Grand Council of Pennsylvania Royal Arcanum v. Cornelius
Grand Council of Pennsylvania Royal Arcanum v. Cornelius
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The undisputed facts upon which a verdict was directed for the plaintiff were these: Shortly before his death Charles E.
At the trial the defendant claimed the right to retain the bonds until paid the amount which she had expended in payment of the note for which they were pledged. This claim was based on the proposition, that upon the death of Cornelius his estate became a trust fund for distribution among his creditors, whose rights became fixed at the instant of the death of their debtor, and that as the estate is insolvent, equity, m order to preserve the rights of the creditors, will treat the debt as still existing and subrogate the defendant to the same rights the bank had in regard to the bonds.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Debtor and creditor—Payment. Payment of a debt by the real debtor is prima facie an extinguishment of it. Equity—Subrogation—Payment. There can be no right of subrogation in one whose duty it is to' pay, or in one claiming under him against one who is secondarily liable, or not liable at all. In such a case payment is extinguishment; nor will subrogation ever be enforced where the equities are equal, or the rights not clear, nor to the prejudice of the legal or equitable rights of others. A person having bonds of another in his possession fraudulently pledged the bonds to a bank as collateral security for the payment of one of three notes which he had given to the bank. He subsequently died. His executrix offered to buy the note with which the bonds were pledged, but the bank refused to sell it. She then paid the bank the amount of all of the three notes with money which she had collected as executrix, and received all the collaterals. The notes were marked “paid.” The collateral pledged with each note was more than sufficient to secure its payment, and the executrix was not required to pay the third note in order to preserve the securities of the estate which were pledged with the other two notes.' Held {1) that the executrix was not entitled to retain the bonds wrongfully pledged until she was paid the amount which she had expended in payment of the note for which they were pledged; (2) that no right of subrogation arose either from the equity of contribution, or from the equity of exoneration; (3) that the deceased was not only the principal, but the only debtor, and no payment by him, or for him, or in his interest, or that of his estate, could give rise to any claim to the bonds on the part of a person making such payment.