Lestz v. Cochran

34 Pa. D. & C. 522, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 236
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County
DecidedOctober 28, 1938
Docketno. 8
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Pa. D. & C. 522 (Lestz v. Cochran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lancaster County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lestz v. Cochran, 34 Pa. D. & C. 522, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 236 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Atlee, P. J.,

In this bill in equity plaintiff is Joseph Lestz. Defendants are John S. Cochran and six associates, liquidating trustees of certain assets of the Lancaster Trust Company, a closed trust company. Plaintiff relates that on March 30, 1925, together [523]*523with Samuel Lestz and Jacob L. Lestz, partners, trading as Samuel Lestz Bro. & Son, he executed a mortgage with accompanying bond in the amount of $25,000 to the Lancaster Trust Company. The mortgage covered premises located at 317 and 317% North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa. The purchase price for the real estate mortgaged was the sum of $41,000.

On May 28, 1927, Samuel Lestz, one of the partners, died, leaving as the surviving partners Jacob L. Lestz and Joseph Lestz, plaintiff herein. On July 19, 1933, the liquidating trustees, having taken over the assets formerly held by the Lancaster Trust Company, entered judgment on the judgment bond accompanying the mortgage. This was done by virtue of a warrant of attorney to confess judgment contained in the bond. Judgment was entered for the sum of $25,000, together with interest from October 1, 1929, in the Court of Common Pleas of Lam caster County, no. 627, April term, 1933. Thereafter, defendants issued a scire facias sur mortgage on the obligation, and on March 19,1937, a judgment was entered for want of an appearance in favor of defendants herein and inter alios against plaintiff in this bill for $37,454.17. On March 20, 1937, defendant trustees issued a levari facias execution writ. By virtue of this writ the real estate known as 317 and 317% North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa., formerly owned by plaintiff in this bill and his associates as partners, on April 16, 1937, was sold at sheriff’s sale to defendants in this bill for the sum of $314.65: see Execution Docket of the Prothonotary’s Office of Lancaster County, no. 98, April term, 1937. Then plaintiff goes on to aver that the purchase price paid for the property, namely, the sum of $314.65, was grossly disproportionate to the fair market value of the property.

Thereafter, plaintiff in this bill petitioned the Court of Common Pleas of Lancaster County to enter a deficiency judgment under the Act of July 1, 1935, P. L. 503, alleging, inter alia, that the fair market value of the real estate so sold at sheriff’s sale was $35,000. This court discharged [524]*524the rule to show cause why a deficiency judgment should not be found, and entered judgment on the ground that the act of assembly referred to had been declared unconstitutional by the appellate courts of this State. So it appears that there then remained a partnership obligation due to defendants by Samuel Lestz, Jacob L. Lestz, and Joseph Lestz, partners, formerly trading as Samuel Lestz Bro. & Son, in the amount of the face value of the aforementioned judgment, plus costs, namely, $38,103, less the aforesaid purchase price of $314.65, to wit, the sum of '$37,716.35.

•' Then plaintiff goes on to relate that prior to the date when the Secretary of Banking of this State took over the Lancaster Trust Company, plaintiff was individually indebted to the trust company in the sum of approximately $6,800, which indebtedness was secured by a personal individual collateral note of plaintiff in this bill, there being pledged as collateral certain securities described. Thereafter, plaintiff avers that on or about December 1, 1932, the Fulton National Bank of Lancaster took over certain assets of the Lancaster Trust Company and among these assets was the note above mentioned. Thereafter, plaintiff reduced the amount due on the note to the sum of $966. Subsequent to November 2,1936, and prior to the maturity of the last renewal collateral note, the Fulton National Bank retransferred the note to defendants herein, transferring also the collateral security accompanying the note. Thereafter, 20 shares of Texas Corporation stock were sold at the request of plaintiff and from said balance there was realized an amount more than sufficient to pay in full the balance due on the collateral note. Plaintiff has demanded the return of the collateral note and the collateral pledged against it, which return defendants have refused to make. Plaintiff avers that the securities now held by defendant have substantially increased in value and are so increasing, and that thus defendants are wrongfully withholding the collateral of plaintiff, since the individual collateral note given by [525]*525plaintiff has been paid. Reciting the above facts as grounds for equitable relief, plaintiff seeks the issuance of an injunction permanently restraining defendants: '

1. From selling, transferring, assigning, or in any other manner disposing of the listed securities now in their possession, registered personally in the name of Joseph Lestz, plaintiff herein, a description of which securities is more fully itemized in “Exhibit B” attached and made a part of the bill of complaint.

2. From proceeding in any manner against plaintiff personally in the collection of any partnership indebtedness until all remedies against the partnership are exhausted and all partnership assets are fully liquidated.

This court also is asked to enter a decree: (1) Commanding defendants to return to plaintiff the collateral note; (2) commanding defendants to deliver to plaintiff all remaining collateral security; (3) commanding defendants to place a fair market value on the premises sold' under the mortgage foreclosure proceeding and to apply said valuation in pro tanto reduction of the remaining partnership indebtedness due to defendants by the Lestz partnership; (4) commanding defendants to make restitution to plaintiff for all costs and damages sustained by plaintiff by reason of defendants’ refusal to return to plaintiff his collateral security referred to in this bill.

To this pleading defendants have filed an answer in which defendants aver that the principal obligation was the bond and not the mortgage, and that this obligation was a joint and several obligation of all of the obligors bound thereby. Defendants further submit that the sheriff’s sale price of $314.65 for the real estate was conclusive as to the fair market value thereof insofar as the present plaintiff is concerned.

• Defendants justify their refusal to return the collateral note sought by plaintiff for the following reasons: (1) That against plaintiff defendants have the legal status of a purchaser for value of all the stock pledged as collateral; (2) because under the original obligation given to the [526]*526Lancaster Trust Company by plaintiff, defendants have rights which were not lost by the giving of subsequent renewal notes. Defendants have the right to apply the collateral now in their possession to the payment of any obligation due them by plaintiff. Defendants, therefore, purpose to assert this legal right and to appropriate the proceeds of the sale of the stock, herein mentioned, toward the payment of the indebtedness owing by plaintiff to defendants upon the balance of $37,454.17 with interest from March 19, 1937. This amount, defendants aver, greatly exceeds the value of the stock sought to be recovered by plaintiff; (3) because under an attachment ad levari debitum issued by defendants on July 19, 1933, all the interest of plaintiff in the stock sought to be recovered by plaintiff was attached by defendants for liquidation of the judgment herein referred to and entered in the Prothonotary’s Office of Lancaster County to no.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. D. & C. 522, 1938 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lestz-v-cochran-pactcompllancas-1938.