Land Title Bk. and Tr. Co. v. Freas, Admrx.

5 A.2d 165, 334 Pa. 26, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 592
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1938
DocketAppeals, 233 and 234
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 A.2d 165 (Land Title Bk. and Tr. Co. v. Freas, Admrx.) 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 Bk. and Tr. Co. v. Freas, Admrx., 5 A.2d 165, 334 Pa. 26, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 592 (Pa. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

After a default occurred in the payment of the principal, interest and taxes due under a mortgage debt, a mortgagee agreed in writing to accept the payment of interest “past and future” at the rate of 4.8% instead of at the previously stipulated rate of 6%. Interest on the mortgage which became due after the execution of the agreement was paid at the rate of 4.8%. This state of facts gives rise to the question: Did such action by the mortgagee release a gratuitous surety who has given a collateral bond for the payment of a portion of the mortgage debt?

The matter came before the court below on plaintiff’s rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff for the amount claimed, to wit, $3,500 with interest. Defendant filed a rule to show cause why the judgment entered should not be opened and defendant let into a further defense. The court below made the following order: “Defendant’s rule to open judgment is discharged and the judgment heretofore entered in favor of the plaintiff *28 and against the defendant, on plaintiff’s rule for judgment for want of sufficient affidavit of defense and new matter, is confirmed.” Thereupon two appeals were taken, one from the entry of judgment for the plaintiff and the other from the order discharging the rule to open judgment.

In its opinion the court below, after reciting at length the facts giving rise to the litigation, based its decision on this ground: That the purported agreement to accept a reduced rate of interest “was not an enforceable agreement because the essential element of consideration was lacking.” The court said: “The question as to whether under all circumstances the affixing of a corporate seal [which was done here] to an instrument imports consideration, is immaterial to the determination of this case. ... It does not follow that a writing so sealed constitutes a contract. . . . While the instrument [in question] is called an ‘agreement,’ it is not a contract in the legal sense . . . the plaintiff agrees to nothing in a contractual sense ... it could at any time under the terms of the so-called ‘agreement’ demand the full rate of interest, i. e., 6%, named in the mortgage, and in the event of the mortgagor declining to pay the interest at that rate plaintiff could immediately and without further action foreclose the mortgage or sue out the bond. . . . The so-called agreement is at most an expression on the part of the plaintiff of its willingness to assist the mortgagor . . . [in] avoiding an immediate foreclosure of the mortgage. . . . There is nothing unusual in a mortgagee, in times of stress, accepting, without prejudice, interest at a rate lower than that called for in the mortgage.” The court then said : “It is well settled in this State that mere forbearance on the part of a creditor or delay in enforcing his rights do not release a surety” (citing Plummer v. Wilson, 322 Pa. 118, 185 A. 311, and other cases).

We cannot agree that the agreement referred to is not a contract. This Court has held that a seal on a written *29 instrument imports consideration and precludes the defense of want of consideration: Killeen’s Est., 310 Pa. 182, 165 A. 34. In U. S., to use, v. Trust Co., 213 Pa. 411, 62 A. 1062, we held that a bond signed in the name of a corporation by the vice-president, with the corporate seal affixed, attested by the secretary, is a sealed instrument. In United States, etc., Co. v. Riefler, 239 U. S. 17, the United States Supreme Court, in an opinion by Justice Holmes, spoke of a bond “carrying as a specialty does, its complete obligation with the paper.” Williston on Contracts, Revised Ed., Yol. 1, sec. 205, says: “The obligation of the maker of a sealed instrument under the common law depends wholly on certain forms being observed. If the forms are observed the obligation is binding. The instrument is not evidence of an obligation, it is the obligation itself.” See Hartford-Ætna Nat. Bank v. Anderson, 92 Conn. 643, 103 A. 845. In the instant case not only were the corporate seals of the respective parties used but the instrument contained a recital as to “their respective corporate seals” being “affixed thereto.” As to the effect of this, see Williston on Contracts, sec. 271-A, and Brooklyn Public Library v. City of N. Y., 222 App. Div. 422, 226 N. Y. S. 491. A corporation may always so contract under its corporate seal as to make the instrument a specialty: Grand Lodge K. of P. v. State Bank, 79 Fla. 471, 84 So. 528; Com. v. Smith, 10 Allen (Mass.) 448, 455, 87 Am. Dec. 672.

The court below adjudged its ruling that the “so-called agreement” reducing the interest rate was “not a contract” as “disposing of the principal contention made by defendant” and declared it was “unnecessary to consider at length the further position of the plaintiff that the change, even if viewed as made under a binding contract, was in all events beneficial to the surety and should, therefore, not release him. There are divergent rulings on this point.”

The “point” referred to is one which it is not necessary for us to decide in this case, for the surety’s liability *30 here became fixed before any change was made in the contract. A surety is not relieved from liability for those debts of his principal which had matured before any change was made in the contract. A liability having been incurred under a contract, a subsequent modification of that contract which does not relate to the accrued liability, has no effect upon the latter. In Magazine Digest Pub. Co. v. Shade, 330 Pa. 487, we held that defendants were not relieved from liability for the principal’s debts which accrued while the original contract remained in force. The subsequent variation of that contract had no effect upon the liability that had already become fixed. In the instant case, the agreement to accept interest at the reduced rate of 4.8% was made after default had occurred in the payment of the principal and after suit for collection of the amount due was instituted. This modification of the interest rate clearly did not extinguish the surety’s then existing obligation. A creditor may waive the further collection of any interest without disturbing the status of his already matured claim against the surety for the payment of the principal, so long as he preserves for the surety’s benefit his claim against the debtor for the entire principal sum. Here the appellant’s liability to pay the principal of the debt came into existence at the expiration date of the mortgage. The appellee has done nothing to prejudice the right of the surety to enforce payment of the matured principal debt in the event the surety pays the creditor in full. The fact that the appellee has waived the right to collect the full interest rate after maturity, does not operate to relieve the surety from his obligation to pay the principal sum already past due.

The cases cited by appellant in support of her position on this phase of the case are not apposite. In Jacob Sall B. & L. Assn. v. Heller, 314 Pa. 237, 171 A.

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Bluebook (online)
5 A.2d 165, 334 Pa. 26, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/land-title-bk-and-tr-co-v-freas-admrx-pa-1938.