Adam Pekny v. Andrew Hrabosky

161 A. 749, 106 Pa. Super. 393, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 254
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 3, 1932
DocketAppeal 168
StatusPublished

This text of 161 A. 749 (Adam Pekny v. Andrew Hrabosky) 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
Adam Pekny v. Andrew Hrabosky, 161 A. 749, 106 Pa. Super. 393, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 254 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

This action of assumpsit, in which plaintiffs, husband and wife, sought to recover a money judgment *395 under a contract, partly written and partly verbal, providing for an exchange of real estate, originated in the county court of Allegheny County.

The result there was a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for $1,243.24; defendants’ motions for a new trial and for judgment n. o. v. were denied and, upon their petition, the common pleas allowed an appeal. The case was not retried in the common pleas because that court sustained the contention of the defendants, raised at the beginning of the trial in the county court and pressed in the common pleas, that the county court never had jurisdiction of the case. The ground upon which they challenged the jurisdiction was that under the issue “the title to lands or tenements may come in question.” The common pleas entered judgment for the defendants, also husband and wife, “for want of jurisdiction in the county court, without prejudice to bringing an action in a court of competent jurisdiction.” We now have this appeal by plaintiffs from the judgment thus entered in the common pleas.

The evidence taken at the trial in the county court is not before us; it was not brought upon the record of the common pleas by incorporating in, or attaching to, the petition a transcript of it: Robertson v. Kraus, 58 Pa. Superior Ct. 331, 334. However, we do have before us the pleadings in the county court and the charge of the trial judge.

Defendants filed a motion to quash this appeal, substantially, upon the ground that appellants have not complied with our rules in that they have failed to print sufficient portions of the record; but as this is an appeal from the common pleas, which in this case acted as the original appellate court, and as the portions of the record printed are sufficient to enable us to dispose of the question here involved, the motion to quash is overruled.

Before considering the matters involved on this *396 appeal, it may be proper to say tbat defendants also contended tbe county court bad no jurisdiction because tbe subject matter of this case is res judicata by reason of the fact that the county court had previously dismissed, for want of jurisdiction, a former suit involving the same issues. Appellants reply that neither the same issues nor the same parties were involved in the former suit and, as neither side has brought before the common pleas or this court the record of that suit, we cannot consider this matter.

Section 6 (a) of the Act of May 5, 1911, P. L. 198, as amended by section 2 of the Act of April 2, 1913, P. L. 21, 17 PS §626, creating the county court, gives it jurisdiction of “all civil actions wherein only a money judgment is sought to be recovered, and in all actions of replevin in which the sum demanded or the value of the property replevied does not exceed fifteen hundred dollars, except in cases where the title to lands or tenements may come in question.” The question, therefore, is not whether the title to lands did actually come in question at the trial in the county court, but whether it appeared from the pleadings that the title to the lands, therein referred to, may come in question.

Our examination of the pleadings leads us to a conclusion contrary to the one reached by the common pleas. The issues raised thereby may be thus outlined. Plantiffs were the owners of an improved farm in Butler County, containing sixty-five acres and valued at $10,600, upon which they lived; defendants owned a house and lot at No. 1512 Nixon Street, Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, valued at $9000, where they lived. On August 25, 1927, an agreement for the exchange of these properties was entered into by the respective owners, and $20.00 paid by defendants to plaintiffs to bind the bargain, for which the following receipt was given by plaintiffs: “Pittsburgh, Pa., *397 August 25, 1927. Beceived from Andrew Hrabosky twenty dollars ($20.00) deposit on account' of farm in Butler County, 65 acres and 8 room house and all machinery and cattle and stock on that farm and exchange for house of Nixon Street 1512. Farm cost $10,600, and house cost $9,000. My hand and seal. Adam Pekny (seal), Anna Pekny (seal).” The following day the real estate broker negotiating the exchange took the parties to the office of an attorney in Butler where a formal agreement was prepared and executed by plaintiffs and defendants. By this agreement plaintiffs covenanted to convey to defendants, on or before September 1, 1927, by deed of general warranty, “clear of all encumbrances except as hereinafter mentioned,” their farm in Butler County, and defendants covenanted to convey, in the same way, their house and lot in Pittsburgh. It was expressly provided in the agreement that the conveyance of plaintiff’s farm was to be made subject to certain “liens, encumbrances and debts” which defendants assumed and agreed to pay. The liens and debts were thus specified in the agreement: “Mortgage in favor of the Federal Land Bank of Baltimore for three thousand ($3000.00) dollars. Mortgage in favor of Ella S. Niece for eight hundred ($800.00) dollars. Three hundred seven ($307.00) dollars to Mr. Walter Wood, being note given for 2 horses. Two hundred thirty-five ($235.00) dollars for binder to Mr. Sleer. One hundred fifty ($150.00) dollars for farm machinery to Mr. Wick. One hundred eighty-five ($185.00) dollars for machinery for Mr. Charlie Johnston. Judgment note in favor of George Varnum for one hundred fifty-six ($156.00) dollars, making the total of four thousand eight hundred thirty-three ($4833.00) dollars.” ___

The agreement also recited that the house and lot of defendants was subject to a mortgage in favor of *398 Safe Investment, Building and Loan Association, in the sum of $2,850. There are certain averments and denials in the pleadings relative to the adjustment of the mortgage in favor of the Federal Land Bank of Baltimore but for present purposes we may say that the principal due thereon was $2,850. Plaintiffs ’ averments are to the effect that although defendants agreed, in the written agreement for the exchange of the properties, to pay the above mentioned items, aggregating $4,833, they failed and refused to pay some of them and plaintiffs, by reason of such failure, were required to pay specified items aggregating $1,039.05. After giving credit for the hand money of $20, plaintiffs brought this suit to recover $1,029.05 with interest.

As the equity in defendants’ property was $6,150, and the amount of the debts which plaintiffs aver defendants were to pay, ($4,833.) added thereto would make a total of $10,983, or $383 in excess of the value of plaintiffs ’ farm, it may be proper to say that counsel for plaintiffs explain in their brief that there was an oral agreement to the effect that this excess of $383 was to be adjusted by plaintiffs paying to defendants $244 in cash and delivering to them an engine and certain household utensils to the value of $139.00.

On the other hand, defendants’ averments were to the effect that the written agreement was not binding upon them because, being unable to read English, the real estate agent for plaintiffs fraudulently induced them to execute the agreement by misrepresenting its contents to them.

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Related

Dobkin v. Landsberg
116 A. 814 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1922)
Robertson v. Kraus
58 Pa. Super. 331 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 A. 749, 106 Pa. Super. 393, 1932 Pa. Super. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adam-pekny-v-andrew-hrabosky-pasuperct-1932.