Lycoming Natural Gas Corp. v. Searle

20 Pa. D. & C. 33, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 121
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Potter County
DecidedJune 26, 1933
DocketNo. 6
StatusPublished

This text of 20 Pa. D. & C. 33 (Lycoming Natural Gas Corp. v. Searle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Potter County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lycoming Natural Gas Corp. v. Searle, 20 Pa. D. & C. 33, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 121 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Lewis, P. J.,

By written articles of agreement dated September 11,1926, Mrs. Gertrude E. Carmer purchased from Mrs. Tillie Bly, a widow, the land concerned in this controversy for $800. The land contract was not recorded.

Mrs. Carmer went into possession of the land and, so continuing, made payments on account of principal and interest until, on January 7,1932, there was unpaid upon the contract $400 principal and $75.92 interest.

While so seized of the equitable title and in possession of the land, Mrs. Carmer and her husband, Roswell Carmer, executed and delivered on October 8,1930, a valid oil and gas lease, by which the land was “granted, demised^ leased, and let” to Peoples Natural Gas Company of Pittsburgh, Pa., its successors and assigns, “for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas . . . for the term of 10 years . . . and as long thereafter as the land is operated by the lessee in the search for or production of oil or gas”. The lease was recorded November 1,1930. It provided for the payment of delay rental until a producing well was drilled on the premises, a one-eighth royalty of the oil and in lieu of a fractional royalty of the gas a fixed rental for each gas well, payable quarterly.

By a valid assignment duly recorded, the rights of the lessee were vested in the plaintiff, Lycoming Natural Gas Corporation, on March 31, 1931, and in the intervening plaintiff, Lycoming Producing Corporation, on June 15, 1932. [34]*34The lessee and its successors in title fully performed everything required of them by the terms of the lease.

About December 1,1931, a large gas well producing from seven to ten million cubic feet of gas per day was completed near the land in controversy and within li miles thereof. Thereby the gas rights in the land became much more valuable than they were at the time the lease was executed.

On January 7,1932, Mrs. Carmer, her husband, Roswell Carmer, the defendant Searle, and one Harry B. Slone went to the home of Tillie Bly at East Concord, N. Y. The Carmers, Searle, and Slone all had actual knowledge of the land contract, the large gas well and the lease. Mrs. Bly, of course, knew of the contract, but apparently had little, if any, knowledge of the large gas well and its influence upon the value of the land she had contracted to convey to Mrs. Carmer. She had at least constructive knowledge of the lease. She was not pressing Mrs. Carmer for payments.

Mrs. Bly and Mrs. Carmer executed and acknowledged what is termed a “surrender agreement”, by the terms of which Mrs. Carmer did “hereby sell, transfer, assign, grant, convey, and surrender” the contract and all her right, title and interest therein and thereunder, and the parties, mutually released each other from all liability under the contract. Roswell Carmer, the husband of Gertrude E. Carmer, was present when the surrender agreement was executed but did not join therein nor in the acknowledgment thereof. The amount remaining unpaid upon the land contract was discussed. Mrs. Bly produced her account book showing what payments had been made upon the contract and, at her request, Searle computed the balance due upon the contract. To this total amount was added the sum of $30 which Mrs. Carmer had borrowed from Mrs. Bly’s mother, making a total of $605.92.

Mrs. Bly executed and acknowledged a deed conveying the land in controversy to Searle and enclosed it in a letter, signed by her, addressed to First Trust Company of Wellsville, N. Y., in which she directed that company to deliver her deed to Searle upon the payment for her account of $505.92, with direction to forward her that sum in form of New York draft or cashier’s check payable to her order. Searle had caused the surrender agreement, deed, and letter to be prepared in advance of the meeting.

At Searle’s suggestion, Mrs. Bly permitted him to carry away from her home the letter and deed to mail to the trust company. Searle recorded the deed on January 11, 1932. It contained no reference whatever to the land contract or to the lease. No notice of Mrs. Carmer’s intention to surrender was given to Lycoming Natural Gas Corporation or its predecessor in title. Searle thereafter permitted Mrs. Carmer to occupy the surface of the land for agricultural purposes and as a chicken farm, but posted the land with trespass notices in his own name.

The facts above stated are not in dispute. It is urged on behalf of the defendants that Mrs. Carmer’s surrender agreement was effective to divest her of the equitable title to the land which she acquired on the execution of her contract with Mrs. Bly, September 11, 1926, and that the surrender of the land contract operated to extinguish the rights of the plaintiffs under the lease.

It is urged on behalf of the plaintiffs:

{a) That the “surrender agreement” was not effective to convey Mrs. Carmer’s equitable title, because her living husband did not join therein.
(6) That Mrs. Carmer, the purchaser of the land under the contract, could ,not affect the rights of those who acquired an interest therein from her by a subsequent surrender of the contract. No cases have been cited to the court in which these questions have been exactly ruled.

[35]*35The Aet of 1893, P. L. 344, 48 PS § 31, provides that a married woman “may not mortgage or convey her real property, unless her husband join in such mortgage or conveyance.” And section 2 of the act, 48 PS § 32, provides that “she may not execute or acknowledge a deed, or other written instrument, conveying or mortgaging her real property, unless her husband join in such mortgage or conveyance.”

Upon the execution of the contract, Mrs. Carmer became vested with an equitable estate in the land, which might be sold, charged, encumbered, and levied upon as hers. It was real estate and subject in her hands to all the incidents of real estate, and as such would descend to her heirs. She is considered in equity as the owner, subject only to the payment of the purchase money. Her interest was not circumscribed by the purchase money paid, but she was entitled to all of the advantages and liable for all losses accruing after the date of the contract: Chahoon et al. v. Hollenback, 16 S. & R. 425; Ives v. Cress, 5 Pa. 118; Kerr et al. v. Day, 14 Pa. 112; Reed v. Lukens, 44 Pa. 200; Hall v. Vanness et al., 49 Pa. 457; Spratt v. Greenfield et al., 279 Pa. 437.

It is well settled that a married woman may do anything in a contractual way concerning her real estate except that she may not mortgage or convey unless her husband joins in such mortgage or conveyance. “Under the Act of 1893 a married woman may ‘sell’ her real estate and make any contract ‘necessary, appropriate, convenient or advantageous’ to the exercise of her right to sell; but she may not perform her contract to sell without the joinder of her husband in the conveyance.” McCoy v. Niblick, 221 Pa. 123, 127.

Upon the execution of the land contract in 1927, Mrs. Carmer was, under the long line of cases above cited, immediately vested with an interest in the real estate. She could contract to divest herself of that interest but could not perform her contract so to do — could not actually divest herself of that interest, except by a conveyance in which her husband joined. This he did not do.

At first glance, it might seem that, if a married woman might make a valid contract to purchase land, she might rescind or surrender the contract so made.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Pa. D. & C. 33, 1933 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lycoming-natural-gas-corp-v-searle-pactcomplpotter-1933.