Lemington B. & L. Ass'n v. Weddell

174 A. 673, 115 Pa. Super. 114, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 8, 1934
DocketAppeal 205
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 174 A. 673 (Lemington B. & L. Ass'n v. Weddell) 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
Lemington B. & L. Ass'n v. Weddell, 174 A. 673, 115 Pa. Super. 114, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Appellant, a member of the bar of Allegheny County and solicitor for Lemington Building and Loan Association (petitioner below and appellee herein) from April, 1919, to February, 1933, has appealed from an order of the court, of which he is an officer, making absolute a rule upon him to show cause why certain moneys, admittedly received by him as such solicitor, should not be paid over to the association.

The proceeding was instituted by a petition for a rule under Section 28 of the Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 784, (17 PS §2046), “relating to the jurisdiction and power of courts.” This section provides, inter alia, that the several courts referred to in the act shall have power “to make rules upon attorneys for the *116 payment of money and the delivery of deeds and other papers in their hands, belonging to their clients, and in every such case to enforce obedience to such rules by attachment.”

The petition, after averring the employment of appellant and that he was authorized, inter alia, “to attend to the foreclosure of all properties upon which [the association] held mortgages” in default, charged that appellant had received three separate sums of money (aggregating $959.71) belonging to petitioner and which he was in duty bound to pay over to it.

The largest item was one for $720.71, which amount, it was averred, had been placed in the hands of appellant by the association on' October 10, 1932, for the specific purpose of turning it over to the sheriff of Allegheny County in payment of the bid made by. appellant for the association at a sheriff’s sale of a property (referred to as the Johnson property) .upon which it had foreclosed a mortgage. The bid was the amount of the costs and taxes. In this connection, it was charged that, although demand has been made upon appellant to pay the designated amount to the sheriff in completion of the transaction and so that petitioner might obtain its deed, that demand has not been complied with. In the next place, it was alleged that the sheriff of Allegheny County on November 15, 1932, delivered to appellant his check covering, inter alia, a refund of $75, advanced by the association, through appellant, to the sheriff for advertising costs in connection with the foreclosure sale of the Davis property.

The third item covered by the petition was one for $164, being the aggregate of certain premiums alleged to have been collected by appellant, as solicitor for the association, upon six mortgage loans made between April, 1930, and June, 1932. The prayer of the petition was for a rule upon appellant to show cause *117 why he should not pay over to his client the aggregate sum of $959.71.

In the answer filed by appellant, the receipt by him, in his capacity as solicitor for the association, of the three above mentioned sums of money, was not denied.

With respect to the item of $720.71, it was averred that the arrangement between the association and appellant was that he should hold this money until such time as the association secured a purchaser for the Johnson property; that the association subsequently requested that the money be returned to it; and that appellant “paid the said money to the [association] by applying the said amount to the credit of the said [association] on the indebtedness of the [association] to [appellant] for professional services rendered to the said Lemington Building and Loan Association, as shown by the bill of the amount of said services.” A copy of the bill was attached as an exhibit to the answer.

As to the item of $75, refunded by the sheriff, it was averred by appellant that he “repaid” this amount to the association by likewise applying it “to the credit of the [association]” upon its alleged indebtedness to him. The same defense was made as to the item of $164 — that it was credited upon the association’s alleged indebtedness.

In conclusion, appellant contended that as the only matter involved was a dispute between his client and himself over their accounts, he was entitled to go to a jury. It is clear from the answer and an examination of the copy of appellant’s account against his client that his sole defense to the charges made against him in the petition is based upon the right of an attorney to deduct, under proper circumstances, just compensation for his services out of moneys in his hands belonging to his client. Under the issues thus framed it because the duty of the court below to make *118 a careful investigation. The question of the good faith of appellant in applying the moneys in question to his own use necessarily arose and became vitally important.

An examination of the exhibit attached to the answer shows that the controversy relates to the matter of appellant’s compensation for foreclosing six mortgages held by the association. The properties, the dates of foreclosure, and the amounts claimed by appellant may be thus stated:

Davis, September 12, 1932, 5% on face of

judgment ............................. $ 97.65

Johnson, September 17,1932, “ 227.58

Sipe, September 12, 1932, “ 280.37

Johnson (No. 2), November 7,1932, “ 201.71

Hollibaugh, November 7, 1932, 272.75

Wallace, February 6, 1933, “ 96.48

Total ............................... $1,176.54

As against the above charges he allowed credit to the association for an item of $175, received by him from it as fees, and then gave it credit for the three items referred to in the petition as aggregating $959.71, — making total credits of $1,134.71, as against charges totalling $1,176.54, and showing an apparent balance due him as of March 1, 1933, of $41.83.

In the taking of the depositions a question of veracity developed between appellant and the officers of the association with respect to the terms of a verbal agreement concerning the fees to be paid him for his professional services in foreclosing these mortgages, and with relation to his contention that the $720.71 was not to be paid to the sheriff but was 'to remain in his hands until a purchaser should fee secured for the Johnson property.

Ora C. Dixon, president of the association, denied that such arrangement had ever been made and testi *119 fied as follows with reference to appellant’s attempted explanation of the delay in obtaining the sheriff’s deed:

“A. When I first spoke to him about it he said they didn’t have the deed yet, and later, on when I spoke to him he said he had the deed but had left it on the desk in his office. Later on he said he had the deed, he had to return it, it was not properly made out, some mistake in the location of it. Q. Did you ever receive a deed at all for this property? A. No, we never have yet.”

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40 Pa. D. & C. 706 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1941)
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190 A. 398 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 673, 115 Pa. Super. 114, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemington-b-l-assn-v-weddell-pasuperct-1934.