Hopkins Manufacturing Co. v. Ketterer

85 A. 421, 237 Pa. 285, 1912 Pa. LEXIS 933
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 2, 1912
DocketAppeal, No. 186
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 85 A. 421 (Hopkins Manufacturing Co. v. Ketterer) 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
Hopkins Manufacturing Co. v. Ketterer, 85 A. 421, 237 Pa. 285, 1912 Pa. LEXIS 933 (Pa. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mestrezat,

This is a bill for subrogation, filed by the assignee of a lessee to compel the assignee óf a mortgagee to receive the debt and assign the mortgage which secures it. .

Charles P. Ketterer being the owner of certain real estate in the borough of Hanover, York county, gave a mortgage thereon, dated March 24, 1896, to the Hanover Savings Fund Society to secure the payment of ten thousand dollars in six months after date. On April 18, 1899, Ketterer leased the real estate to the Ketterer Manufacturing Company for ten years with the option of a second term of like tenure at an annual rental of one thousand dollars, payable semi-annually, which was applicable by the tenant (a) to payment of taxes on the property, (b) to interest on the mortgage, (c) to principal of the mortgage. The company took possession under the lease and continued in possession until it was adjudged a bankrupt in March, 1907. In pursuance of an order of the United States District Court, the trustee on September 25, 1907, sold its leasehold right to one, Lebzelter, who, on December 1, 1907, sold and delivered possession of the premises to the Hopkins Manufacturing Company, the plaintiff.

The Hanover Savings Fund Society, the mortgagee, on November 25, 1908, assigned the mortgage to Percival C. Ketterer, the defendant. The assignee of the mortgage issued a sci. fi. thereon, December 19, 1908, and obtained judgment. He issued a levari facias January 21, 1910, on the judgment and the proceedings being suspended by order of court, he subsequently issued an alias levari facias and levied on the lands described in the mortgage and held by the plaintiff under the lease.

[289]*289The plaintiff company, by a letter dated January 28, 1909, addressed to Percival C. Ketterer at his residence in New York City and duly received by Mm, notified Mm that it stood ready to pay the amount due on the mortgage with costs, upon assignment thereof to it. On August 12, 1909, the plaintiff tendered to. the mortgagee’s attorney of record in the proceedings thereon the debt, interest, costs and attorney’s commission with the request for the assignment of the mortgage to the plaintiff. The tender was refused because the counsel for the mortgagee had no express authority to make an assignment. Percival C. Ketterer entered judgment in the Common Pleas of York County on March 28, 1909, for $15,245 on a judgment note dated March 16, 1909. The judgment is unsatisfied. The real estate covered by the mortgage and on which this judgment was a lien is worth $13,000. The. balance due on the mortgage when assigned to Percival C. Ketterer was $7,500. Ketterer was then and is now a resident of the City of New York.

The plaintiff company erected on the leased premises the necessary buildings and appliances with railroad switches, etc., for carrying on the business of manufacturing wagons and similar vehicles, and there are no premises with suitable buildings in the borough of, Hanover or vicinity adapted for the purpose. If the plaintiff company should be evicted from the premises its loss, expenses and the depreciation in value of its property would be an irreparable injury to it.

The plaintiff paid on its rent account on December 30, 1908, $833.33, and on September 20, 1909, $500.00.

The ábove facts are summarized from the findings of the court below, and are all that are material to the disposition of the case here. This bill was filed September 16, 1909, praying the court to stay the writ of alias levari facias issued on the mortgage, and for an order directing the defendant to assign and transfer to the plaintiff company the mortgage upon payment to [290]*290him of the balance due thereon. The learned court below granted the decree as prayed for, and the defendant has taken this appeal.

We have no disposition to interfere with the findings of fact by the court below which are complained of in the .first and second assignments of error. We think the findings are supported by the evidence and that the objections are not well taken. The plaintiff company presented a case which entitles it to équitable relief. The mortgagee was entitled to his money when it became due by the terms of his contract. If it were not paid he could proceed and collect it. The mortgage is security for the indebtedness and furnishes the legal means of enforcing payment. When, however, the debt is tendered to the mortgagee he must receive it, and he is prevented from taking any proceedings on the mortgage to collect. Generally speaking, he is not required on receipt of the indebtedness to assign or transfer the mortgage; he can only be required to satisfy it. The circumstances however may be such that when the debt is paid he may be required to assign the instrument for the protection of the party making the payment. If a junior mortgagee, judgment creditor or other encumbrancer pay a prior encumbrance in order to protect his own interest in the encumbered estate he will as’ a general rule be subrogated to all the rights of the senior encumbrancer, and if necessary for his protection may compel an assignment of the security: 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2nd Ed.) 2á3. We have ruled that the same relief should be afforded under similar circumstances to a lessee for years: Wunderle v. Ellis, 212 Pa. 618. In the case before us, therefore, the only question is whether the plaintiff company has shown such ground as would warrant a chancellor in granting the relief prayed for in the bill, and in compelling the holder of the mortgage to assign it on payment of the debt, in-’ terest and attorney’s commissions due thereon.

[291]*291In view of the tender made by the plaintiff, it is immaterial, as correctly said by the learned court, what rent was unpaid at any subsequent date. The contention that the plaintiff was guilty of laches cannot be sustained. The facts found by the court and summarized above show that the company proceeded with due speed to protect its interests by taking up the mortgage. The lease was recorded, and hence the assignee of the mortgage had constructive notice of the contents of the lease when he took the assignment. He not only knew that the lease had been in existence for more than nine years, but must be presumed to know, what was a fact, that the lessee had erected a valuable plant on the leased premises and that it had been in operation since the construction of the plant. It must be further assumed that he knew what the court finds to be a fact that the collection of the mortgage by legal process and the consequent eviction of the plaintiff company from the premises would result in irreparable loss and injury to it. He must, therefore, be regarded as having full knowledge of the conditions existing at the time he took the assignment of the mortgage in 1908.

The plaintiff company was not required to tender payment of the mortgage immediately upon its assignment to the present defendant. It was not required to anticipate that he would attempt to collect by legal process the mortgage and thereby deprive it of the valuable manufacturing plant erected upon the premises. The company did, however, within two months after the assignment of the mortgage notify the assignee that it would pay him the indebtedness when the mortgage was assigned to him. This notice was followed by a tender of the debt, interest and costs due on the mortgage to the record attorney of the owner of the mortgage with the request for an assignment to the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 A. 421, 237 Pa. 285, 1912 Pa. LEXIS 933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-manufacturing-co-v-ketterer-pa-1912.