Landreth v. Howell

24 Pa. Super. 210, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 158
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 1904
DocketAppeal, No. 249
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 Pa. Super. 210 (Landreth v. Howell) 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
Landreth v. Howell, 24 Pa. Super. 210, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 158 (Pa. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion by

Morrison, J.,

This is an action of assumpsit and at the trial the learned [215]*215court granted a compulsory nonsuit and subsequently refused to take it off, to which ruling the plaintiff excepted and a bill was sealed.

The plaintiff's claim is founded upon an alleged state of facts of which the following is the substance: A master in partition sold to plaintiff a tract of land described by metes and bounds and said to contain six acres, three roods and eight perches of land, more or less, at $2,500 per acre. The quantity of the tract was introduced in the papers by way of description and there was no covenant or warranty as to quantity. It is conceded that the description was in accordance with the ancient title papers conveying the land. The plaintiff having voluntarily paid for the land at the rate of $2,500 per acre for the quantity mentioned in the description accepted his title and rested for about a year before making any attempt to recover for the deficiency in the quantity of land. In the meantime the master had made report of his proceedings, which had been confirmed by the court below, and the money received from the plaintiff had been paid over under decree of the court, to the parties entitled thereto long before the commencement of this suit. The full amount of purchase money paid by the plaintiff was $17,000, and the deficiency which he claims should be refunded to him is $1,650. The deficiency claimed by appellant amounts to less than ten per cent of the estimated acreage. Our question then is this: Is this deficiency large enough to require the defendant to refund where the conveyance has been fully executed by payment of the purchase money and acceptance of a deed, and where the appellant still retains the title and does not offer to rescind by reconveying the property and placing the parties in statu quo ? It must be noted at this point that there is absolutely no evidence of any fraudulent misrepresentations made by the defendant or by anybody for whom she is responsible. The learned counsel for the plaintiff bases his right to recover on the ground of a mutual mistake of such an amount as would induce a court of equity to set aside the sale if it had been discovered in time, and where not discovered in time to grant relief to the purchaser. It is conceded that none of the parties to the transaction had any knowledge that the land described in the papers did not contain the quantity mentioned in the description. The coun[216]*216sel cites Hoover v. Senseman, 3 Cent. Repr. 540, in support of appellant’s right to recover. But that case does not help him. It was on a declaration which clearly set up facts which if true would justify a recovery. To this declaration the defendant demurred and the Supreme Court said : “ The demurrer admits all the facts averred in the first count of the declaration. That avers the sale and purchase to have been at a specific price per acre, and through a mutual mistake, six acres more than was contained in the piece of land, was sold, bought and paid for. In view of the price paid per acre — $135—this is too large a deficiency not to relieve against in equity, as the plaintiffs in error thus obtained money which they are not actually entitled to retain, this action lies, and the judgment is correct.” The declaration in that case averred that the defendants believed and represented that the land contained fifty-six acres and some perches, and the said plaintiff relying upon and believing the representations of said defendants that the said tract of land did contain fifty-six acres and some perches as represented, did pay the full purchase money for the same to said defendants. The demurrer admitted the truth of this and no good reason can be given why equity should not relieve on such a state of facts. But in our case the evidence shows that none of the parties knew or had any definite belief as to the quantity of land covered by the description, except as they judged from the language of the description. And the description in all of the title papers and the advertisement stating that the tract contained six acres, three roods and eight perches, more or less, the plaintiff was put on notice that there might be less and there might be more land in the tract. This is not a case where the defendant represented the quantity of land and the plaintiff believed and relied upon such representation. The appellant also cites Painter v. Wilson, 197 Pa. 434. But that was an action for the purchase money of land payable when the title to the same “has been thoroughly tested by said first parties, and proven to be a good and perfect title.” All that this case really decides on our question is, where there is a great difference between the quantity of land sold and the quantity of land to which the vendor had title, equity will relieve the vendee from payment of the whole of the purchase money. This case has no application where the land has been [217]*217fully conveyed and the purchase money paid and the vendee long afterwards brings an action to recover back part of the purchase money on an alleged deficiency in quantity of the land. Babcock v. Day, 104 Pa. 4, is also cited. That case is authority for the proposition that while in view of the mutual mistake of the parties plaintiff was entitled to equitable relief, yet the discharge of his rule to open a judgment against him for the purchase money was not error; his remedy was to tender a reconveyance and sue for the rescission of the contract. In that case Mr. Justice Clark said: “ Babcock lived on an adjoining farm, knew the lines, and directed the subsequent survey. This is not, therefore, the case of a person selling land which he did not own, and for which he could not make title. The description in the deed was by metes and bounds, and the deed and transfer were effective to vest the title in Babcock. There was no defect in the title to the lands described in the deed, and the truth, as to the actual location of the barns, was as easily ascertainable by one of the parties as the other.

“ The mistake of the parties, however, which resulted from the fault of neither, was so essential, so material and substantial, as that it may reasonably be supposed that, but for the misdescription, they might never have entered into the contract at all. Under the peculiar and special facts of this case, if the injury had been but small, as compared with the consideration, we might hold the defendant to be without remedy, but the magnitude of the injury is such, that the defendant should obtain relief in some form. He must not, however, hold to the profits of his contract, and demand compensation for his loss. He should put the plaintiff in statu quo, tender a re-conveyance, and demand and sue for a rescission.” In that case the deficiency was about one third of the purchase price of the land.

In the case under consideration the appellant has shown no disposition to reconvey the land and rescind the contract, but he asks to be permitted to hold to the profits of his contract and demand compensation for his alleged loss.

Wolf v. Christman, 202 Pa. 475, is also cited, but that case has no application. In it the vendee bought relying on a warranty or express representation by the vendor as to the [218]*218depth of -the lot. And the case was a bill in equity for specific performance, or in the alternative to refund the money paid. And of course, in such a case the vendee was entitled to relief, because when he purchased he relied on a warranty or express representation by the vendor as to the depth of the lot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Pa. Super. 210, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landreth-v-howell-pasuperct-1904.