Opinion by
Porter, J.,The plaintiff brought this action upon a promissory note and under an agreement of the parties at the trial the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $617.54, the question being reserved, “Whether or not under the evidence in this cause the defendant is entitled to be credited on the note in suit with the whole or any part of the sum of $515.95, being the one-half of the amount received by the plaintiff from the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company under a release dated February 19th, 1906, with leave to the court to make the proper credit, if any, and enter judgment accordingly.” The learned judge of the court below held that the defendant was entitled to credit for the said sum of $515.95 and accordingly entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $36.50; from which judgment the plaintiff appeals.
The complicated facts and numerous written contracts out of which the question here presented arises are stated at length in the opinion of this court in Tabor Manufacturing Co. v. Lovell, 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 177, a former appeal in this same proceeding, and it is not necessary that they should be here repeated. We there held that under the agreements which were set forth in the affidavit of defense the defendant was entitled to have credit upon this note for one-half of the $1,031.91 which the Mechanics’ Iron Foundry Company had, on February 19, 1906, paid to the plaintiff, and said, that, whether the plaintiff was entitled to credit for one-half of this entire amount and also for the sum of $377.37 for which the plaintiff had already been allowed a credit was a matter which must be determined at the trial. All of the facts which the defendant had set forth in his affidavit of defense were established by uncontradicted testimony at the trial, or formally admitted by the plaintiff to be true, and no good *595reason has been presented for departing from the conclusion at which we arrived in the former appeal; that the sum of $1,031.91 paid by the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company to the plaintiff was in effect, so far as this defendant was concerned, a payment upon the indebtedness of Storm & Company to the plaintiff, and the defendant was entitled to have one-half that amount credited upon the note in suit. Whether he was also entitled to have the credit of $377.37 is under the evidence an entirely different question.
Under the covenants of the agreement, dated July 27, 1905, between the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company, George R. Allen, and the Tabor Manufacturing Company, the parties agreed to pool their issues in the endeavor to collect their several claims against Storm & Company, and one of the provisions of that agreement was that in case the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company foreclosed a mortgage which it held upon certain machinery owned by Storm & Company it would divide the proceeds, after deducting expenses, between the several parties in proportion to the balance then remaining of their several demands. This did not operate as an assignment of the mortgage, the foundry company simply became obliged to account for the proceeds of the sale under the mortgage. This agreement was approved of in writing by this defendant and Storm & Company. The parties to the agreement subsequently concluded that it was advisable for their protection that the mortgage should be foreclosed-. The mortgage was upon machinery which was located on the premises of, and in the possession of, the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company, in Boston, Massachusetts, and was duly recorded. The mortgage' contained a provision that the mortgagee, upon any default, might sell the property after giving ten days’ notice; “And out of the money arising from such sale the grantee or his representatives shall be entitled to retain all sums then secured by this mortgage, whether then or thereafter payable, .... or to discharge any claims or liens of third persons affecting the same.” Notice having been given the property was sold under this mortgage on December 5, 1905, and was bought in by the Mechanics Iron *596Foundry Company for $2,750.00. The expense of the sale under the mortgage was $105.51, leaving the net proceeds $2,644.49. The same day that the sale was made, but prior thereto, an agreement was entered into between this plaintiff, George R. Allen and the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company, under the provisions of which it was agreed that if at the sale under the mortgage the property was sold to the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company the foundry company would continue to operate the plant and after deducting, as the cost of manufacture, certain specified rates per pound for castings from the money actually received from time to time upon the sale of said castings, the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company would pay an amount equal to one-third of the balance to the said Allen and an amount equal to one-third of the balance to the Tabor Manufacturing Company, "in liquidation of the indebtedness now due from the said Storm & Company, and in settlement of the interest of said George R. Allen, and the said Tabor Manufacturing Company, in the property covered by said mortgage, until the said George R. Allen and the said Tabor Manufacturing Company shall have been paid in full, at which time all rights of the said George R. Allen and the said Tabor Manufacturing Company to the property covered by the said mortgage and agreement of July 27, 1905, and under this agreement, shall cease.” The purchase of the property at the sale, by the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company, was made in pursuance of this agreement. Had it not been for the agreement of December 5, 1905, the foundry company would have been required, under the provisions of the agreement of July 27, 1905, to account to the plaintiff company and to Allen for their' proportions of the net proceeds of the sale, namely $2,644.49; of which the- Tabor Manufacturing Company would have been entitled to receive $782.16. The agreement of December 5, 1905, modified the contract of July 27th, of the same year, and relieved the foundry company from accounting and paying to the other parties in this manner. The agreement of December 5, and the sale in pursuance thereof, changed the right of the plaintiff company from that of calling upon the foundry company *597to account for the proceeds of the sale of the machinery to that of being entitled to receive one-third of the excess of the amount of the sales of the castings, resulting from the future operation of the factory, over the cost of manufacturing those castings at a fixed price. The effect of this was that at the time of the sale the plaintiff company was not a mortgagee, nor was it a purchaser at the sale; the amount for which the property sold at the sale' was totally immaterial to this plaintiff. The Mechanics Iron Foundry Company was not obliged to pay to the Tabor Manufacturing Company, as its share of the proceeds of the sale, the sum of $782.16; nor is there any evidence in this case which would justify a finding that it did actually make such payment. True it is that the .plaintiff company subsequently gave credit to the defendant for $377.37, which sum was said to be the one-half of the amount of the share of the plaintiff in the fund resulting from the sale, the slight discrepancy in the amount is probably to be accounted for by some expense not referred to in the testimony. But this was done upon the theory of the plaintiff that, because the interest of Storm & Company, the mortgagors, was divested by the sale, the right of the defendant to .have credited upon this note any part of the money which the plaintiff subsequently received under the various agreements with regard to the property, ceased. The plaintiff contended that the defendant was entitled to credit for one-half of the share of the plaintiff in the fund resulting from the sale under the mortgage, if that fund had been distributed under the agreement of July 27, 1905, but that the defendant was not entitled to credit for one-half of any amount which the plaintiff received under the provisions of the contract of December 5, 1905. The plaintiff upon this theory conceded that the defendant was entitled to credit for $377.37, and for that amount the defendant did receive credit in the verdict which was rendered by the jury.
We are of opinion that the defendant was entitled to credit for one-half of all that the plaintiff received under the several agreements down to the final release of February 19, 1906. There is no dispute under the evidence as to the amounts *598which were received down to December 5, 1905. The defendant proved that the plaintiff had received $1,031.91, on February 19, 1906, the one-half of which is $515.95. The defendant did not prove that the Mechanics Iron Foundry Company had actually paid to the plaintiff company the sum of $782.16, as its share of the proceeds of the sale under the mortgage. The only sum, therefore, received by the plaintiff under the provisions of the contract of December 5, 1905, for one-half of which the defendant was entitled to credit, was the item of $1,031.91. The defendant’s evidence entitled him to credit for the entire sum of $515.95. The plaintiff contended that the defendant was only entitled to credit for $377.37, out of the funds received after the sale, and for the amount thus conceded the defendant has credit in the verdict. It follows that instead of reducing the verdict by $515.95, with interest from February 19, 1906, the court should have reduced the verdict by the amount of $138.58 with interest from said date. The verdict was rendered on April 8, 1908. The amount of the additional credit to which the defendant was entitled, with interest to April 8, 1908, is $156.36, which deducted from the amount of the verdict leaves $461.18.
The judgment is modified and judgment is now entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $461.18, with interest from April 8, 1908, and costs.