Hertzog v. Hertzog's Administrator

34 Pa. 418
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 34 Pa. 418 (Hertzog v. Hertzog's Administrator) 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
Hertzog v. Hertzog's Administrator, 34 Pa. 418 (Pa. 1859).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Woodward, J.

The omission.from our statute of frauds and perjuries, of the 4th section of the British statute, after which ours was modelled, left us free to sue on parol contracts for the sale of lands. But such actions were rare in the early history of our jurisprudence; and when they were brought, the measure of damages, though not very distinctly defined in the cases, was so controlled, that specific performance of the contract should not be virtually enforced. It is too manifest for debate, that if the value of the land may be recovered in an action of case upon the parol contract, the statute, as we have it, is as effectually evaded, as if the land itself were recovered in ejectment. Therefore it was, that whilst the personal action was sustained, because forbidden by nothing in our statute, the damages recovered were measured by other standards than the value of the land at the time of the recovery. In some of the early cases, it would seem, the damages were merely nominal; in none, were they more than compensatory of what had been paid on the footing of the contract.

[420]*420The rule was indemnity — compensation for what had been paid or done — restoration of the parties to their condition before the contract was made. And this rule was agreeable to that which prevailed in England and Pennsylvania, in respect to breach of written executory contracts, and that also which was always applied to covenants of seisin, covenants for quiet enjoyment, and covenants against encumbrances, and for further assurance, in deeds of conveyance, or other executed contracts. Where there was no fraud, misrepresentation, or wrongful suppression of facts on the part of the vendor, but he was simply unable to convey the title stipulated for, or to defend his alienee in the possession granted, he was liable to restore the purchase-money received with interest, but not to compensate the vendee for improvements made, or for accretions, from any cause, in the value of the estate. In a word, the measure of damages for breach of real contracts was to be looked for, not in the value of the estate at the time of breach, or eviction, but in the consideration which had passed betwmen the contracting parties.

At length, cases began to make their appearance, in which land was promised, not for moneys paid, but for services rendered and to be rendered during the life of the promissor — such as a housekeeper usually renders to the employer, or a child to a parent. The quantum of services stipulated for in such cases, being necessarily uncertain, their value could not be ascertained beforehand. And as the parties had fixed their value by bargaining for a particular piece of land, when the action came for breach of the contract, it was argued, that nothing but the full value of that particular piece of land could indemnify the disappointed vendee. This class of contracts, though resting in parol, was regarded as so peculiarly meritorious, that the ordinary rule of compensation was departed from, and another adopted which had no precedent or analogies in the law of vendor and vendee. The value of the land, at the time of eviction or breach of promise, was held to be the measure. No attention was paid to the intrinsic and essential value of the services rendered, and none to the statute of frauds and perjuries. The case of Jack v. McKee, 9 Barr 235, was the first of this type that made its appearance in our books. It was followed by Bash v. Bash, Id. 260; by Oyer v. McDowell, 9 Harris 417; by Beach v. McClintock (not reported), and by Malaun v. Ammon, 1 Grant’s Cases 123.

When the elective judiciary came in, the two cases in 9 Barr had been decided — the other three were decided by the new bench — but by a bare majority. In each of those three cases, Judge Lowrie and myself, notwithstanding the unfeigned deference felt for our predecessors and our brethren, were constrained, by our sense of duty, to record our dissent, and in the last-named case, I expressed, in a -written opinion, the grounds of our [421]*421dissent. This opinion is reported in 1 Grant’s Cases, beginning on page 132.

Since that opinion was written, we have had no cases of the kind in this court until the present term, and meanwhile the three judges who maintained the doctrine of Jack v. McKee, have withdrawn from the court, and the people of Pennsylvania have put other three judges on the bench, who, after' full consideration of the subject, have, with one voice, instructed me to overrule Jack v. McKee, .and all its sequents. Of course, the present Chief Justice and I concur with our brethren in considering those cases mistakes,- and the bench is now, therefore, unanimous in setting them aside.

It is to be expected, that when so grave a responsibility is assumed, the grounds and reasons of our action should be stated. These will be found fully developed in the dissenting opinion above mentioned. The authorities aré also sufficiently referred to and discussed therein. The court does not mean to adopt or approve of all the observations in that opinion, but the legal positions assumed are believed to be well supported by the most approved authorities, and to be consistent with the general understanding of the profession in Pennsylvania, except for the period of ten years that Jack v. McKee ruled the law.

The main position of Judge Rogers in that case, that the services being uncertain, both in quantity and value, can only be compensated by conveyance of the land agreed for, or by assessing its value, is, we think, a manifest error. The question is always brought under discussion, after- the services have been .rendered, and when they are therefore capable of exact description. However uncertain they may be, when agreed for, they are never uncertain as matter of judicial investigation, for they are past and known. Now that a jury is competent to assess the value' of past services is proved by every day’s experience in court. That they are as competent to perform this duty as to assess the value of land, will scarcely be denied. Why, then, it may be asked, should this class of. cases be taken out of the general rule, that applies to other contracts for land both executory and executed ? Why should the investigation be directed to the value of the bargain, in direct contravention of the rule in written contracts, instead of being- directed to the consideration of the bargain, as in those cases ? And why should there be virtual performance of a parol contract' for land, the consideration being services performed, when we will not enforce performance, either actual or virtual, of parol contracts, the consideration of which has been paid in money ?

These questions are not answered to our satisfaction by any of the cases mentioned. Nor do the authorities, cited by Judge Rogers, justify the distinction which he introduced in Jack v. [422]*422McKee. I will not go over them again, for they are sufficiently, discussed in the opinion in Grant’s Oases, but I refer to the remarks in Davis v. Smith, 5 Georgia R. 285, as meeting the equitable views that are sometimes set up in favour of disappointed vendees. The observations of Mr. Rawle on pages 328-9-30-31 and 32 of his valuable treatise on Covenants for Title, are also worthy of especial notice as bearing on the same point. See also, Bitner v. Brough, 1 Jones 127.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hertzog-v-hertzogs-administrator-pa-1859.