Lindsay v. Rose

6 Pa. D. & C. 325, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 470
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedApril 22, 1924
DocketNo. 6089
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C. 325 (Lindsay v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsay v. Rose, 6 Pa. D. & C. 325, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 470 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Stern, J.,

This is a bill in equity praying for specific performance of an option for the sale of real estate. On bill, answer, replication and proofs, the chancellor adopts as his findings of facts and conclusions of law the requests of the parties for such findings and conclusions, so far as they have been affirmed or qualified. They are sufficiently complete to make independent findings unnecessary.

In general, it appears that the defendant, Solomon Rose, was and is the owner of a lot of ground 15 feet in width by 100 feet in depth. The lot fronts on both Tenth Street and on Alder Street, which is a thoroughfare west of, and parallel to, Tenth Street. On the Tenth Street end is erected a three-story store and dwelling across the entire 15 feet width of the lot and extending about 61 or 62 feet in depth. This building is numbered 1344 North Tenth Street. On the Alder Street end of the lot is a three-story dwelling-house erected across the entire width of the lot and extending in depth about 21 or 22 feet. This building is numbered 1341 Alder Street. On the first floor of this latter building there is cut out a corridor or alleyway giving access to Alder Street, although the house contains an independent door and entrance to Alder Street. Between the two structures referred to there is an open areaway or yard enjoyed in common by the tenants of the two buildings, each of the structures being rented out to different tenants and under different leases.

The plaintiff, George W. Lindsay, offered to rent the front structure on Tenth Street, and the defendant said that he would rent it to Lindsay for $75 per month. Rose offered to sell to Lindsay for $8500, pointing out that he, Lindsay, would get both of the structures, and that if he bought, as distinguished from renting, he would have to buy the whole lot. This conversation and these negotiations took place on the premises. Nothing was then determined upon, but a few days later the parties met at Rose’s office, and there Rose again advised Lindsay to buy the property, exhibiting to him the [326]*326rentals and carrying charges for the entire property. Lindsay said, however, that he would rent for two years at $75 per month. Finally, a written agreement was drawn and executed by the parties in the form of a lease, dated Oct. 6,1921, wherein and whereby the defendant leased to the plaintiff “a certain three-story store and dwelling, situated at No. 1344 North Tenth Street, at $75 per month,” and with a further clause as follows: “One hundred and fifty dollars was paid by the lessee at the signing of this agreement as a security to remain until the expiration of this lease or at the purchase of this property by lessee for the sum of Eight thousand five hundred dollars, option of which he has within the terms of this agreement.”

The plaintiff went into possession of the store and dwelling on the Tenth Street end of the lot, occupying the store as a drug store. The building on the Alder Street side continued in the occupancy of other tenants, who held under leases from the defendant and paid rent to him.

A short time before the expiration of the lease, Lindsay signified to Rose his desire to exercise the option of purchase, and the parties met for settlement on Oct. 6, 1923. Settlement was not effected, however, because of a disagreement between the parties as to the subject-matter of the option. The plaintiff claimed that he was to obtain the entire lot with both structures thereon erected; the defendant contended that the option was only for the same part of the lot that was the subject-matter of the lease, namely, the three-story store and dwelling on the Tenth Street end of the property. The only controversy involved in the present proceedings in equity is on this point; the defendant refuses to convey the entire lot, and the plaintiff insists upon obtaining the entire property or nothing. There were incidental facts testified to and made the basis of some of the requests for findings, but the major facts are as herein set forth.

As to the general principle of law involved there can be no question; the difficulty in this, as in most cases, is in the application of the law to the facts. Where the description contained in an agreement of sale is indefinite and vague and does not clearly indicate a reference to a specific piece of property, parol testimony cannot be admitted to round out or complete the description, nor can specific performance be decreed. On the other hand, if the description is complete and designates a specific property, whether by metes and bounds, by name or number, or by any other method accomplishing the general result, parol evidence is admissible to apply the description to the property and to overcome any “latent” ambiguities which may be disclosed upon the attempt to fit the description to the physical property itself.

As the chancellor views the present case, the first duty which devolves upon him is to consider the written agreement and determine what the description is. Like every other writing, the lease and option agreement must be construed by the court. Before any parol evidence can be admitted or any claim made that there is a latent ambiguity, there must first be an interpretation of the writing by the chancellor construing the description which covers the subject-matter of the demise and option.

Examining the agreement with this in mind, we find that it consists of a lease of “a certain three-story store and dwelling, situated at No. 1344 North Tenth Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.” There is no controversy between the parties as to the meaning of this description. It relates clearly to the structure on the Tenth Street side of the lot, known as No. 1344 North Tenth Street. The plaintiff admits that this is all that he leased under the agreement, and the parties acted on that understanding, in that during the two years of the lease the structure No. 1341 Alder Street continued to be rented [327]*327out to other tenants and the rent therefrom received by the defendant. With the subject of the lease, therefore, thus clearly defined, we come to the subsequent option clause of the agreement, which provides for “the purchase of this property, . . . option of which he has within the term of this agreement.” What is meant by the purchase of “this property?” In itself it is clearly an inadequate description under the statute of frauds, since it contains no description whatever. It is merely an arrow-head pointing to a prior part of the agreement and can refer only to the property described in the demise, namely, “a certain three-story store and dwelling, situated at No. 1344 North Tenth Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.” It refers either to this description or to nothing; at least, to nothing that can be made the subject of specific performance under the terms of the statute of frauds.

The result is that the chancellor is bound to conclude that the only description upon which the plaintiff can rely, under the statute of frauds, is the description as given in the demise, and, as above stated, that description admittedly includes only the structure on the Tenth Street end of the lot. From this reasoning it would follow, as a matter merely of the construction of the written instrument, that the subject-matters of the option and of the demise are identical, and that no parol evidence can be admitted to change the description of the property covered by the option or to amplify it in any manner. This leaves no ambiguities to explain; the description is definite and its application to the land is definite.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C. 325, 1924 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-v-rose-pactcomplphilad-1924.