Greater Adelphi Building & Loan Ass'n v. Trilling

22 Pa. D. & C. 411, 1935 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 269
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedJanuary 24, 1935
Docketno. 4620
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Pa. D. & C. 411 (Greater Adelphi Building & Loan Ass'n v. Trilling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greater Adelphi Building & Loan Ass'n v. Trilling, 22 Pa. D. & C. 411, 1935 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 269 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1935).

Opinion

MacNeille, J.,

Morris Goldenberg delivered his bond, accompanied by a second mortgage secured on 5415 Berks Street, to the Cooperative Building and .Loan Association, and at the same time (April 11, 1923), subscribed to 15 shares of stock in the thirty-third series, which stock he then assigned to the association as collateral security for the loan. Thereafter he sold and conveyed the property to Mr. and Mrs. Trilling, the defendants herein, under and subject to payment of the mortgage. At the time of this conveyance Goldenberg’s shares of stock were, by consent of the association, transferred on its books to the defendants, subject, of course, to this collateral stock assignment. Whereupon the defendants, on April 7,1926, executed to the association their bond, under seals, in the sum of $2,500. On October 22, 1934, judgment was entered against the defendants, and we are now considering a petition of defendants to open this judgment and let them into a defense.

Defendants’ first contention is that they received no consideration for the execution of the bond. They make no contention that the bond is either void or voidable because of fraud, accident or mistake, or that it was given for an illegal consideration, nor do they show that an actual valuable consideration was intended to pass from the obligee to the obligor that supplied a motive for entering into the contract.

We think sufficient answer to this contention is contained in Yard v. Patton, 13 Pa. 278, where, on page 285, the court said:

“But one answer to this position is, that the seals of the parties in themselves import a consideration, and save their covenants from falling within the class of nude acts at law and in equity . . .; and it is not now to be doubted, that though a parol, unexecuted promise to make a gift inter vivos, without con[412]*412sideration, is void, an agreement under seal to do so, may be enforced as a legal obligation: In re Campbell’s Estate, 7 Barr 100. Nor as argued for the plaintiff, is the presence of a seal only presumptive evidence of consideration in Pennsylvania. It is true, that where an actual valuable consideration is intended to pass, and furnishes the motive for entering into a contract, a party may defeat it, by showing a failure of consideration, at any time before its final execution.”

Yard v. Patton was decided in 1850; has never been departed from, and is cited at least at late as 1932 in Killeen’s Estate, 310 Pa. 182, 187, as authority.

At the argument and in their brief, defendants insist that there never was any consideration for the bond; that nothing of value moved to the obligor from the obligee, and that the obligee suffered no detriment. They even discussed that part of their bond which refers to the fact that the association was willing to transfer the shares if Goldenberg agreed that his bond be not released. Defendants argue, rightly we think, that such a promise on Golden-berg’s part to the building association was merely agreeing to do that which he was already bound to do, and that in any event it was of no benefit to the defendants.

It is also true that the assignment of the shares from Goldenberg to the defendants would not have discharged Goldenberg from the liability to the association on his bond, it being a primary obligation which could only be discharged by payment. It is not reasonable to believe that either the obligor or obligee regarded this recital in the bond as setting forth a consideration. Neither party to the transaction could have thought that the recital was stating a benefit to the obligor or a detriment to the obligee. It is clear to us that the parties meant to execute a pure specialty — an instrument under seal for the purpose of making it valid without any consideration other than as imported by the seal. Rightly or wrongly, the cases refer to this as being a situation where a seal imports' a consideration, and the instrument to be valid needs nothing more than the seal.

Plaintiff, in paragraph 3 of its answer, says that the “association held a second mortgage and had assigned to it shares of stock of the said association as collateral security for the said mortgage and in consideration of the transfer of the said shares of stock to the defendants, David M. Trilling and Shirley S. Trilling, the said David M. Trilling and Shirley S. Trilling executed and delivered the bond which is the subject matter of this suit.”

A stockholder in a building and loan association has a right to sell his shares, and the bona fide purchaser may demand that the corporation shall record the transfer on its books. Although the association may charge a reasonable fee for recording the transfer, it may not refuse. See “Law of Building Associations” by G. A. Endlich (1895 ed.), 448, par. 472 et seq. This rule is recognized in Pennsylvania in Bank of Commerce’s Appeal, 73 Pa. 59. The Act of June 24, 1895, P. L. 258 (no. 172), sets forth the means whereby the transfer is to be effected.

This averment in the answer seems to be entirely gratuitous on the part of the building association, obligee in the bond, and it looks as if the plaintiff mistakenly thinks that it must find somewhere in this transaction a consideration to support the bond. It is noticeable that the defendants do not contend the transfer of stock was within the intent of the parties as consideration at the time the bond was executed. In fact, in their argument and in their brief they vehemently deny this proposition and argue against it. Therefore it could [413]*413not have been the intent of the parties to the bond at the time it was executed, and leaves us where we started as having a specialty under seal where no consideration was intended other than as the seal itself should import one. It is true that if the transfer of the stock was in the minds of the parties as consideration to support the bond, it is no such consideration. So that we still have a specialty under seal executed with the intention that the seal alone imports a consideration.

The second contention made by the defendants is that the obligation is one of suretyship and not a direct Obligation.

In Arch B. & L. Assn. v. Sehlesinger, 69 Pa. Superior Ct. 107, on facts very similar to, if not identical with, those of the instant ease, the Superior Court affirmed an opinion of President Judge Martin of Common Pleas Court No. 5 of this county, in which he said (p. 109) :

“The bond is under seal, and is a direct obligation binding the defendant to comply with its terms. The fact that a bond of the former owner, Knox, was also held by plaintiff, does not change the character of the bond executed by defendant from a direct obligation to one of suretyship.”

The petitioner has raised the question as to whether there was a valid consideration for the execution of the bond. The plaintiff answered “that the bond was executed by” the defendant “in consideration of the assignment to her of the seven shares -of stock that had been issued to Knox, the former owner of the mortgaged property”. It does not appear that the validity of such a consideration was attacked on the ground that the association was by law bound to transfer the stock to the defendant. It is apparent that the court assumed that, since the bond was under seal, there was no necessity for pointing out a consideration, and the bond was a direct or primary obligation of the defendant, in spite of the fact that the plaintiff association also held the bond of the former owner.

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Related

Killeen's Estate
165 A. 34 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
Yard v. Patton
13 Pa. 278 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1850)
Bank of Commerce's Appeal
73 Pa. 59 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1873)
Hazleton National Bank v. Kintz
24 Pa. Super. 456 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1904)
Livengood v. Hay
55 Pa. Super. 134 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
Arch Building & Loan Ass'n v. Schlesinger
69 Pa. Super. 107 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Pa. D. & C. 411, 1935 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greater-adelphi-building-loan-assn-v-trilling-pactcomplphilad-1935.