Guckenheimer & Bros. v. Kann

89 A. 807, 243 Pa. 75, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 578
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1914
DocketAppeal, No. 210
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 89 A. 807 (Guckenheimer & Bros. v. Kann) 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
Guckenheimer & Bros. v. Kann, 89 A. 807, 243 Pa. 75, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 578 (Pa. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Potter,

This was a hill in equity filed to compel contribution by the defendant W. L. Kann. From the facts as found by the court below it appears that the Penn-American Plate Glass Company borrowed the sum of $750,000 from the Farmers’ Deposit National Bank of Pittsburgh, giving its note to the bank for that amount dated March 13, 1909, with $600,000 of its own bonds as collateral security. An agreement signed by W. L. Kann, Samuel Wertheimer, Emanuel Wertheimer, Isaac Wertheimer, Isaac Guckenheimer, Ida Guckenheimer, M. M. Kann, and Samuel J. Mack was also given to the bank in which the parties named jointly and severally agreed that if the glass company should default in payment of its note they would pay the same in like manner as if they had endorsed the note. As further consideration for the loan the bank was paid a bonus of $7,500 and the above named parties agreed in and by the same agreement to deliver to the bank, stock of the glass company having a par value of $200,000 and to buy back such stock from the bank within three years for the price of $100,000 and if not purchased within that time, the price of the stock was thereafter to be increased to certain sums named. The stock was delivered to the bank in accordance with the agreement, the defendant Kann, contributing thereto [78]*781,116 shares. Contemporaneously with the transaction with the bank, a separate agreement was made between Isaac Guckenheimer, Trustee, W. L. Kann, A. Guckenheimer and Bros., Samuel Wertheimer, Ida Guckenheimer, Emanuel Wertheimer, Isaac Wertheimer, Isaac Guckenheimer, M. M. Kann, and Samuel J. Mack, by which the parties named who held all the stock of the glass company, stipulated as to the proportions in which they were to be liable as among themselves on their agreement with the bank. The liability of the defendant Kann was thus fixed at $298,365.12 if it should be found necessary for the guarantors to pay to the bank the full amount of the loan, $750,000. The agreement contained no stipulation as to the respective liability of the parties as between themselves for such amount as might be paid to redeem the stock. In pursuance of the agreement the defendant Kann deposited with Isaac Guckenheimer as trustee certain securities to insure the payment of any sum for which he might become liable under the terms of the contract. The firm of A. Guckenheimer and Bros, was composed of Samuel Wertheimer, Isaac Wertheimer and Isaac Guckenheimer, all of whom were, parties to both agreements. The firm was not a party to the agreement with, the bank, but was a party to that between the stockholders. On April 1, 1912, the plaintiff corporation, A. Guckenheimer & Brothers Company, was formed, taking over all the assets and liabilities of the firm. At about the same date, the glass company having defaulted in the payment of the $750,000 note, the same was paid by A. Guckenheimer and Bros., who also at the same time paid the bank $100,000 for the stock which had been transferred as stated above. The present bill was filed by A. Guckenheimer & Brothers Company to compel W. L. Kann to contribute his alleged proportion of the amounts paid by A. Guckenheimer and Bros., to the bank both in discharge of their liability and in redemption of the stock.

Upon the trial the court below sustained the bill and [79]*79held that the defendant Kann was liable to the plaintiff in the sum of $298,365.12 with interest, for his share of the note and in the sum of $39,782.01 with interest, as his share of the redemption- price of the stock. Exceptions to the findings of the trial judge were dismissed by the court below and a final decree was entered directing the payment by defendant of the amounts named, on delivery to him of his stock and securities, and directing defendant to pay three-fourths of the .costs.

Defendant has acquiesced in and complied with that part of the decree directing the payment of $298,365.12 with interest as his share of the note, but he objects to the enforcement of contribution against him for payment upon account of the $100,000 paid under the agreement for the purchase of the stock. The eighth assignment of error is to that portion of the decree which directs the payment by defendant of the sum of $39,782.01 with interest, which was held to be his proportion of the amount paid for the stock. The ninth assignment of error, is to that portion of the decree which directs defendant to pay three-fourths of the costs. All the quesitons involved in this appeal may properly be considered under these two assignments of error. Counsel for appellant cite no authorities in support of their contentions, but suggest that the authorities upon which the court, below relied, do not properly apply to the facts of this case. These authorities are, the leading case of Deering v. Earl of Winchelsea, 2 Bos. & Pul. 270, in which the principle was clearly recognized that contribution depends not upon contract, but upon a fixed principle of justice, and Malone v. Stewart, 235 Pa. 100, where the rule of contribution as defined in the case just cited is recognized as applicable in Pennsylvania. The record in this case shows the presence of every element essential to a proper case for contribution. Here, one of several parties who were liable upon a common obligation to the bank, discharged that obligation for the benefit of all of them. This gave to the one who made-[80]*80the payment the right to recover from each of his co-sureties his proportionate share of the common burden. The payment was compulsory in that there was a clear legal duty to pay which might have been enforced by judgment and execution. Even where payment has been made by one legally bound therefor before the maturity of the debt contribution has been enforced. Thus in Craig v. Craig, 5 Rawle 91, Mr. Chief Justice Gibson said (p. 98): “As to the position taken, that payment before the bonds fell due, would be essentially voluntary, it is proper to remark, that the principle was ruled differently in Armstrong v. Gilchrist, 2 Johns. Cas. 429, where it was held that a guarantor of a note who had compromised and paid it for his own indemnity before it had become due,. was entitled to recover. That a surety is to wait till payment is extorted from him, is not pretended; but it is said that payment before maturity is necessarily voluntary; and that eventual liability is not equivalent to a precedent request. There is no authority for that; and it seems not to be defensible on principle.......Nor is he bound to subject himself to the risk of an action by waiting till the creditor has a cause of action. He may, in short, consult his own safety and resort to any measure calculated to assure him of it, which does not involve a wanton sacrifice of the interest of his principal.” In the present case the firm of A. Guckenheimer and Bros, which purchased the stock from the bank was not itself directly a party to the contract, but all its individual members were parties and the contemporary agreement made, between the stockholders of the glass company was signed by the firm as well as by its members, and it appeared that the firm held two thousand shares of the glass company’s stock. All the partners in the firm were liable to the bank under the agreement, and it makes no substantial difference whether the money which they all were under obligations to pay, was paid with the check of the firm or by them as individuals. It was clearly in relief of [81]*81their individual obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 807, 243 Pa. 75, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guckenheimer-bros-v-kann-pa-1914.