice Act “the pleadings shall consist of the plaintiff’s statement of claim, the defendant’s affidavit of defense, and, where a set-off or counter-claim, or new matter is pleaded, the plaintiff’s reply thereto. When the affidavit of defense, or, where a set-off or counter-claim, or new matter is pleaded, the plaintiff’s reply thereto-, is filed, the pleadings shall be closed and the case shall be deemed to be at issue, and no replication or formal joinder of issue shall be required. Every allegation of fact in ......the defendant’s set-off or counter-claim, or neiv matter, if not denied specifically or by necessary implication in the affidavit of defense, or plaintiff’s reply, ......shall be taken to be admitted,” except in certain cases of which this is not one. Inspection of the affidavit of defense in the present case discloses that it sets up new matter. We refer to the collateral agreement and the violation thereof set up in the sixth paragraph thereof. Plaintiff treated this as new matter by filing a reply thereto- and, in our view, was justified in doing so. Under the- Act of 1925, this action was compulsory and not voluntary. This brings the case within the familiar rule reiterated in Federal Sales Co. v. Farrell, 264 Pa. 149, 152, that no waiver of the right to judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense will be implied if plaintiff’s action was made compulsory by statute or rule of court. It follows that the court below should have considered the question of the sufficiency of the affidavit of defense.

We are of one mind that it was insufficient to prevent judgment, as will appear by reference to- a few well settled legal principles. ■ Clearly neither the averment, that at the time of the execution of the lease for which the notes were given the lessor made a promise to Kosior to make certain alterations in the truck which ■was not fulfilled, nor the averment that the lessor in *157 duced defendant to endorse the notes by a promise that in the event Kosior failed to meet the notes at maturity the lessor would repossess the truck and deliver it to defendant, Avhich was not kept, constitutes a defense against a holder in due course. The statement of claim sufficiently avers that Farmer & Ochs Company took the notes in good faith for value before they were due without notice of any infirmity therein or defect in the title of the person negotiating them. These averments, if true, constituted it a holder in due course under section 52 of the Negotiable Instruments LaAV of May 16, 1901, P. L. 194, 202.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Pa. Super. 152, 1928 Pa. Super. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-casualty-co-v-gizynski-pasuperct-1927.