Nevin, Exrx. v. Bk. of Elizabeth

174 A. 618, 115 Pa. Super. 92, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 395
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 3, 1934
DocketAppeal 10
StatusPublished

This text of 174 A. 618 (Nevin, Exrx. v. Bk. of Elizabeth) 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
Nevin, Exrx. v. Bk. of Elizabeth, 174 A. 618, 115 Pa. Super. 92, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 395 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The action below was assumpsit by James M. Nevin, Esq.,, a member of. the bar of Allegheny County, against the State Bank of Elizabeth, a former client, to recover $1,338.49 for professional services; the bank defended against the entire amount of the claim.and set up a counter-claim against plaintiff in the sum of $519.68, for which amount it asked a certificate. The trial resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,397.74, subsequently reduced by stipulation to $1,088.39; defendant’s motion for a new trial was denied and it now appeals from the judgment entered upon the verdict.

The death of plaintiff occurred subsequent to the trial and his executrix, Norma Nevin, was substituted as plaintiff.

The professional services for which compensation was claimed were rendered in connection with the foreclosure by plaintiff of two mortgages held by the bank; one was against the property of Willard H. Weigel and in the penal sum of $28,000; the other upon a property of William E. Carothers and Ella May Carothers, his wife, for the penal sum of $30,000; the real estate covered by each was bid in at the sheriff’s sale by plaintiff, for the bank, for costs and taxes. In each case plaintiff entered judgment upon the bond secured by the mortgage and issued the necessary writs.

At the time of the sale of the Weigel property the real debt amounted approximately to $15,486 and in *95 his original statement plaintiff claimed an attorney’s commission of five per cent upon this amount, or $774.33; by amendment to the statement, this amount was claimed as “a fair and reasonable compensation for tbe services rendered.” The real debt on the Carothers mortgage was $11,183 and, in like manner, plaintiff claimed $559.16 for its foreclosure. An additional item of $5, for interest upon costs alleged to have been advanced, need not be taken into consideration. It will be conducive to clearness to consider separately the circumstances surrounding each of these foreclosures.

1. With respect to the Weigel foreclosure, it appears of record that plaintiff was both president of the defendant bank and its solicitor when the proceedings were conducted. The bank defended against the payment of his claim of $774.33, for the professional services rendered by him in connection with this foreclosure upon two grounds:

(a) It was averred in the bank’s amended answer that on February 11, 1927, more than a year before these proceedings, plaintiff’s salary, as president and attorney, had been increased from $600 to $2,500, per annum, under an oral agreement between him and the bank that in consideration of this increased salary he would render, without further compensation, the professional services incident to the collection of the various loans of the bank; and that plaintiff was therefore not entitled to any compensation, in addition to his salary, for his services in connection with this foreclosure.

(b) The further defense was made that Weigel, the mortgagor, upon several occasions prior to the institution of the foreclosure proceedings made the proposition to plaintiff that he would deed the property covered by the mortgage to the bank; that plaintiff, *96 “in violation of his duty to his client in the premises,” rejected this offer and proceeded with the sheriff’s sale in order to be in a position to claim his attorney’s commission; and that the bank was compelled to expend the sum of $100.64, as costs of the foreclosure proceedings, although the object of the sale could have been attained by the acceptance of Weigel’s offer. These costs were the first item in the counter-claim. Plaintiff’s reply was that the property was also encumbered by a judgment in favor of a third party for more than $1,500, which it was necessary to divest by a sheriff’s sale in order to give the bank a clear title. At the trial it was contended by the bank that plaintiff had no knowledge of the existence of this judgment when he refused the offer of the mortgagor and failed to communicate it to his client.

The jury separated its verdict into two items; upon this Weigel item it awarded the plaintiff the entire amount of his claim, i.e. $774.33 with interest from March 15, 1928, ($174.22) or a total of $948.55.

There was testimony both ways on the issues of fact connected with this foreclosure, viz., whether the increased salary of plaintiff covered such services as were here rendered, and whether Weigel had distinctly offered to make a deed to the bank in order to avoid the foreclosure. In our opinion, the testimony justified the learned trial judge, Soppel, J., in submitting those issues to the jury; the verdict demonstrates that they were resolved in favor of the plaintiff. As there was evidence sufficient, if believed, to sustain the finding, the motion for a new trial was properly denied as to this item. This also disposes of the item of $100.64 in the bank’s counter-claim. We here state however that, for reasons hereinafter detailed, this amount of $948.55 is subject, in our opinion, to a deduction in favor of the defendant bank in the sum of $490.

*97 2. We turn now to the item of $559.16 claimed by plaintiff for professional services in foreclosing tbe mortgage owned by the bank upon a portion of tbe Carotbers real estate. For reasons already given, we eliminate tbe contention of the bank tbat the increase in plaintiff’s salary was intended to cover these services. An additional defense, however, was interposed by tbe bank to tbe payment of this particular item. That defense was, in brief, tbat plaintiff, in violation of bis professional obligations as attorney for the bank in this proceeding (be was no longer its president), so manipulated, for bis personal advantage, tbe item for taxes involved in this sheriff’s sale tbat bis client was obliged to pay out $419.04 more than it should have been required, or was legally liable, to pay. This was tbe second item in its counter-claim.

There was evidence upon tbe part of tbe defendant of these facts. In addition to tbe Carotbers real estate upon which tbe bank held a mortgage, they owned five other properties in tbe same township; upon three of these, plaintiff bad liens of bis own and subsequently instituted foreclosure proceedings which resulted in tbe acquisition by him of these properties.

When tbe sheriff’s office was preparing for tbe sale of tbat portion of tbe Carotbers real estate covered by tbe bank’s mortgage and the question of the amount of taxes to be included in the calculation of the amount which would have to be bid to cover taxes and costs arose, plaintiff not only failed to secure a proper allocation of the taxes as between tbe real estate covered by the bank’s mortgage and tbe other real estate of tbe mortgagors, but directed the tax collector of tbe township “to turn in all taxes against tbe Carotbers property.” As a result, tbe total amount of taxes included in tbe calculation was $1,249.96. Only $830.92 of this amonnt was assessed against tbe property cov *98 ered by the bank's mortgage and then np for sale. The difference of $419.04 represented taxes assessed against other property of the Carothers, some of which was subsequently purchased by the plaintiff on his own foreclosure proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
174 A. 618, 115 Pa. Super. 92, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nevin-exrx-v-bk-of-elizabeth-pasuperct-1934.