Sokolow v. North Ninth Street Building & Loan Ass'n

4 A.2d 430, 134 Pa. Super. 202, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 113
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 19, 1938
DocketAppeal, 97
StatusPublished

This text of 4 A.2d 430 (Sokolow v. North Ninth Street Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Sokolow v. North Ninth Street Building & Loan Ass'n, 4 A.2d 430, 134 Pa. Super. 202, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 113 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This action of assumpsit, which was tried, before a judge without a jury, was brought by David Sokolow, to the use of Morris H. Kean, to recover the sum of $2,500, which, it was alleged, Sokolow had left with the defendant as security for a second mortgage loan made by defendant to one Henry F. Lindner, subject to the conditions specified in a bond for $10,000, executed contemporaneously by Sokolow and Mittin Bros, and delivered to the defendant, which, it was alleged, had been complied with.

The facts are somewhat complicated and will require a rather full exposition in order to be understood.

Sokolow and Mittin Bros, were the owners of a large garage, at Fairhill and Wingohoeking Streets, Philadelphia, which they had agreed to convey to Lindner, subject to a first mortgage of $25,000. Sokolow applied to the defendant building and loan association for a second mortgage loan of $20,000, to be further secured by assignment of 100 shares of stock in said association. The property committee of the association recommended the loan, provided Sokolow deposited $5,000 with the association to be held as collateral until the $20,000 mortgage was reduced to $11,600, and their report was duly approved by the Board of Directors.

However, when the transaction was put through on May 18, 1925, the property was conveyed to Lindner subject to the first mortgage of $25,000, and he executed and delivered to the defendant association a second mortgage for $20,000, secured also by an assignment of 100 shares of stock in the defendant association, for which he had just subscribed. The mortgage called for the payment of $100 per month dues, $100 per month interest, $25 per month premium and fines for nonpayment of the foregoing, and for the production by the mortgagor to the mortgagee on or before October 1 of each and every year of receipts for all taxes and water rents assessed for the current year, and provided that if *205 default should he made in the payment of dues, interest, premiums or fines as above for the space of three months after any payment fell due, or in payment of current taxes and water rents and interest on the prior mortgage and the delivery of receipts for the same to the mortgagee within thirty days after the same were due and payable, the whole principal debt should at the option of the mortgagee become immediately payable and recoverable. The building and loan association drew two checks, one for $15,000, which was endorsed by Lindner and delivered to the vendors, and one for $5,000, which was endorsed and given back to the building and loan association, in return for which it executed and delivered its two notes for $2,500 each, payable seven years after date, Avith interest at 5% per annum, one to the order of David Sokolow and the other to the order of Israel Mittin and Albert Mittin, trading as Mittin Bros. 1 At the same time Sokolow and Mittin Bros, assigned their respective notes to the defendant association to be held as collateral security for the mortgage; and they also executed and delivered to the defendant a collateral bond for $10,000, which recited the giving of the said second mortgage by Lindner and the assignment by them to the defendant of the said two notes — (“aggregating five thousand dollars”) — “as additional security for the faithful performance of all the conditions of said mortgage given by said Henry F. Lindner to the said North Ninth Street Building and Loan Association.” The conditions of this bond were as follows:

“Now the conditions of this obligation is such that if the said Henry F. Lindner, his Heirs and Assigns, shall well and faithfully carry out all of the provisions of the said mortgage until the withdrawal value of the Building and Loan Stock assigned as collateral to secure the payment of said mortgage shall have a value *206 of Five thousand ($5,000) Dollars, then the above obligation to be void or else to be and remain in full force and effect.

“And it is further agreed that if at any time the said Henry F. Lindner, his Heirs and Assigns, shall be in arrears to the said North Ninth Street Building and Loan Association for dues, interest, premiums and fines, for the period of three (8) months, or shall violate any of the provisions of said mortgage given by the said Henry F. Lindner, to the said North Ninth Street Building and Loan Association, then the said North Ninth Street Building and Loan Association shall have the right to immediately apply said Five thousand Dollars in reduction of the aforesaid mortgage, given by the said Henry F. Lindner to the said North Ninth Street Building and Loan Association.”

It is clear that the last quoted agreement relates to the two notes aggregating $5,000, which, in the clause of the bond just before the condition, had been recited as having been assigned by the obligors to the association as additional security for the faithful performance of all the conditions of the mortgage by Lindner.

The notes were given and assigned as a method of effectuating the condition for the deposit of $5,000 as collateral, upon which the second mortgage loan had been granted.

The plaintiff is apparently resting under the impression that this bond provided for the return of these notes to the respective payees when “the withdrawal value of the stock, assigned as collateral to secure the payment of said mortgage shall have a value of five thousand dollars.” But it does not. The bond provides that the obligors’ personal liability of $10,000 on the bond — which also contained a warrant of attorney to confess judgment in that amount — should be void and of no force or effect when the withdrawal value of the building and loan stock, assigned as security for the mortgage, should have a value of $5,000; but, in the *207 clause immediately before, it was recited that tbe notes had been assigned by the obligors as additional security for “the faithful performance of all the conditions” of the mortgage; and consequently they were not returnable until all the conditions of the mortgage had been faithfully performed, except in so far as this may have been affected by the prior action of the association in agreeing to hold the deposit thus given as collateral until the mortgage had been reduced to $11,600, which, if the dues, interest, etc. had been regularly paid, would have been in seven years; and, in the clause immediately after, it gave the defendant association the right to apply the said $5,000, represented by the notes, in reduction of the said mortgage at any time that the said Lindner should be in arrears to the defendant association for dues, interest, premiums and fines for the period of three months, or should violate any of the provisions of said mortgage; in which event the notes would not be returnable at all. Plaintiff has confused the personal liability of the obligors on the bond, with the deposit of the notes aggregating $5,000, which had been assigned as additional security for the performance of all the conditions of the mortgage.

Lindner did not comply with the conditions of his mortgage to the defendant association.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 A.2d 430, 134 Pa. Super. 202, 1939 Pa. Super. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sokolow-v-north-ninth-street-building-loan-assn-pasuperct-1938.