Hunsberger v. Perkiomen Nat. Bank

164 A. 839, 108 Pa. Super. 443, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 211
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 14, 1932
DocketAppeal 198
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 164 A. 839 (Hunsberger v. Perkiomen Nat. Bank) 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
Hunsberger v. Perkiomen Nat. Bank, 164 A. 839, 108 Pa. Super. 443, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 211 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Perkiomen National Bank, appellant herein, was defendant below and appeals from a judgment entered *445 against it for $971.14 (debt and interest), for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense as to one of the two items plaintiff sought to recover.

The cause of action upon which plaintiff’s suit was based may be thus stated, in general terms: The defendant bank, at a date subsequent to November 28, 1927, had in its possession, as the proceeds of the sale of collateral deposited with it by one Edwin D. Reiter (adjudicated a bankrupt on January 27, 1928), a sum of money, exceeding by more than $1280, the amount necessary to pay all of Reiter’s obligations to it; plaintiff, by reason of certain transactions hereinafter recited, claims to have,been subrogated to the rights of the bank, to the extent', of $1280, in the surplfts. then in its hands; but the 'bank, in violation of its alleged legal duty to protect plaintiff’s rights, paid ■ over the entire balance in its hands to Reiter’s trustee in bankruptcy.

The pleadings consisted of plaintiff’s statement, an affidavit-of defense in lieu of a demurrer—under which the questions of law raised thereby were decided against defendant—and an 'affidavit of defense upon the merits.

Two promissory notes were involved, each .said to have been made by Reiter to the order of Hunsberger, the plaintiff, and by the latter endorsed to the defendant bank; (1) a sixty day note for $280, dated September 26, 1927, and (2) a note for $1000, dated October 3, 1927, also payable sixty days after date. The loss or destruction of both notes prior to the date of suit gave rise to several rather immaterial controversies relative to the details of their form.

Material averments of the ■ statement were; that in each instance plaintiff was an accommodation endorser for Reiter, with the knowledge and consent of defendant; that each note was drawn on the usual printed form then used by defendant; and that on November 28, 1927, (the notes being about due and *446 Reiter having become insolvent), defendant “made demand on the plaintiff as accommodation endorser” for payment, and plaintiff thereupon paid defendant $1280 in full of the notes.

The seventh, eighth and ninth paragraphs of the statement read: “7. At the time when the plaintiff paid the aforesaid notes to the defendant, the defendant had in its possession certain securities belonging to the said Edwin D. Reiter, including ten shares of capital stock of the defendant bank which had been placed into the hands of the defendant as collateral security for all obligations owed by said Edwin D. Reiter to the defendant bank, including the aforesaid two notes on which the plaintiff was accommodation endorser, and which the plaintiff paid as hereinbefore stated.

“8. At some time after the plaintiff had paid the aforesaid notes to the defendant bank, the exact time being unknown to the plaintiff, the defendant sold the securities which it held as collateral for all indebtedness of said Edwin D. Reiter as aforesaid, and by said sale realized a sum of money sufficient in amount to pay all of the obligations which were owed by the said Edwin D. Reiter to the defendant bank, and did, out of the proceeds of said sale, pay to itself all of said other obligations and turned over to the trustee in bankruptcy of the said Edwin D. Reiter, the amount of money by which the proceeds of the sale of said securities exceeded said other obligations, which sum of money so turned over to said trustee in bankruptcy was more than sufficient to reimburse to the plaintiff the amount of money which he had paid on the aforesaid notes.

“9. Plaintiff is informed by counsel and therefore avers that the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff to reimburse the plaintiff for the payments which he had made on said notes as accommodation endorser, together with interest from the respective dates of *447 said payments, out of the proceeds of the sale of the aforesaid collateral before turning the balance of said proceeds over to the trustee in bankruptcy of the said Edwin D. Reiter.”

A further averment was that plaintiff proved his claim against Reiter’s bankrupt estate and received a dividend of $241.11 on February 2, 1929, for which amount defendant is entitled to credit in this case.

By its statutory demurrer, defendant averred plaintiff had not stated a good cause of action, because; (a) defendant was under no legal obligation to reimburse plaintiff out of the balance of the proceeds of the collateral, remaining in its hands after satisfaction of its own claims, but, on the contrary, was bound to pay that surplus to Reiter’s trustee in bankruptcy;

(b) plaintiff lost whatever rights he might otherwise have had “by his failure to proceed promptly for subrogation against [the], securities or the .proceeds thereof”; and (c) “plaintiff is estopped to now assert a right against the defendant by reason of his failure to present a preferred claim before the referee in bankruptcy, on the theory of subrogation. ’ ’

The court below held that plaintiff, as an accommodation endorser, became a surety for Reiter, and, upon payment of the notes, was subrogated, to the extent of the payment, to the rights of the bank in the collateral deposited by Reiter; that the legal obligation of the defendant bank was that of a; trustee for plaintiff, so far as the collateral was concerned; and that it would be liable to plaintiff for surrendering the proceeds of the collateral, without his consent. It was also held that plaintiff was not estopped, upon either ground, to assert his right of subrogation; the questions of law were, accordingly, decided against defendant, with leave to file an affidavit upon the merits.

Upon its filing, plaintiff obtained-a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. As to the note for $280, it was denied in the third para *448 graph of the affidavit that plaintiff “became the accommodation endorser [thereof] for the accommodation of the said Edwin D. Reiter,” and it was also denied that this note was signed by Reiter “and was payable to the order* of plaintiff and was endorsed by the plaintiff to the defendant bank.”

In the fifth paragraph it was denied that the defendant bank made a demand upon the plaintiff, “as accommodation endorser,” to pay the notes or that they were paid in response to such a demand. On the other hand, there was an admission in the eighth paragraph that the notes were paid by plaintiff to defendant.

The court below held these averments sufficient to prevent judgment as to the item for $280, for the reason that, unless plaintiff was an accommodation endorser, no right of subrogation could be asserted. The rule was, therefore, discharged as to this item.

With reference to the note for $1000, it was admitted in the affidavit that plaintiff was an accommodation endorser thereon and paid the amount thereof to the defendant.

The reply to the averments of the statement, relative to the value and disposition of the collateral, was:

“7.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A. 839, 108 Pa. Super. 443, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunsberger-v-perkiomen-nat-bank-pasuperct-1932.