Williard v. Millersburg Trust Co.

48 Pa. D. & C.2d 149, 1969 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 93
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedAugust 29, 1969
Docketno. 2777
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 Pa. D. & C.2d 149 (Williard v. Millersburg Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williard v. Millersburg Trust Co., 48 Pa. D. & C.2d 149, 1969 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 93 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

BOWMAN, J.,

By complaint in equity, plaintiff, the surviving tenant by the entireties, seeks to have set aside and cancelled a bond and mortgage for the reason that her signature to these documents is a forgery. By way of new matter and counterclaim, defendant seeks to make plaintiff responsible for that portion of the proceeds of the mortgage loan which was used to discharge pre-existing debts of plaintiff and her late husband which were liens against the mortgaged real estate at the time of the mortgage loan in question.

A long delay occurred between the time the case was at issue on the pleadings and a request made for hearing. The hearing has now been held. From the admitted facts and the hearing record it develops that [150]*150there is but one legal issue to be resolved. Is the doctrine of unjust enrichment applicable under the facts of this case so as to charge plaintiff with responsibility for said pre-existing debts which were discharged out of the proceeds of the mortgage loan in question?

From the admitted facts and the record we make the following

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff, Charlene Savage Williard, formerly Charlene Savage, is the widow of Joseph P. Savage who died October 6,1965. She has since remarried.

2. Defendant, MiUersburg Trust Company, is a Pennsylvania banking corporation with its principal office in MiUersburg, Pa.

3. On March 29, 1963, and for many years prior thereto, plaintiff and her late husband were record owners of property known and numbered as 133 East Market Street, Williamstown, Pa.

4. On that date, a bond and mortgage naming Joseph P. Savage and Charlene Savage, his wife, as obligors and mortgagors and MiUersburg Trust Company as obligee and mortgagee to evidence and secure a loan of $12,000 was delivered to the bank; the mortgage being recorded on April 2, 1963, in the Recorder’s Office of Dauphin County in mortgage book T, vol. 42, p. 274.

5. Plaintiff did not affix her signature to either of said documents nor had she authorized her late husband or any other person to do so.

6. The aforesaid mortgage is a lien of record against premises 133 East Main Street, Williamstown, Pa., of which plaintiff is now the sole owner as surviving tenant by the entireties.

7. The signature of the late Joseph P. Savage and the purported signature of plaintiff to said documents were witnessed by an official of defendant who has no recollection of the transaction at the present time.

8. From the proceeds of the mortgage loan in [151]*151question of $12,000, defendant disbursed the sum of $11,178.15 by check payable to Miners National Bank of Pottsville; $32.50 by check payable to an attorney; and $789.35 by credit entry in favor of a joint checking account of plaintiff and her late husband in defendant bank, which account had been dormant for a number of years.

9. The Miners National Bank of Pottsville applied the proceeds of the check payable to it, $11,178.15, in discharge of the following obligations owned by it and all of which were hens of record against the identified real estate as of April 2,1963:

(a) balance of principal and accrued interest of $2,489.64 on a genuine note of plaintiff and her late husband dated February 8, 1962, and reduced to judgment;

(b) balance of principal and accrued interest of $622.94 on a genuine note of plaintiff and her late husband dated July 1,1959 and reduced to judgment; and

(c) balance of principal and accrued interest of $8,065.57 on loan secured by mortgage upon the identified premises and against plaintiff and her late husband dated May 29, 1959, and on loan evidenced by note reduced to judgment against plaintiff and her late husband dated April 2, 1962, as to which documents plaintiff also claims she did not affix her signature nor authorize any person to do so on her behalf.

10. No notice of the mortgage loan in question being negotiated nor of the manner of the disbursement of the loan proceeds was given to plaintiff, nor did she become aware of it until shortly before the death of her husband while attending her husband in a Philadelphia hospital. At that time, on being advised by defendant that an installment was due on a mortgage loan, she arranged for payment thereof through a relative, even though she knew nothing of it.

[152]*15211. After her late husband’s death, plaintiff paid one installment on the mortgage loan in question before consulting an attorney.

12. Prior to his death, the late husband of plaintiff drew two checks on the aforesaid joint checking account in defendant bank in the sum of $95.76 to a heating oil company and in the sum of $172.76 to a plumbing firm for past services or supplies afforded plaintiff and her late husband.

13. None of the proceeds of the mortgage loan in question, except possibly as noted immediately above, was used to improve the premises in question or otherwise directly benefit said real estate.

DISCUSSION

As previously noted, defendant concedes that plaintiff’s signatures to the bond and mortgage in question are forgeries. It also recognizes that these documents must be declared illegal and void as to plaintiff and cancelled as prayed for by plaintiff. It urges, however, that under applicable principles of the doctrine of unjust enrichment the real estate in question should be subjected to an equitable lien in its favor for $3,381.10, being that portion of the proceeds of the mortgage loan used to discharge valid pre-existing debts of plaintiff and her late husband, or used for their mutual benefit.

Defendant relies upon the Restatement, Restitution, and a number of our appellate court decisions which adopted and followed the restatement under their facts. Plaintiff asserts that our appellate courts have never accepted the broadest possible application of the restatement, particularly where one who seeks application of the doctrine of unjust enrichment is a volunteer or acts negligently with respect to the transaction out of which the application of the doctrine is sought.

[153]*153There is no question in the present case that defendant bank in utilizing two common practices incident to settlement of a mortgage loan transaction opened the door for its present predicament that good practice would surely have kept closed. In not requiring the presence of plaintiff at settlement and in not disbursing the loan proceeds to the debtors or requiring them to formally acknowledge some other distribution, defendant bank encouraged the deceased husband’s fraud upon it and was guilty of negligent practices as to plaintiff.

It is equally clear, however, to the extent that the proceeds of the mortgage loan were used to discharge admittedly valid pre-existing debts of plaintiff and her late husband which were liens upon the real estate in question, plaintiff was materially benefited.1 Absent the mortgage transaction in question, upon the death of her husband, she would have remained liable for these debts and the real estate would have continued to be subject to their terms as security for payment.

Keeping in mind that we are dealing with an equitable principle, should plaintiff, under these circumstances, be made responsible to defendant for these discharged prior obligations which total $3,112.58?

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Bluebook (online)
48 Pa. D. & C.2d 149, 1969 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williard-v-millersburg-trust-co-pactcompldauphi-1969.