Kisinger v. Pennsylvania Trust Co.

180 A. 79, 119 Pa. Super. 16, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 159
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 1, 1935
DocketAppeal, 236
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 180 A. 79 (Kisinger v. Pennsylvania Trust Co.) 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
Kisinger v. Pennsylvania Trust Co., 180 A. 79, 119 Pa. Super. 16, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 159 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

Harry Kisinger presented to the court below a petition for a declaratory judgment to have determined his claim of a right to offset deposits which he had in the Pennsylvania Trust Company of Pittsburgh (hereinafter referred to as Pennsylvania Trust) against a mortgage previously given to that company, after the trust company had been taken over for liquidation by the Secretary of Banking of the Commonwealth. All parties whose interests were affected were made parties to the proceeding. The court of common pleas made an order upholding plaintiff’s claim, and the defendants affected by the order have appealed to this court.

The facts essential to a determination of the issues are not in dispute and may be logically divided into two parts, one concerning the facts depended upon by plaintiff and the other the facts more particularly depended upon by the appellants. We will so refer to the evidence rather than dealing -with it chronologically. In 1931, Harry Kisinger purchased a parcel of land in Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, which was subject to a mortgage of $5,000 dated April 20, 1917, to Pennsylvania Trust and payable in five years from that date. A short time prior to February 16, 1932, that trust company, acting through its assistant trust officer who was authorized to conduct negotiations respecting ex *19 tension of time of payment of mortgages, notified plaintiff that they would require payment of the mortgage in full. After some discussion, at a second meeting the authorized agent of the trust company “offered to extend the time of payment for three years, provided Kisinger would give his own bond to secure the mortgage debt, would pay $100 on principal every three months, and would open and maintain a deposit account with Pennsylvania Trust Company. At the same time, Hoelzle [the agent] falsely assured Kisinger that Pennsylvania Trust Company owned the mortgage on his property in its own right, and in response to Kisinger’s suggestion that the Trust Company might not be in good financial condition, promised and agreed that if the company should be closed his monies on deposit would be applied toward payment of the mortgage” (6th Finding of Fact). Although the agent assured the plaintiff that the bank was the owner of the mortgage in question in its own right and not as trustee, the plaintiff caused the record to be searched and found such to be the fact. Thereupon, Kisinger accepted the offer, opened an account, and made a deposit in Pennsylvania Trust on February 16,1932. On May 31,1932, the Pennsylvania Trust gave to plaintiff a written paper extending the time for payment of the mortgage and providing for the payment of $100 to be made each and every three months with interest, until debt and interest were fully paid. On June 6, 1932, plaintiff gave to the Pennsylvania Trust his personal bond guaranteeing the payment of the mortgage as required by the oral agreement just referred to. On March 4, 1933, the Pennsylvania Trust was placed upon a restricted basis and, on November 29, 1933, the bank was closed and the liquidation of its assets was undertaken by the Secretary of Banking of the Commonwealth. Deposits were not available to depositors generally after the bank was closed in March, 1933. When the bank was closed, plaintiff had on deposit in that trust company *20 the sum of $1,258.18 in a savings account and $174.48 in a checking account. The mortgage continued at all times up to the closing of the bank to stand on the record in the recorder’s office of Allegheny County in the name of Pennsylvania Trust Company of Pittsburgh.

With reference to the facts depended upon by the appellants, it appeared that in June, 1917, the mortgage was assigned by the bank to an estate for which the Pennsylvania Trust Company was guardian. It was subsequently assigned by that estate to a mortgage pool where it continued to remain until after the time when the bank was placed upon a restricted basis. On July 15, 1932, it was assigned by the pool to the Pennsylvania Trust Company and two other defendants, guardians of the estate of J. H. Reich, a minor. These transfers of the mortgage were evidenced by declarations of trust and entries on the books of Pennsylvania Trust, but were not recorded until the bank was closed. The orphans’ court of Allegheny County made an order directing the Pennsylvania Trust to place all of its trust assets in the custody of the Colonial Trust Company, which trust company has continued to hold the mortgage, acting in the nature óf a conservator.

The appellants contend that the final order should be reversed for the reasons that (1) the Pennsylvania Trust was not the owner of'the mortgage at the time the alleged agreement was made; (2) 'the conversations between plaintiff and defendant’s agent did not amount to a contract; (3) under the parol evidence rule, the written agreement for an extension of the mortgage comprised the entire contract between the parties; and (4) the defendant is not entitled to a set-off because he did not make claim to exercise such right before the Pennsylvania Trust was taken over by the Banking Department.

1. The law is well settled in this state that a mort *21 gagor, in payment of interest and principal and any other matters affecting the mortgage security, may deal with the original mortgagee or his recorded assignee without the peril of being called upon again to respond for the same matter to an assignee who has or has not recorded his assignment if the mortgagor has not had actual notice thereof. “The assignment of a mortgage by an instrument duly executed, or the assignment of such mortgage on the margin of the mortgage record is not such legal notice to the mortgagor as will preclude him from setting up payments made by him to the mortgagee before he has actual notice of the assignment”: Kinch v. Fluke, 311 Pa. 405, 409, 166 A. 905; Binkley v. Hartman, 4 S. & R. 175; Brindle v. M’Ilvaine, 9 S. & R. 74, 77; Foster v. Carson, 159 Pa. 477, 28 A. 356; O’Maley v. Pugliese, 272 Pa. 356, 359, 116 A. 308; Lee v. Sallada, 7 Pa. Superior Ct. 98. If the assignees of this mortgage, the guardians of the minor, J. H. Reich, wished to protect the interests of their ward, they should have taken a certificate of no defense and advised the mortgagor of the assignment. We find no merit in the suggestion that the Act of April 11,1929, P. L. 512 (15 PS 2514), changed the situation in the least. At best, the position would not be any stronger than that of one who had recorded his assignment, and, as we have seen, such recording without actual notice to the mortgagor does not affect the right of the mortgagor to deal with the previous mortgagee. In any event, that act did not make a declaration of trust filed with the trust department of the bank the equivalent of recording. The Act of 1929 is a supplement or amendment to the banking act intended to prescribe a practice to be followed by banks subject to the laws of this Commonwealth who also act as fiduciaries in their dealings between trust and commercial departments and did not amend the recording acts.

2. It is next urged that the conversations between *22

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Bluebook (online)
180 A. 79, 119 Pa. Super. 16, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kisinger-v-pennsylvania-trust-co-pasuperct-1935.