Friend v. Lamb

25 A. 577, 152 Pa. 529, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1013
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1893
DocketAppeal, No. 277
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 25 A. 577 (Friend v. Lamb) 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
Friend v. Lamb, 25 A. 577, 152 Pa. 529, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1013 (Pa. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Green,

We are of opinion that the learned court below, rather than the master, adjudged correctly the facts and law of the present contention. It is not a case of mere legal right and is not dependent solely upon principles which control the determination of causes of that character. The proceeding is by bill in equity, and the relief sought is the specific performance of a contract for the sale of a tract of land for the price of fifty thousand dollars. The defendant against whom the contract is proposed to be enforced is a married woman, and as only five thousand dollars of the purchase money were to be paid in cash, the sale is to be regarded as one made almost entirely upon credit, and the credit is to be secured by a mortgage for the sum of forty-five thousand dollars in annual payments of five and seven thousand dollars respectively, with interest on all, and reaching over a period of seven years. For a man to encumber himself with such a contract, would be, in all ordinary circumstances, [533]*533a rash, improvident and extremely hazardous undertaking. Nothing but a rare combination of fortunate events to occur in the very near future, capable of being foreseen by an extremely sagacious and experienced operator in speculative transactions, would justify such a contract in the ordinary judgment of men. But with a woman, especially a married woman, unless possessed of ample cash capital to meet her maturing payments, and a special skill and experience in conducting such affairs, an engagement of this character would seem to be almost entirely destructive of the least prospect of success, and improvident and oppressive to the last degree. There is no evidence in this case that Mrs. Lamb possessed any of the essential qualifications either in capital or experience to conduct such an enterprise to a successful conclusion. Where the money was to come from to meet the annual payments does not appear, and the consequences of “ the usual sci. fa. clause” are well enough known to indicate what would become of the property if the payments were not promptly met. We deem the contract in this case as highly improvident and rash, and most likely to result in great disaster even before the maturity of the payments and therefore oppressive in its character. In its merely legal aspects these considerations could not be regarded and they would not constitute a defence to an action to recover damages for its breach. But in equity the rule is very different where the application is for a specific performance of the contract. It was thus expressed by this court in Freetly v. Barnhart, 51 Pa. 279, where we said that “ there, is nothing better settled than that a decree for specific performance is not a matter of course, but rests in the sound discretion of a chancellor. It may be refused, therefore, notwithstanding a contract obligation, if there be circumstances rendering it inequitable, and then the party seeking it is left to his action for damages. I know of no case in which specific performance is ever decreed unless it appears to accord with good conscience that it should be so decreed, be the contract ever so specific in it terms.”

To the same effect are Weise’s Ap., 72 Pa. 351; Elbert v. O’Neil, 102 Pa. 302, and Rennyson v. Rozell, 106 Pa. 407. In the last of these cases our late Brother Clark said : “ It is not sufficient to call forth equitable interposition of the court thatf the legal obligation under the contract may be perfect; if in[534]*534justice would result from a decree for specific relief the parties must be remitted to their remedies at law. Even when the agreement is perfectly good, the price adequate and no blame attaches to the purchase, if the transaction be inequitable and unjust in itself, or rendered so by matters subsequently occurring, specific performance may be denied and the parties turned over to their remedy in damages: Henderson v. Hays, 2 Watts, 148; Remington v. Irwin, 14 Pa. 143; Freetly v. Barnhart, 51 Pa. 279.”

An unconscionable price, a clouded title, any circumstances of overreaching, misrepresentation, suppression of the truth, suggestion of the false, fraud of any kind, breach of confidential relation and many other similar causes will induce the courts to refuse specific performance. The cases and illustrations in the books are very numerous and of great variety.

In the present case, besides the improvident and oppressive character of the contract and the coverture of the purchaser, it was alleged as a defence that it was represented to Mrs. Lamb, before the contract was made by the plaintiff or his agent, that the property was underlaid with coal. The defendant, Mrs. Lamb, testified that Mr. Miller, who conducted the negotiation for the plaintiff, said “ that there was also brick shale and clay suitable for making brick, and that it was underlaid with coal. I asked the question when he spoke about the brick shale and clay where could I get the coal and he said why there is plenty of it all underneath this property.” And again : “ He said the property, the whole property, was underlaid with coal — I do not know whether he stated the thickness of the vein or not. Q. What did Mr. Miller say of the coal as to its value, prior to signing the agreement? A. Mr. Miller said the land was underlaid with coal; he said it would be more valuable on that account.” On cross-examination she said she saw a coal pit on the farm, noticed the old slack piles, did not go into the coal pit. “ When I saw the coal pit I presumed that some coal had been taken out at some time before. I did not at any time make any inquiry as to the quantity of coal taken out. Nothing else was said to me about this coal but what Mr. Miller told me at the first meeting in the office.”

Harry Collins, a witness for the defendant, testified that he was present at an interview between Miller and Mrs. Lamb at [535]*535Somer’s office in which “ Miller told Mrs. Lamb that the property was underlaid with coal. He also said that the coal that was underneath the property, together with the stone, would make that as valuable property as there was anywhere in the state.”

It was proved by McKelvy, a witness for the plaintiff, that the coal had been taken out years before by tenants of a former owner and that there was no coal on the premises left, but about five or six acres which were not included in the lease to the lessees of the coal.

The master in his treatment of this testimony laid stress upon the fact that Miller, the plaintiff’s agent, denied that he had ever represented that there was coal on the property, and held that if the representations were made, Mrs. Lamb did not rely on them, but made an examination for herself, and he expresses some doubt as to the truth of the testimony of the defendant and her witness. We do not perceive any sufficient reason for discrediting the positive testimony of Mrs. Lamb and Collins on this subject, and as the actual presence of coal underlying all, or any considerable part of the land, would naturally be a fact of the gravest importance in considering the value of the property, we feel constrained to say that even a condition of doubt upon this most serious subject would impel a chancellor to refuse specific performance. This was the conviction of the learned court below and it is also ours. We cannot think it would be equitable to force upon any purchaser a title to seventy acres of land, at a price of fifty thousand dollars, when the supposed presence of a large body of coal which had been in fact removed may have been the chief inducing cause of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A. 577, 152 Pa. 529, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friend-v-lamb-pa-1893.