Fishel Et Ux. v. McDonald Et Ux.

60 A.2d 820, 163 Pa. Super. 251, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 352
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1948
DocketAppeal, 1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 A.2d 820 (Fishel Et Ux. v. McDonald Et Ux.) 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
Fishel Et Ux. v. McDonald Et Ux., 60 A.2d 820, 163 Pa. Super. 251, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 352 (Pa. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Reno, J.,

Plaintiffs appealed from a decree sustaining preliminary objections to their bill in equity, upon which the court below ruled that “a court of equity has no jurisdiction and that the plaintiffs have a full, adequate and complete remedy at law.”

Succinctly stated, the bill averred these facts: In 1928 David A. Hammond conveyed property to plaintiffs, husband and wife, subject to a mortgage given by *253 Hammond to the Keystone-Westmoreland Building and Loan Association, and plaintiffs gave their mortgage to Hammond for part of the purchase price. Later in 1928 plaintiffs conveyed to defendants, husband and wife, subject to the two mortgages which the grantees assumed and agreed to pay. In 1932 an execution was issued by the building association (whether upon a judgment on the bond or the mortgage does not appear), and at the sheriff’s sale the property was purchased by, and conveyed to, the execution-plaintiff. The sale divested the lien of the second, the Hammond, mortgage. In 1933 the building association conveyed the property to one of the defendants, C. Edgar McDonald. Meanwhile the Hammond mortgage had been acquired by the Secretary of Banking, as receiver of the Bloomfield Trust Company of Pittsburgh, who in 1944 entered judgment against plaintiffs upon the accompanying bond.

The averment around which most of our discussion will revolve is: “The plaintiffs aver that the defendants, . . . defaulted in the payments due under said mortgage and acquiesced in said sheriff’s sale fraudulently for the purpose of divesting said property of the lien of said second mortgage, and reacquiring title to the same free of said second mortgage, and for the purpose of avoiding liability which they had assumed by said deed. . . . Plaintiffs further aver that they were without knowledge either of said sheriff’s sale or of the reconveyance of said property to the said C. Edgar McDonald until about two weeks prior to the filing of this bill. [January 6, 1946]”

Plaintiffs sought, and secured, a preliminary injunction restraining defendants from selling or encumbering the property, and seek a final decree subjecting it to the liens of the Hammond mortgage and the judgment of the Secretary of Banking.

Where a grantee accepts a deed containing an assumption of existing mortgages and agrees to pay them *254 he becomes personally liable for them, and his liability may be enforced in an action of assumpsit. Mercer’s Est., 330 Pa. 475, 199 A. 481; Blood v. Crew Levick Co., 177 Pa. 606, 35 A. 871; Britton v. Roth, 313 Pa. 352, 169 A. 146. The agreement to assume and pay imposes upon the grantee the obligation to protect the grantor not only from loss but also from liability, and the grantor may recover as soon as his liability has become fixed and established, even though he has sustained no actual loss or damage at the time he seeks to recover. Ruzyc v. Brown, 320 Pa. 213, 181 A. 783. The liability -of plaintiffs Avas fixed by the judgment of the Secretary of Banking, and their right to recover from defendants accrued before they filed their bill. 1 The obligation assumed by the grantee is for the benefit of the mortgagee, and he, or his assignee, may maintain an action thereon upon proof of maturity or default. Fair Oaks B. & L. Assn. v. Kahler, 320 Pa. 245, 181 A. 779.

Where, hOAvever, the grantor does not seek money damages, but presses for reinstatement of the lien of the mortgage' Avhich has been divested through the fraud or collusion of the grantee, he may sue in equity. Kennedy v. Borie, 166 Pa. 360, 31 A. 98; Bowen v. A. R. Boyd Enterprises, Inc., 326 Pa. 385, 191 A. 137. This is so, because fraud vitiates everything that it touches, and an allegation of fraud coupled Avith a prayer for an. appropriate and’ characteristic equitable remedy always calls forth the poAvers of the chancery court. *255 Act of June 13, 1840, P. L. 666, §39, extended by the Act of February 14, 1857, P. L. 39, §1, 17 PS §§286, 283. “In this Commonwealth chancery, always assumes jurisdiction in relief of fraud and this is so whether or not the remedy in equity is more 'efficacious or adequate than an action at law”: Zoni v. Importers and Exporters Ins. Co. of N. Y., 338 Pa. 165, 167, 12 A. 2d 575. See also Custis v. Serrill, 303 Pa. 267, 154 A. 487, and N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Brandwene, 316 Pa. 218, 172 A. 669. “As a general rule' courts of equity have jurisdiction to relieve against every species of fraud. . . . Its process is plastic and may be readily modeled to suit the exigencies of the particular case. A court of equity proceeds, with but little regard to mere form. It moves with celerity and seizes the fruits of. a'fraud in the hands of the wrongdoer . . Clauer v. Clauer, 22 Pa. Superior Ct. 395, 399.

The principles which rule the instant casé are illustrated by two .authorities wé have cited.- In the Kennedy case, supra, upon a demurréf to a bill,- the Supreme Court ruled, in effect,. that where one takes title to land subject to two mortgages, he cannot; at a subsequent sale under the first mortgage, buy in. the property and hold it divested of thé lien of the second mortgage. In that case the defendants bought at the sheriff’s sale while here the building ■ association bought. The difference, however, will not defeat plaintiffs’ claim if the building association, -éven though it did not commit fraud, or join in it, nevertheless, pursuant to an arrangement with defendants, bought the property for them and subsequently conveyed it to one of them in furtherance of the agreement. Equity will not be thwarted by a wash sale. ■ -a. ■

In the Bowen case, supra, the holder of a third mortgage alleged that the foreclosure sale by which her mortgage was divested was a fraudulent and collusive arrangement between the holder of a prior encumbrance and the owner of the property having as its *256 objective the discharge of her mortgage. There, too, the owner, or its nominee representing the same financial interests, subsequently acquired title to property from the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale. The chancellor “found that the foreclosure . . . and the conveyance . . . were made in good faith' and were without fraud or collusion.” The Supreme Court held that the evidence sustained the chancellor’s conclusions, and affirmed the dismissal of the bill. But it cannot be doubted that had there been “positive proof of a combination to destroy the second lien” (p. 390), the plaintiff would have secured relief by having the lien of her mortgage reinstated. Mr. Justice Barnes stated the basis for relief at p. 389: “Here . . . the crucial question is . . . whether the Fuller executors [holders of the mortgage upon which the execution was issued] and the Boyd interests were in collusion to divest the liens of junior encumbrances.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The case is not ruled by Rauch v. Dech, 116 Pa. 157, 9 A. 180, and Rushton v. Lippincott, 119 Pa. 12, 12 A. 761, relied upon by appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
60 A.2d 820, 163 Pa. Super. 251, 1948 Pa. Super. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fishel-et-ux-v-mcdonald-et-ux-pasuperct-1948.