Heilwood Fuel Co. v. Manor Real Estate Co.

175 A.2d 880, 405 Pa. 319
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 5, 1961
DocketAppeals, Nos. 148 and 157
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 175 A.2d 880 (Heilwood Fuel Co. v. Manor Real Estate Co.) 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
Heilwood Fuel Co. v. Manor Real Estate Co., 175 A.2d 880, 405 Pa. 319 (Pa. 1961).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Benjamin E. Jones,

Two appeals are before us, each appeal being from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, sitting in equity. One appeal (No. 148) by Heilwood Fuel Co., Inc. (Heilwood) challenges the validity of this order insofar as the order sustained preliminary objections of Manor Eeal Estate Company (Manor) and dismissed Heilwood’s equity complaint. The other appeal (No. 157) by Manor attacks the order insofar as the order amended a previous order which had certified to the law side of the court an alleged claim of damages by Heilwood.1

In Pine Township, Indiana County, Heilwood and Manor each owned certain tracts of land under which lay coal. Manor had acquired its tract from Willmore Coal Company.

On January 31, 1956, Manor wrote a letter to Pine Township Coal Company, Inc. (Pine) and the construction and interpretation of this letter is the heart of this controversy. That letter, described as a “letter of intent” which, if accepted by Pine, would become an “interim understanding and agreement”, is divided into two parts, one entitled “Exchange” and the other “Lease”. Under the “Exchange” heading, the parties provided for the exchange of certain properties, the exchange to take place by June 30, 1956: (1) subject to approval of the respective titles, Manor agreed to convey to Pine and Pine agreed to convey to Manor owner[322]*322ship in certain properties delineated on a map attached to the letter; (2) in the exchange it was intended that gas and oil rights be reserved and that the areas to be conveyed be equal as to coal and surface acreage; (3) in the event Manor did not convey to Pine, Manor’s property would be included in the “Lease” provision. Under the “Lease” heading: (1) Manor agreed to lease to Pine certain coal seams under a 1650 acre tract of land not included in the “Exchange” heading, the lease to be prepared and submitted for execution within 60 days of the exchange of properties between Manor and Pine, i.e., June 30, 1956; (2) the provisions of the contemplated lease were set forth; (3) it was provided that the coal mined and shipped should be routed over lines of the Pennsylvania Railroad.2 It is stated by Manor, in its brief, that the principal purpose of this letter “was the development of the Yellow Creek Coal Field and the production of coal for shipment via The Pennsylvania Railroad”. On February 5, 1956, Pine, in writing, accepted this “interim understanding”.

In returning to Manor the approved “interim understanding” on February 16, 1956, Pine stated, inter alia, that “all parties interested” understood that Heilwood, “an allied company” of Pine, owned the properties which were to be exchanged to Manor and that Pine was “in a position” to guarantee performance of that part of the contract.

On March 4, 1956, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, Real Estate Department (Pennsylvania), wrote to Pine, the stated subject of this letter being: “Proposed exchange between [Manor] and [Heilwood]”. That letter, referring to the abstracts of title and descriptions of the property which Manor was to convey, assured Pine such documents would be available to Pine’s lawyers.

[323]*323According to Heilwood’s complaint, after the “interim agreement” was entered into, by mutual consent, Manor took possession of Heilwood’s property and Heilwood took possession of Manor’s property and each remained in possession of the other’s property until the equity action was filed; in February 1956, Manor leased to a coal company part of a seam of coal under Heilwood’s property, together with a fight of way over the surface, and the coal company has' both used the right of way and mined coal; Manor has removed and sold timber from Heilwood’s property and Heilwood has done likewise on Manor’s property.

Completion of the undertakings in the “interim agreement” were delayed because Pine, under Chapter XI of the Bankruptcy Act, had entered into a plan of arrangements with its creditors. Finally, the Pittsburgh District Director of Internal Revenue on February 24, 1959, by letter notified Pine that, since the property exchange under the “interim agreement” would be between Heilwood and Manor, who were not Pine’s subsidiaries, approval of the property exchange by the District Director was unnecessary. Four days later, Heilwood’s counsel wrote Pennsylvania, enclosing a copy of the District Director’s letter, stating that, since this was “the only barrier to the completion of the long contemplated exchange of coal and surface”, it, Heilwood, hoped the exchange could be accomplished at an early date. In response to this letter, several days later, Pennsylvania’s counsel wrote to Heilwood’s .counsel stating, inter alia: “As there does not appear to be any further legal impediments, the necessary documents to effect the transfer- will be prepared by Manor toward the end that this exchange may be completed as soon as possible.” Yery significantly, Pennsylvania’s counsel then stated: “In accord with our prior understanding, nothing further will be done at this time in respect to the leasehold interests: (Emphasis supplied.)

[324]*324Approximately eight months later — -November 25, 1959 — Manor wrote Heilwood’s counsel forwarding a copy of the proposed Manor-Heilwood deed and a copy of the proposed Heilwood-Manor deed for comments or approval, enclosing certain notations by Manor as to the deed descriptions. Three weeks later Heilwood’s counsel wrote to Manor, under the heading “Exchange of lands between [Heilwood] and [Manor]”, and returned the several deed drafts, stating, “I [Heilwood’s counsel] have endorsed approval of [Heilwood] on the back of the deed form [Manor to Heilwood] . . .” and advised that a blueprint of a certain map should be added to the Heilwood-Manor deed.

The record is silent as to anything which thereafter transpired between Manor and Heilwood, or Manor and Pine, except that the complaint avers that Manor refused to exchange its property for that of Heilwood.

On May 20, 1960, Heilwood instituted an equity action in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County against Manor seeking to have that court direct Manor to exchange its property for that of Heilwood. Manor, by preliminary objections, attacked Heilwood’s complaint in three respects: (1) that no cause of action was stated; (2) that the complaint shows an agreement between Manor and Pine, not between Manor and Heilwood; (3) that the agreement was entire and not severable and Heilwood cannot seek specific performance of only part of the agreement, i.e., the exchange of properties, and not the lease portion of the agreement. On February 27, 1961, the court en banc dismissed Heilwood’s complaint on the ground that “the exchange of properties and the leasing provisions of the agreement are interdependent and not severable [and that Heilwood] is not entitled to specific performance of one phase of the agreement, the property exchange provisions, and completely OArerlook the proAÚsions relating to the leasing of properties” and, therefore, Heil[325]*325wood failed to state a cause of action. From the order dismissing its complaint, Heilwood had appealed.

In its original order the court certified the question of damages for the cutting of timber on Heilwood’s properly to the law side of the court. Heilwood then moved the court to amend its order by removing therefrom certification of the question.

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175 A.2d 880, 405 Pa. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heilwood-fuel-co-v-manor-real-estate-co-pa-1961.