Irvine v. Bull

7 Watts 323
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 Watts 323 (Irvine v. Bull) 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
Irvine v. Bull, 7 Watts 323 (Pa. 1838).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Huston, J.

The question in this cause arose- on the following [324]*324statement of facts, which I will arrange according to the order of time, without, in all cases, regarding the order in which they came before the court.

About the close of 1828 Irvine and Bull agreed by parol for the sale and purchase of a vacant lot in (he town of Towanda. The price was to be 50 dollars, to be paid in cash when a deed was made and delivered, but it did not appear that any day was precisely appointed. Soon after this, the father-in-law of Bull called on Irvine and informed him he had the money ready to pay, and wanted the deed. Irvine was sick, but said he would have a surveyor and mark out. the lot and give the deed at the December court, when he would want the money. The same person at the appointed time called and offered the money. The deed was not made, but an assurance given that it would soon be ready. Early in the spring, Irvine called on the brother of Bull to see the lot surveyed and marked, and this was done. D. M. Bull, who did not live in Towanda, soon after this, had a fence put round the lot and leased it to a person who planted it with potatoes, beans, &c., and planted some fruit trees; and Bull next winter agreed to lease it to the same tenant for another year. The next spring Irvine applied to that tenant and offered him another lot to cultivate, because he said he wished to give the possession of the lot in question to a person who had a promise of another lot from Irvine; he said his object was not to get Bull out of possession, whose right he admitted.

Some time after this Irvine and Mr Cash and Bull’s brother being near the lot, Irvine said he had sold the lot too cheap and he would give D. M. Bull 20 dollars to recant, and Cash said he would give 20 dollars more. At one time Irvine went to the brother of Bull and asked where D. M. Bull lived, and was told at Munroe in that county. Irvine said he wanted the money in one hour. D. M. Bull at one time offered the money to Mr Cash who refused to receive it. It being reported that Cash and Kinney bad an interest in the lot, the brother of Bull went to them and they both informed him that Irvine had power to make a good title.

In the spring of 1831 Bull again leased it to his former tenant, who ploughed and planted it, and as his corn was coming up Irvine went in and ploughed it up, and when the tenant came, drove him off with threats. Soon after this, Bull tendered and counted the money to Irvine, who ordered him away with abusive language.

The plaintiff called witnesses to prove the value of the lot from the time of the contract up to the time of the trial. This was objected to and admitted, and exception was taken to the opinion of the court.

The witnesses proved that improvements by the state or directed by act of assembly had, soon after this contract, raised the price of lots in this borough, so that probably this lot would have sold for 600 or 700 dollars.

After this, (and it does not in the paper book appear by which [325]*325party, but as I understand it by the defendant) there was given in evidence a declaration of trust, dated the 27th of October 1830, by which Irvine declares he held the lot and other property in trust for Simon Kinney, David Cash and himself, each one-third. The paper recites a conveyance from John M. Robinson to Irvine, dated the 13th of August 1826.

This declaration of trust was not recorded until the 16th of September 1833.

There was also shown a deed, dated the 12th of January 1836, by which Simon Kinney sold one-third of this lot to M. Mason for 150 dollars.

Also on the 31st of March 1837 a deed from David Cash to J. Bar-slow for one-third of this lot for 300 dollars.

There was also given in evidence a deed from Irvine to D. M. Bull for the lot in question, dated the 11th of October 1833.

This case had been commenced of February term 1832, and tried, as appeared by the record, in September 1833, and brought to this court and reversed, see 4 Watts 287. At that trial the jury had given a verdict in favour of Bull for 300 dollars, to be released if Irvine executed a deed to Bull within thirty days and paid the costs. On this account Irvine had made and offered the deed last mentioned. But on the 16th of September 1833 he had, or they had, recorded his declaration of trust for Kinney and Cash, and Bull refused to accept the deed offered.

To understand the ground on which the first bill of exceptions was decided, it is proper to state that, not having a court of chancery, our predecessors adopted modes of using and applying common law actions, unknown where there is a common law court, and also a court of chancery. Thus, to compel a specific performance, an action on the case was brought, stating the agreement and such facts as would be sufficient to induce a chancellor to decree specific performance. This was usually coupled with other counts, for damages for breach of the contract, and the jury might give damages for a sum so large, as that the vendor would make a deed, rather than pa}r such sum, and the verdict was conditional for so much, to be released on making a deed within a specified time and paying the costs. This mode of proceeding is not always adopted, but we maintain an ejectment by the purchaser against the vendor, and on proving the contract and compliance with it, and if money has been tendered and refused, bringing it into court, the jury may find a verdict for the plaintiff, and he is put into possession, and the vendor takes the money tendered and generally makes a deed, or if he be obstinate, the record is the evidence of title in the person who recovered. This last mode is the most usual and in many cases preferable, but. not always so, and perhaps would not have been so in the case before us.

At the first trial the narr. did not contain a count setting out the contract, and possession delivered, and improvements made, and all [326]*326the circumstances which in chancery would have led to a decree for specific performance; and the conditional verdict and judgment on it were reversed by this court. When the cause went back, a count containing such particular designations was added; and as the cause progressed, and at the time testimony to prove the value was offered, the court and the plaintiff’s counsel supposed, and had a right to suppose, the jury might consider it a case which would warrant them to find a verdict for such amount as would induce the vendor to comply with his contract rather than, pay the amount of the verdict. This could only be done by ascertaining the present value of the lot and giving a conditional verdict for a sum at least equal to, or greater than that value. In a court of chancery, if Bull had made out a case which entitled him to a specific performance, the chancellor would have compelled Irvine to make a conveyance and deliver the lot, without regard to whether a canal by the state or any other matter had increased its value, or to how much its value was increased ; and to make our mode of proceeding equivalent, we must adopt the same principle, viz., that the purchaser is entitled to the lot as it at present is, and give a verdict which will compel the vendor to convey it, or not leave him a gainer by refusing to comply with his contract.

In this point of view and in this stage of the cause there was no error in receiving the testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Watts 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvine-v-bull-pa-1838.