Commonwealth v. Gerlach

20 Pa. D. & C.2d 290, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 346
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Butler County
DecidedNovember 4, 1959
Docketno. 3
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 Pa. D. & C.2d 290 (Commonwealth v. Gerlach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Butler County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Gerlach, 20 Pa. D. & C.2d 290, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 346 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Shumaker, P. J.,

— This matter is before the court on exceptions filed to the findings of fact, conclusions of law and decree embodied in the opinion and decree of this court dated April 22, 1959.

On January 20, 1958, defendants gave an option to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, plaintiff in this action, to purchase their 253 acres of land made up of two tracts situate partly in the Borough of Slippery Rock and partly in Slippery Rock Township for the sum and price of $60,000, which option was for a period of 90 days and by the terms thereof was to become a land purchase contract upon the acceptance thereof by the Commonwealth. This was officially exercised on March 5, 1958, within said 90-day period.

[291]*291This land is adjacent to the Slippery Rock State Teachers College Campus and is desired by the Commonwealth for said college for college expansion and development.

All of def endants met in the office of attorney John L. Wilson, local counsel for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, on a subsequent date by arrangement and appointment and were advised that the titles to the two properties involved had been examined and found marketable.

A deed was presented to defendants for their signatures and all of defendants except Clair S. Gerlaeh signed and acknowledged the instrument conveying said property to the Commonwealth.

The court found as a fact that defendant Clair S. Gerlaeh assigned no reason for refusing to make and execute said deed except that he wanted to think it over. Later, he assigned the reason that the consideration was not present but had to be requisitioned from Harrisburg.

There was a lapse of time during which effort was made to get this defendant to execute the deed but all efforts in this regard were of no avail.

The Commonwealth then filed the complaint in equity to compel specific performance.

After hearing held, this court entered a decree on April 22, 1959, directing specific performance and requiring defendant Clair S. Gerlaeh to appear in the prothonotary’s office on May 12, 1959, at 12 noon, and there sign and acknowledge said deed before the prothonotary and further directed that in the event he failed so to do, the prothonotary should execute said deed for him conveying all of his interest in the subject property.

The court directed plaintiff in said decree to place in the hands of the pro.thonotary the sum of $60,000, being the purchase price for the property.

[292]*292On May 4,1959, exceptions were filed by counsel for defendants.

Oral argument was held in this matter of the exceptions filed, and on October 1, 1959, the brief for the Commonwealth was filed with the court, at which time the matter is considered before the court.

It is here again to be noted that all of defendants save one, Clair S. Gerlach, are nominal defendants only, they having made, executed and acknowledged the deed, are and remain ready and willing to consummate the transaction, and indeeed, some of them testified at the hearing in behalf of plaintiff.

This leaves only Clair S. Gerlach as the real party defendant.

Specific exception was taken by counsel for said defendant to the court’s calling attorney John L. Wilson to the witness stand during the trial as the court’s witness.

Mr. Wilson was so called for the reason that more of the testimony adduced dealt with what transpired in Mr. Wilson’s law office and the court desired the benefit of all possible testimony concerning what occurred there.

While the procedure may have appeared unusual, this court was then sitting in equity and as a court of conscience deemed it fair to all parties to have the benefit of Mr. Wilson’s testimony.

This court, as the trier of the facts, was under no special obligation of any kind to accept this testimony at face value. He was at full liberty to attribute to it such weight or credit as he deemed it was entitled to receive.

It is obvious that no jury was involved in this litigation. Had there been this court would never have called a witness of any kind and certainly not one of the gentlemen of counsel. This clearly might have in[293]*293fluenced a jury in the matter of attributing weight to the lawyer’s testimony.

Since attorney Wilson did not volunteer to take the witness stand, the court did not require him, since he was court-called, to disqualify himself and have other counsel proceed with the trial.

We are of the opinion that since this case is in equity, the court was well within its bounds of propriety in seeking for consideration all of the possible testimony available and that therefore the exception to this conduct of the court is without merit and must be dismissed.

However, if any error was thus committed, it was certainly harmless error and must be ignored.

For the purposes of this opinion now being written and for the purposes of the prior and present conclusions reached by this court, the entire testimony of Mr. Wilson can be wholly and completely ignored.

The fact appears from the unqualified testimony of all the other witnesses in the case that defendant Clair S. Gerlach did refuse to make and execute the deed as per the provisions of the land purchase contract to which he was bound by his signature thereto.

Excerpts from Mr. Wilson’s testimony were inserted under “Discussion” in the body of the opinion of April 22, 1959, but solely because it was in narrative style and seemed to explain concisely what had been developed from other witnesses from short questions and short answers.

Let us take the statement of the real party defendant himself as it appears on page 51 of the record in his direct examination made by his attorney, Mr. Mc-Candless, which would be that part of the case most favorable to him.

Mr. McCandless: “Now, will you relate as near as you can recall what took place at that meeting?”

[294]*294Mr. Clair S. Gerlach: “Well, as I recall, they talked over the signing over the deed and he says, ‘Here, you sign this over, we’ll requisition the money.’ I said, ‘When is this money coming through?’ They couldn’t assure me. ‘Well,’ I says, ‘I’ll not sign it.’ Of course I didn’t go on and say, I’ll not sign it, because there’s no money, because that was their conversation, that was understood why I wouldn’t sign it.”

Mr. Clair S. Gerlach: “Of course, I won’t say what was in their minds. I won’t swear I did say I won’t sign it because of that. I know that was the conversation from the very first.”

Counsel for exceptants has laid emphasis on the fact that plaintiff in this case has no greater rights in this action by virtue of it being the sovereign, i.e., the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, than an individual litigant would have. With this, the court readily agrees with the proposition and takes no issue with learned counsel on this point at all. This is no case or situation where a court is duty bound to especially protect the interests of society. From the outset the Commonwealth in this case has been considered by this court as having the standing or status of an individual plaintiff.

Counsel for the real party defendant, Clair S. Gerlach, stoutly contends that this court is without jurisdiction since the bill for specific performance was filed prior to the tender of the purchase price.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Gerlach
159 A.2d 915 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
20 Pa. D. & C.2d 290, 1959 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-gerlach-pactcomplbutler-1959.