Schalck v. Quirk

1 Foster 236
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Foster 236 (Schalck v. Quirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schalck v. Quirk, 1 Foster 236 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Opinion delivered by

Walker, J.

This was a scire facias on a mortgage dated 2 6 Aug., 1871, given by Thomas Quirk and Alicia his wife, in right of the said Alicia to Adolph W. Schalck of two lots of ground and buildings thereon, situate in Pottsville, Schuylkill county. The mortgage with the accompanying bond was for fifteen hundred dollars, and was made payable on the 26th August, 1872. The mortgage contained a clause that in case of default of payment when due, a writ of scire facias might be forthwith sued out and the mortgagee proceed to recover the principal and interest of the mortgage together with ten per cent, per annum of the amount due as commissions for collecting. The bond contains a similar clause and has a warrant of attorney attached, to confess judgment, and by virtue thereof [237]*237judgment was entered in this court, 28 August, 1871, to -September term 1871, No. 623.

On the 31st August, 1872, five days after the mortgage fell due by reason of default, Mr. Schalck issued his scire facias, and in default of an affidavit of defence, took judgment, on the 21 October 1872, for $1764.18, being for the principal of the mortgage with the interest, and ten per cent, upon the aggregate amount.

The ten per cent, for collecting amounting to $160.38, and it is to this last item that the judgment is asked to be opened, under the rule of the 23d December 1872, obtained by Mrs. Quirk, the defendant.

The facts as appear from the depositions taken, are, that at the execution of this mortgage, Mrs. Alicia R. Quirk was a married woman, and owned in her own right the property mortgaged to Mr. Schalck, to obtain a loan of money for her husband and John McBarron, her father. That she mortgaged her property to secure the payment of this money, and at the time of the execution of it, she swears she knew nothing of the ten per cent, collection, that she was not informed of the fact and did not read the mortgage. Since that time her husband, Thomas Quirk, died.

Under this state of facts, the questions presented are:

1st. Whether the claim of ten per cent, for collection is to be regarded' as a penalty, or otherwise ?

2d. Whether her position as surety for her husband and father, required a full statement of all material facts to make valid the contract, and to enforce it in a court of law.

3d. And whether her coverture is not a bar to the recovery of money upon such contract.

1st. Is the claim often per cent, in the nature of a penalty?

Under the head of “ penalties and forfeitures, 2 Story Equity, section 1301,” it is laid down that originally in all cases of this sort there was no remedy at law, and the only relief which could be obtained was exclusively sought in courts of equity.

“The true foundations of the relief in equity in all these cases is, that as the penalty is designed as a security, if the party obtains his money or his damages, he gets all that he expected and all that in justice he is entitled to, and notwithstanding the objections sometimes urged against it, this secures a sufficient foundation for the jurisdiction.”

In rpáson, in conscience, in natural equity there is no ground to say because a 'man has stipulated for a penalty in case of his omission to do a particular act (the real object of the parties being the performance of the act), that if he omits to do the act, he shall suffer an enormous loss, wholly disproportionate to the injury to the other party.”

If it be said that it is his own folly to have such a stipulation, it may equally well be said that the folly of one man cannot authorize gross oppression on the other side.

The law as a securer would be unworthy of the name, if it did not to [238]*238some extent provide the means of preventing the mischief of improvidence, rashness, blind confidence, and. credulety on one side, and skill, avarice, cunning and gross violation of the principles of morals and conscience on the other.

When a penalty or forfeiture is designed merely as a security to enforce the principal obligation, it is as much against conscience to allow any party to pervert to a different and oppressive purpose, as it would to allow him to substitute another for the principal obligation.

The whole system of equity jurisprudence proceeds upon the ground, that a party having a legal right shall not be permitted to avail himself of it for the purposes of injustice, or fraud, or oppression or harsh and vindictive injury. 2 Story Eq. 547.

“When a large sum is agreed to be paid, upon the non-payment of a smaller; or, the non-performance of a duty, the damages resulting from which may be ascertained with reasonable certainty, and which is much less than the sum expressed, that sum will be penalty. Watts v. Sheppard, 2 Ala. 425.

So when a party to a contract stipulates to perform one or more things, and in the event of non-performance of any or all of them, agrees to pay a certain sum, the sum agreed to be paid will be regarded as a penalty, and not as liquidated damages. Owens v. Hodges, 1 McMullen 106.

In the case of a common bond, the penalty is double the amount of the debt due, and which is but the security for the payment of unliquidated damages, those damages being merely the debt interest and costs.

While this no doubt is the law relative to penalties in bonds, yet the supreme court of this state in the case of Robinson v. Loomis, 1 P. F. Smith 78, have decided that a stipulation in a mortgage for five per cent, attorney collection fees is not a penalty, but an agreed compensation to the mortgagee for expenses incurred by the default of the mortgagor.

In that case, though, there was no evidence of the actual expenses of the plaintiff in the suit, yet there were no doubt some expenses, and the court left .the contract of the parties stand, on the ground that it was a fair compensation to cover the expenses which the mortgagee had sustained in bringing suit. In this case the amount is double, and the plaintiff has paid nothing for professional services, being himself a lawyer, and having commenced suit himself. Of course there must be some line drawn between penalties and liquidated damages, and as the supreme court have ruled .that the five per cent, attorney fees are not a penalty, we cannot say that it is in this case, especially as it does not determine the result of this application.

2. As a surety all material facts should be disclosed to her.

The testimony in this case discloses the fact that the mortgage was given by Mrs. Quirk to secure the payment of money borrowed for her husband 'and father. .This would undoubtedly make her a surety, ‘for [239]*239when a wife joins with her husband in granting a mortgage upon her estate for the debt of her husband, she stands as a surety.” Miner v. Graham, 12 Harris 495. Sheidle v. Weishlee, 4 Harris, 134.

As a general rule suppressio veri is a just cause for setting aside contracts in equity. Brightly’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 62.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Foster 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schalck-v-quirk-pactcomplschuyl-1873.