Bacon Estate

45 Pa. D. & C.2d 733, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 272
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Bucks County
DecidedFebruary 1, 1968
Docketno. 39409
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Pa. D. & C.2d 733 (Bacon Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bacon Estate, 45 Pa. D. & C.2d 733, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 272 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

Satterthwaite, P. J.,

The first and final account of Ruth E. Bacon, administratrix of the estate of said decedent, was presented to the court [734]*734for audit, confirmation and distribution of ascertained balances on September 5, 1967, as advertised according to law. . . .

At audit, two unpaid claims of creditors in decedent’s lifetime were presented. One of these, a loan to decedent in the amount of $1,000 by one Jennie Donachie, was duly proven by a written memorandum and is not challenged by any one in these proceedings. Accountant has not paid the same solely because funds in her hands for distribution as above noted would be insufficient to pay that claim in full, if the second claim, that of L. Dubrow & Sons, Inc. [Dubrow], hereinafter discussed, also be allowed. Accordingly, the claim of Jennie Donachie in the full amount of $1,000 is hereby recognized as valid and subsisting, together with interest thereon from October 24, 1967, interest for the year prior to the latter date having been deducted in advance.

The second or Dubrow claim is based on decedent’s lifetime agreement for the purchase of furniture, which transaction was not consummated because of his death prior to the time for delivery of the goods purchased and accountant’s refusal to accept the same after his death. This claim, liquidated in counsel’s brief for the first time in any specified amount, is for $3,513.50, the alleged balance due [after certain now conceded credits] on the full original purchase price which decedent had agreed to pay. Accountant, while not denying such liability on the purchase contract as may be legally required to the extent of assets in her hands, and conceding that the obligation thereof against decedent’s estate was not terminated by decedent’s death [compare Fegelson Estate, 40 D. & C. 2d 278,16 Bucks 125 (1966) ], does dispute the amount claimed as damages, and would require claimant to prove the basis for compensation legally due. She contends that, as pointedly demonstrated by the absence [735]*735of delivery of the goods, such compensation would not be measured by the full remaining balance of the entire purchase price. Moreover, she also reasons that in any event her acquiesence in the forfeiture of decedent’s lifetime deposit with Dubrow on account of the furniture contract in fact amounted to more than adequate damages for the default.

From the evidence at the audit hearing, it appeared that in the fall of 1966, decedent, a widower, was contemplating marriage with one Eleanor Brady and had purchased a house for their proposed marital domicile. On October 1, and again on October 24, 1966, decedent and Miss Brady together visited Dubrow’s place of business as a furniture dealer in Philadelphia to make selection of furnishings for their new home. Decedent, on one or the other of these two dates, ordered all of the articles in question, consisting of certain rugs, a 10-piece dining room suite, a 6-piece bedroom suite, another 5-piece bedroom suite, with mattresses and box springs to match, two sofas, a “rollaway” cot, a cocktail table and various other side pieces and chairs, a vacuum cleaner and attachments, and a floor polisher. All of these items [except the floor polisher at $24.88, which decedent apparently took with him on October 24th] were ordered for future delivery in January 1967 in the new home. The total of the purchase prices which decedent thereupon agreed to pay for these various articles [itemized at length in Dubrow’s Ex. Nos. 1, 2, 3, 6, 7 and 8] aggregated $5,368.48. Decedent made cash deposits on October 1, 1966 or shortly thereafter of $1,030, and on October 24, 1966, received certain credits for cancellations and changes in the further amount of $105.53 [see Dubrow Ex. Nos. 4 and 5]. The net unpaid purchase price, accordingly, was $4,232.95.

Unfortunately, the parties’ arrangements and undertakings so outlined were never carried out, being [736]*736interrupted by decedent’s apparently untimely death on November 1, 1966, only one week after the latter of the Dubrow tansactions. Since the contemplated marriage had not come about and since accountant, who was decedent’s daughter and only intestate heir, refused to accept the furniture or complete the purchase contract, notice was given through counsel to Dubrow on January 16, 1967, of the fact of decedent’s death, and this was followed a month later by formal notice to Dubrow of accountant’s “cancellation”. Subsequent negotiations for an amicable settlement of the claim were apparently unsuccessful.

A seller’s remedies for breach of a buyer’s contract to purchase goods are enumerated in section 2-703 of the Uniform Commercial Code of October 2, 1959, P. L. 1023, as amended, 12A PS §2-703. The only ones presently relevant in any possible view of the case are the cross-references to sections 2-706, 2-708 and 2-709. [It may be conceded, for present purposes, that Dubrow had properly “identified to the contract” all of the goods in question prior to thé time it was notified of decedent’s death and accountant’s purpose to repudiate the purchase, within the meaning of section 2-704 of the code.] The auditing judge is of the opinion that Dubrow has not borne the burden of proof required of it to permit recovery herein under any of these provisions.

Section 2-706 authorizes the seller, on the buyer’s rejection of the goods, to resell the same upon reasonable notice to the buyer of intention so to do, and, upon compliance with certain other cautionary provisions, thereupon to recover from the buyer the difference between the resale price and the contract price. This provision is presently unavailing for the reason that, until passing mention was made thereof in the audit testimony of Dubrow’s sales manager, no notice whatsoever of intention to resell thereunder was given, [737]*737so far as the record discloses; even more decisively, according to Dubrow’s own evidence, no resale of the goods has in fact yet been made.

Section 2-708, the generally applicable provision defining the seller’s measure of damages for the buyer’s default where the goods are improperly rejected, authorizes the seller to recover the difference between the market price and the unpaid contract price, with further provision in subsection (b) under certain circumstances for allowance of the profit the seller would have made as an alternative measure of damages. This section likewise is of no help to Dubrow for the reason that no evidence was submitted in the within proceedings either of market price or of profit.

Dubrow relies solely and entirely upon section 2-709, claiming it is entitled thereunder to the full amount of the unpaid agreed purchase price as to most of the items. This section provides, in presently relevant part:

“ (1) When the buyer fails to pay the price as it becomes due the seller may recover, together with any incidental damages under the next section, the price
(a) ... [of goods accepted, etc.] . . .
(b) of goods identified to the contract if the seller is unable after reasonable effort to resell them at a reasonable price or the circumstances reasonably indicate that such effort will be unavailing”.

In his brief, counsel for Dubrow has conceded that certain of the items are not within this section, and hence he has in effect given credit therefor against the total claimed to be due.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Pa. D. & C.2d 733, 1968 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bacon-estate-paorphctbucks-1968.