In re White

13 Pa. Super. 201, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 133
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 21, 1900
DocketAppeal, No. 87
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 Pa. Super. 201 (In re White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re White, 13 Pa. Super. 201, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 133 (Pa. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion by

W. D. Porter, J.,

This is a proceeding, under the 15th section of the Act of February 24, 1834, P. L. 70, to enforce the specific performance of five contracts for the sale of real estate. The proceeding was begun by Harry White presenting his individual petition, setting forth that Hon. Thomas White had during his lifetime entered into two agreements in writing, dated, respectively, December 28, 1864, and February 5, 1866, with James McCracken, for the sale and conveyance of two lots of land on the south of the borough of Indiana; copies of the agreements attached to the petition accurately describe the land: that Hon. Thomas White died July 22, 1866, after having made his last will and testament, wherein he appointed the said Harry White executor thereof, [203]*203giving him full power to make and execute deeds for all contracts made by tbe testator for sales of real estate in his lifetime which were not executed at the date of his death; that Harry White in his individual capacity had entered into three articles of agreement with said James McCracken, dated, respectively, September 9, 1867, October 22, 1866, and December 1, 1867, each of said agreements being for the sale and conveyance by White and purchase by McCracken of a lot of land described, respectively, in the agreements attached to the petition. The petition alleged that the purchase money had not been paid upon these lots, and prayed that the balance due thereon be ascertained and decreed, and a specific performance of the contracts be adjudged. The respondents moved to dismiss the petition, and considerable doubt seems to have arisen as to whether the petition in its original form could stand. The source from which this doubt arose is difficult to comprehend. The jurisdiction of the court and the authority for proceeding in this manner were purely statutory, and, entirely apart from the question as to the right to maintain the proceeding when the vendor is living, there is certainly nothing which could warrant the court in entertaining jurisdiction in the same proceeding of different contracts held by two or more estates, or by an estate and an individual living, simply because the grantee happens to be the same person, while the several estates or individuals have no community of interest in any one of the contracts. The mere fact that the individual who has a contract which he desires to have enforced is the executor of an estate which also has a contract that it would be advantageous to enforce does not affect the rights under either of the contracts, and the proceeding is to be governed by the same rule which would prevail if the executor and the indivdual were different persons.

The petition and proceedings were amended upon the motion of the petitioner by permitting Harry White, executor of the last will and testament of Thomas White, to be substituted as petitioner, and striking out Harry White individually as a party, and also striking out all reference to the three contracts made by Harry White with McCracken. The proceeding thus became one by the executor of Thomas White, deceased, to enforce the specific performance of the two contracts made by Hon. Thomas White and James McCracken, both now deceased. This put [204]*204the record in proper form, and, as the parties seem to have had a full opportunity to present all their evidence, we are not satisfied that they were placed at any disadvantage in the presentation of these proofs upon the merits. The petition as originally presented set forth the facts as to the two contracts made with Hon. Thomas White, and there could have been no question as to the nature of thé obligation which was to be enforced. The executor had not at that time become a party to the proceeding, and as the record then stood no decree could have been entered in his favor, for the petition did not set forth what the interest of Harry White as an individual was which would entitle him to seek a specific performance of these two contracts ; but the execution of the instruments was not denied, and the respondents put in all the evidence of payment which they had and all which they now assert that they could have produced. There was, therefore, no impropriety in allowing the amendment and, as the amendment cured the defects in the original petition, the assignments of error based upon the overruling of the motion to dismiss it, because of formal defects, have ceased to have anything upon which to stand. The first, second, third, sixth and seventh specifications of error are dismissed.

The estate of Hon. Thomas White being safely solvent, and there being no distributees to complain, those who were to receive money from the estate were perfectly safe in any event. It is not remarkable, therefore, that we find this statement in the paper-book of the appellee, on page 4 of his counter-statement : “ Harry White, who individually sold lots to McCracken, being the same person who was executor of Thomas White, who had sold the lots ten and twelve that were still unpaid for, the calculation of the balances owing were naturally run together.” The executor mingled the funds of the estate with his own. The accounts of the estate against individuals and the individual accounts of the executor against the same persons were involved in confusion. The calculation submitted by the appellee as to the amounts due upon the various contracts of McCracken, as printed in appellant’s paper book, shows that after a certain period the personal claims of the appellee and the claims of the estate of Thomas White against McCracken were carried as a common account, and showed but one balance owing by McCracken, without indicating whether to the [205]*205estate of Hon. Thomas White or to the appellee npon personal account. There was no impropriety in this so far as the persons who were to receive money from the estate of the Hon. Thomas White were concerned, but, as an incident of it, the accounts became involved in obscurity. This obscurity has occasioned all the trouble in this case. The petitioner, when he began this proceeding, was himself the victim of this obscurity, and so if there be error in this case it is because the learned court below lost sight of the fact that there was a distinction between the property of Harry White and that of Harry White, executor of the will of Thomas White.

The two contracts which remained for the consideration of the court after the amendment of the record were exhibit “ B,” an agreement made February 5, 1866, between Thomas White and James McCracken, by which White agreed to sell and convey to McCracken lot No. 12 in a plan laid out by him, and McCracken agreed to pay for said lot the sum of $300 at the time set forth in the agreement; and exhibit “ C,” an agreement dated December 28, 1864, between Thomas White and James McCracken, by which White agreed to-sell and convey to McCracken lot No. 10 in plan laid out by him, and McCracken agreed to pay therefor the sum of $275. Lot No. 10 was sold by McCracken to Sebring, and the deed was executed directly by Harry White, executor of Thomas White, to Mrs. Sebring. We have, therefore, only to do with that lot in so far as the balance then unpaid upon it would affect the amount applicable to the other lot, as resulting from subsequent payments. On January 1, 1867, the amount due on lot No. 10, was $60.52, and the amount due on lot No. .12, on June 27,1868, was $157.29. The legal title to both of the lots, 10 and 12, was in the estate of Thomas White. The appellee sets forth in his petition, “ and that with the consent of the said Harry White the said McCracken sold lot No. 10 about June 1, 1872, to Elizabeth Sebring, for the sum of $350.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Pa. Super. 201, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-white-pasuperct-1900.