Dillinger v. Ogden

90 A. 446, 244 Pa. 20, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 708
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 2, 1914
DocketAppeal, No. 148
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 90 A. 446 (Dillinger v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillinger v. Ogden, 90 A. 446, 244 Pa. 20, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 708 (Pa. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Pottee,

This was a bill in equity filed to compel specific performance of an alleged contract for the sale of real estate. It is averred that on December 11, 1909, plaintiffs entered into a contract with Jacob W. McCausland whereby he agreed to sell and convey to them in fee simple, and they agreed to purchase, an undivided one-half interest in certain real estate in Creensburg, Pennsylvania, for the consideration of $83,000. The agreement was signed by all three parties. It provided that $3,500.00 of the purchase money was to be paid in cash, as “hand money,” the vendor to give his notes for the same “to be refunded in case the title should prove unsatisfactory”; a further sum of $19,500, to be paid in cash on the execution and delivery of the deed, and the balance of $10,000, was to be secured by judgment bond, or bond and mortgage on the premises, payable three' years after the delivery of the deed, with interest from that date at the rate of five per cent, per annum, payable annually. The rents, issues and profits of the property sold were to go to plaintiffs from the date of the agreement. A further stipulation was as follows: “The said parties of the second part shall have thirty days within which to examine the title to the said real estate, and only on condition it should prove to be satisfactory to them shall they be bound to perform this contract on their part. The deed to be prepared as soon thereafter as possible, and to be sent to the party of the first part (McCausland) for execution and delivery by himself and his wife.” It is averred in the bill that plaintiffs having caused the title to the real estate to be examined and being satisfied therewith, and having prepared a deed in accordance with the contract, on January 19,1910, sent it for execution to McCausland, who with his wife was then in Paris, where they were temporarily residing; but the deed was returned unexecuted, under the claim that the contract was only an option and as compliance had not been made with its [23]*23terms within thirty days from its date, McCausland was not bound by it; that in August, 1910, plaintiffs again requested him in the presence of his wife to comply with the terms of the contract, but he refused to do so and has persisted in that refusal; plaintiffs have always been ready and willing to carry out the contract; that the agreement was duly recorded on January 19, 1910, in the recorder’s office for Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania; that on April 10,1910, McCausland and wife conveyed their interest in the premises in question to the defendant, Anna W. Ogden, Trustee, and assigned of record to her their interest in the rents, issues and profits thereof; that defendant had notice both actual and of record, of McCausland’s agreement with plaintiffs ; that plaintiffs had tendered to defendant the balance of the purchase money and a bond and mortgage for $10,000 drawn in accordance with the terms of the contract of sale, which she had refused to accept, and had also refused to execute and deliver to plaintiffs a deed for the premises purchased by them. The prayer of the bill is for specific performance by defendant of the contract of sale. Defendant demurred to the bill assigning among others the following reasons: “ (1) The contract, of which specific performance is sought, is an option. The plaintiffs failed to accept the terms thereof ¡within the time therein limited, or thereafter, whereby the same became inoperative as to Jacob McCausland and the defendant. (2) The plaintiffs, having failed to examine the title in question within thirty days after December 11, 1909, or to notify Jacob McCausland within the period aforesaid or thereafter, that such title was satisfactory to them, had no right, after January 10, 1910, to demand of said McCausland a conveyance to them of said land. . The plaintiffs have been guilty of laches.” The court below sustained the demurrer for the reasons cited, and dismissed the bill at plaintiffs’ costs.' Plaintiffs have appealed.

The first question arising is whether the agreement of [24]*24which specific performance is asked, is a contract for the sale of real estate or was merely an option to purchase. If the stipulation as to the title, be for the moment disregarded, it is apparent that the agreement constitutes . a complete contract of purchase and sale; it was signed and sealed by both parties. McCausland agreed to sell and Dillinger and Huff agreed to buy. The property sold was described and defined with certainty. The price to be paid and the time and manner of payment were definitely fixed and the first payment of $3,500 was acknowledged. Provision was also made that the vendee should receive the rents, issues and profits of the property to be sold, from the date of the agreement. It is not unusual to insert in agreements for the sale of real estate conditions that the title shall be good and marketable and free of encumbrances, otherwise the contract not to be binding on the vendee. Here, the condition was that the title should be satisfactory to the vendees and that they should have thirty days to examine the title and ascertain if it was satisfactory. They were bound to performance of the contract if the title proved to be satisfactory. This condition was for the sole benefit of the vendees. They did not agree to take, an unsatisfactory title, but they were limited to a period of thirty days, in which to make the examination, and to reach a conclusion, not as to whether they should purchase, but only as to whether or not the title was satisfactory. They were limited solely to passing judgment irpon the title. There is no stipulation that they would notify the vendor of their decision except through the preparation and sending to him a deed “as soon thereafter as possible,” that is, after the examination was completed and the decision made. Lack of mutuality in the contract is suggested but there is the same mutuality as exists in every contract of sale, which is subject to conditions. If it is assumed that time was of the essence of the contract, the conclusion might well follow, that when the vendees permitted the thirty days to pass with[25]*25out rejecting the title, both parties became unconditionally bound. Taking notes to secure the repayment in case of an unsatisfactory title, of the $3,500.00 paid on account, did not convert that payment into a loan. The payment was expressly made on account of the purchase money and the notes were given merely to protect the vendees in case the title did not prove to be satisfactory. The payment was receipted for as “hand money” given as an earnest, to bind the bargain. As we read the agreement it shows clearly the intention of the parties that it should constitute a contract of sale, with but one single condition, which was that the title should be satisfactory. While time was given for examination, in order to ascertain whether the title was good, yet the vendees were not at liberty to refuse arbitrarily to accept. They could not reject the title capriciously. If it was good, they were bound to take it. Abundant authority is to be found for this position. Thus in Folliard v. Wallace, 2 Johns. (N. Y.) 395, the grantee of land covenanted that he would pay the purchase money to the grantor “three months after he should be well satisfied that the title was undisputed and good against all other claims.” In an action for the purchase money, Chief Justice (afterwards Chancellor) Kent said, (p. 402) : “Nor will it do for the defendant to say he was not satisfied with his title, without showing some lawful incumbrance or claim existing against it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A. 446, 244 Pa. 20, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillinger-v-ogden-pa-1914.