Heffner v. First Nat. Bk. of Hunt'don

166 A. 370, 311 Pa. 29, 87 A.L.R. 610, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 484
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1933
DocketAppeal, 63
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 166 A. 370 (Heffner v. First Nat. Bk. of Hunt'don) 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
Heffner v. First Nat. Bk. of Hunt'don, 166 A. 370, 311 Pa. 29, 87 A.L.R. 610, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 484 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

Margaret Heffner, appellant, and her husband, A. M. Heffner, appear as co-makers on a promissory note for $2,000, dated December 2, 1929, payable to the First National Bank of Huntingdon, appellee herein. The pertinent provisions thereof read as follows:

“$2,000 Huntingdon, Pa., December 2, 1929.
“Ninety one days after date, for Value Received, I promise to pay to the order of First National Bank, Huntingdon, Pa., Two Thousand and °%oo Dollars, having deposited as collateral security for payment of this or any other liability or liabilities to said holder thereof due or to become due, or that may be hereafter contracted, the following property, viz.: 67 Shs. P. R. R. Co.......”

The note was the last of a series of several notes renewing successively, every three months, a note dated July 6, 1918. At that time 67 shares of stock of the P. R. R. owned by Mrs. Heffner, the certificate being in her name, were deposited as collateral security. In December, 1929, Heffner together with other persons borrowed several sums from appellee Bank, in each case giving their joint and several notes therefor. These notes were by Heffner and his brother, A. B. Heffner, for $465; by Heffner with E. P. Heffner and A. B. Heffner for $3,625; by Heffner with E. P. Heffner and E. W. Benson for $3,400, and the last by Heffner and his son, who were associated together in business, for $450. Appellant’s husband subsequently became bankrupt.

On June 6, 1930, appellant, by letter, directed the bank to sell the stock at 75%, and apply so much of the proceeds thereof as was necessary to pay the $2,000 note and remit to her any surplus. On July 2d jfche bank, in *32 a letter to her attorney, informed her that it held unsatisfied claims, for which the railroad stock was pledged as collateral security, against A. M. Heffner, co-maker of the note for $2,000, and as a result was unable to comply with her request.

In this proceeding to compel the bank to account for the value of the stock, and to pay to her the surplus after liquidating her note for $2,000, the chancellor, after hearing, denied her request and dismissed the bill.

Appellee bank rests its claim to apply the surplus to the unsatisfied claims enumerated above against appellant’s husband, on the following provision of the note: “having deposited as collateral security for the payment of this or any other liability or liabilities to said holder hereof, due or to become due, or that may be hereafter contracted, the following property, viz.: 67 Shs. of P. E. E. Co.”

The controversy, therefore, narrows itself to the proper interpretation of this collateral pledge: whether under it appellee, the holder, was authorized to apply the surplus from the proceeds of the sale of appellant’s stock to the satisfaction of other notes made jointly by her husband with others and payable to appellee bank.

The obligation is the joint and several note of appellant and her husband, A. M. Heffner: Negotiable Instruments Act of May 16, 1901, P. L. 194, section 17, paragraph 7; Walker v. Bank of Montgomery Co., 12 S. & R. 382; Delaware Co. Trust, etc., Co. v. Haser, 199 Pa. 17.

Under it joint liability is created. The liability is, in the alternative; several has to do only with the remedies of the holder, conferring upon holder the remedy of pursuing the co-makers separately and recovering the whole amount due on the note from either, but it does not add to the substantive right involved, i. e., the payment of the note by the makers. The obligation of the makers, as between themselves, is joint. If the holder recover from one the full sum due on the note, that one may compel the other to reimburse him the proportionate share for *33 which he is responsible. The rule of substantive law, as distinguished from the procedural, is that co-makers are jointly responsible for the satisfaction of the obligation ; the substantive right in the holder is to have payment of the note by the makers. It is well to keep in view this familiar legal status of the parties because of the insistence by appellee that the joint and several obligation of the note serves to extend the scope of the severally owned securities of one maker pledged as collateral, to the joint liabilities of the other maker with third parties. See Torrance v. Third Nat. Bank, 210 Fed. 806, 808.

The clause under consideration lacks a complete expression of the intention of the parties. It speaks of “any other liability or liabilities,” but fails to indicate whose liability or liabilities. Certainly, the parties thereto contemplated the inclusion of the idea (if the clause is to have any meaning) “any other liability or liabilities of the undersigned ” or, “any other liability or liabilities of Margaret and A. M. HeffnerTo omit this implication from the provision leaves it meaningless, since the parties assuredly did not refer to any liabilities in general.

The natural inference from the clause as we have thus completed it is that the securities were pledged for liabilities similar to those incurred on the note-joint liabilities, the joint liabilities of the undersigned, of Margaret and A. M. Heffner. To conclude otherwise would require a forced, unusual and argumentative meaning to be placed on the agreement. The joint liability of appellant and her husband is very different from the joint liability: [1] of her husband and his brother, [2] of her husband, his son and his brother, [3] of her husband and his son and a third party.

A pledge, like any other contract, where there is any doubt as to its meaning, must be construed with some degree, of strictness against the party preparing it: Kelter, Tr. v. American Bankers Finance Co., 306 Pa. *34 483; St. Lucie Co. Bank & Trust Co. v. Aylin, 114 So. 438; Nat. Bank of Kentucky v. Gallagher, 49 S. W.[2d] 1006; Gillet v. Bank of America, 160 N. Y. 549; Holston Nat. Bank v. Wood, 125 Tenn. 6. The form signed hy appellant and her husband was the usual printed form note of appellee, and it was for the bank that prepared it to word it clearly in accordance with the meaning it now insists upon, by inserting words which adequately conveyed that meaning.

The fact the note is a renewal note does not affect its relation to the collateral involved. When parties give their note, secured by collateral deposited at the time the loan is made, and thereafter the loan is renewed by renewal notes similar to the original, the pledge of the collateral is not thereby affected, but continues as security therefor as originally contracted, in the absence of any expressions of a contrary intent: Church v. Swetland, 243 Fed. 289, appeal dismissed, 249 U. S. 579.

While we have no cases decided by appellate courts directly ruling the question, the authorities of other jurisdictions support the conclusion here reached. In fact oúr independent research discloses no case reaching a result inconsistent with our position and none has been pointed to by counsel.

The case bearing most directly on the question is In re Haynsworth, 34 Fed. [2d] 334. Therein a partnership note was executed by the firm of Haynsworth & Stuckey.

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 370, 311 Pa. 29, 87 A.L.R. 610, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heffner-v-first-nat-bk-of-huntdon-pa-1933.