Land Title Bank & Trust Co. v. Baron

19 A.2d 62, 341 Pa. 241, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1941
DocketAppeal, 260
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 62 (Land Title Bank & Trust Co. v. Baron) 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
Land Title Bank & Trust Co. v. Baron, 19 A.2d 62, 341 Pa. 241, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 411 (Pa. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Patterson,

This appeal is from a decree, entered by the court below in a proceeding instituted by a bill in equity to foreclose a mortgage, directing the subordination of certain guaranteed bonds, comprising part of a series the mortgage was given to secure, which were pledged with the indenture trustee as collateral security for loans made by it to the guarantor, the fund realized from the sale of the mortgaged premises being insufficient to pay all bonds in full.

Frank Seitchik, appellee, is the holder of two Class “A” participating bonds secured by a mortgage upon the land and buildings known as the Fairfield Apartments, located at 53rd Street and Wynnefield Avenue, in Philadelphia. The bonds, which were payable June 15,1929, were executed on June 15,1926, by one S. Louis Baron, who held title to the premises as “straw man” for the real owner. There were two series: Class “A” having a preferential status, comprising 175 bonds of a face value of $175,000, and Class “B,” having a deferred status, consisting of 25 bonds with a face value *243 of $25,000.- The Class “B” bonds are not involved in this proceeding. The bonds and mortgage were delivered to the Real Estate Land Title and Trust Company (now the Land Title Bank and Trust Company), appellant, as trustee for the bondholders. Payment of principal and interest on the bonds was guaranteed by the Philadelphia Company for Guaranteeing Mortgages (hereinafter referred to as guarantor), which company purchased the Class “A” bonds and resold them to the. general public. By the terms of the guarantee, the individual bondholders were to make no demand upon the mortgagor except through the guarantor, and no extension was to be granted without its consent. In accordance with its usual practice, the guarantor maintained a ready market for the bonds, which were assignable, but not negotiable.

The guarantor, on June 5, 1929, notified the bondholders that the owner of the mortgaged premises had requested an indefinite extension of the loan, and that all who desired to retain their bonds would continue to receive guaranteed interest thereon, while those who. so desired might deposit their certificates with the guarantor and receive payment. No formal extension of the mortgage was granted. On June 15, 1929, the mortgagor defaulted upon the principal, and on and after December 15, 1929, the interest on the Class “A” bonds was' defaulted. The guárantor, however, continued to pay the interest to and including the installment due December 15, 1932. Shortly after the default in payment of the principal, the owner of the mortgaged premises surrendered its leases to appellant, as trustee. Formal demand for payment was made by appellant upon the mortgagor, on March 20, 1930, and on the same day notice of the demand was given the guarantor. Appellant took possession of the property on April 12,1930.

From June, 1929, to October 6, 1931, the guarantor repurchased, and registered in its own name, Class “A” bonds of a total value of $71,000. On the latter date, *244 these bonds were pledged to appellant, in its separate corporate capacity, to secure direct loans previously made by it to the guarantor, in the sum of $967,000, and its liability of $480,000 upon a conditional guarantee of another loan. The guarantor’s president testified that he regarded the corporation as solvent on the date of the transfer. On December 15, 1931, however, its financial situation was such that its directors and officers elected to invoke, for the first time, an eighteen months’ period of grace upon its obligations of guarantee. Receivers were appointed for the guarantor on January 11,1933, whereupon the pledged bonds, together with its other assets, were assigned to an operating trustee, the Mortgage Service Company of Philadelphia. At the request of more than 25 per cent of the Class “A” bondholders, appellant, as trustee, on December 3, 1936, instituted foreclosure proceedings in equity, and the mortgaged premises were purchased at sheriff’s sale by a bondholders’ committee. A net fund of $90,268.49 was realized, which fund is now before the court below for distribution. Appellant’s account, as trustee, was confirmed on October 30, 1939, but the court reserved decision upon the status in distribution of the pledged bonds.

Pursuant to a decree of the United States District Court, the pledged securities were, on December 9,1939, exposed to sale at public auction and were purchased by appellant in its separate corporate capacity. Thereafter, appellant, as trustee, filed a petition in the court below, setting forth the contention of certain Class “A” bondholders that these bonds should be subordinated in distribution and submitting the question for determination. Answers were filed by appellant in its individual corporate capacity, and by appellee. A hearing was had before the chancellor, which resulted in an adjudication that the bonds should be subordinated. Exceptions filed by appellant were dismissed, and this appeal followed. The court below had previously decreed that *245 Class “A” bonds, of a value of $9,000, remaining in the hands of the guarantor’s operating trustee, and not involved in this appeal, should have a subordinated status.

Appellant’s claim to parity in distribution rests upon the assertion that it purchased the bonds for value, by virtue of the pledge, prior to default by the guarantor, and without knowledge of any equities existing in favor of the other bondholders. Appellee contends that at the time of the hypothecation of the bonds, both mortgagor and guarantor were in default, and that appellant then knew or should have known facts indicating that the Class “A” bonds would not ultimately be paid in full. The court below so found, and, if its findings are supported by competent evidence, they are binding upon us and conclusive of the subordinate status of appellant’s bonds.

In Land T. Bk. & Tr. Co., Tr., v. Schenck, 335 Pa. 419, relied upon by appellant, this Court held that a pledgee for value of participating mortgage bonds, from the guarantor, was entitled to share in the distribution of the trust fund pari passu with other bondholders of the same class, notwithstanding that the hypothecation occurred after maturity. The sole question presented in the cases there involved, the facts of which superficially resemble those here presented, was whether the time of transfer affected the status of the bonds in distribution. It was pointed out (p. 432) that “No other reason is advanced to defeat their right to share pro rata in distribution, since it appears that the pledgees had no notice of any facts existing at the time of the pledge, which would give rise to equities in favor of the purchasers of bonds.” Certain factors which would give rise to such equities were considered, and it was found that the pledgees had no reason to know of their existence, the Court saying (p. 432) : “They cannot be said to have had knowledge that the bonds would not ultimately be paid by the mortgagor, or that The Philadelphia Company would default upon its contracts of *246 guarantee at the expiration of the eighteen months’ grace period.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 62, 341 Pa. 241, 1941 Pa. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/land-title-bank-trust-co-v-baron-pa-1941.