Mott v. Kaldes

135 A. 764, 288 Pa. 264, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 451
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 30, 1926
DocketAppeal, 46
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 135 A. 764 (Mott v. Kaldes) 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
Mott v. Kaldes, 135 A. 764, 288 Pa. 264, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 451 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Equity jurisdiction being invoked by plaintiffs and not questioned by defendant, this case proceeded to trial on bill, answer and proofs. It was adjudged that a certain letter of attorney, hereinafter enlarged upon, did not confer on the agent thereby appointed authority to make a ten-year lease of real estate, which lease also will be more fully described as we proceed. It was further adjudged that, in the absence of such authority, the lease contravened the statute of frauds and, by virtue thereof, had the effect of creating a tenancy at will only, which had ripened into a tenancy from year to year; that neither acceptance of rent by the owners of the real estate nor acquisition of title thereto by the agent named in the letter of attorney, — which in fact occurred, —operated to validate the lease for the term named therein; accordingly, the court decreed it to have terminated on April 1, 1925, the date of the expiration of the last yearly period and the day named in a notice to quit which had been duly served on the tenant. Exceptions to the adjudication were dismissed and a final decree entered; defendant has appealed.

The essential facts may be stated briefly as follows: In 1910 and thereafter, Adeline Durr was the owner of the premises now in controversy, 313 Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton, Pa. On June 5, 1913, she executed a writing appointing her daughter, Emma Miller, attorney, for the express purpose and with the express power, in substance, to collect moneys due to her, the donor, and to pay debts owing by her. In May, 1918, Emma *268 Miller, as “attorney” for her mother, executed a lease to Paul Kaldes, the defendant, covering the property here involved, for the term of ten years, from April 1, 1919, at a rental of $550 a month. Immediately prior to the execution of this lease, Kaldes and a partner were tenants of the property under an earlier lease, not involved in this case. Commencing April 22,1919, Kaldes paid the monthly rent of $550 by checks drawn to the order of Adeline Durr, which were endorsed, “Adeline Durr, Emma Miller, Attorney,” and collected by deposit in the bank account of Mrs. Durr; but there was nothing to show that the latter knew of these particular deposits. In December, 1923, Mrs. Durr died, leaving a will by which she devised the residue of her estate, including 313 Lackawanna Avenue, to her daughter, the agent named in the letter of attorney; thereafter the same rent was paid to the latter. In July, 1923, the daughter died intestate, and title to this real estate passed to her heirs, the plaintiffs. From that time on the rent named in the lease was paid by checks to the “Estate of Mrs. Emma Miller,” and deposited for collection by the administrator of that estate. In March, 1924, the heirs-at-law of Mrs. Miller served a three-months’ notice to quit on Kaldes and, on his refusal to go, filed the present bill to establish the invalidity of the term named in the lease under which defendant claimed to hold the property.

The substance, not the form or extent, of the final decree is the matter of complaint, it being contended by appellant (1) generally, that, on the facts of the case, plaintiffs were entitled to no relief whatever, and, specifically, (2) that since the letter of attorney contained a clause empowering the agent named therein to do all and every act which might be needful and necessary about the conduct and management of the principal’s affairs and estate, it had the effect in law of authorizing such agent to accept the surrender of a then existing lease and to execute the ten-year lease here involved; (3) *269 that the statute of frauds did not void or affect such new lease or the term named therein; (4) that the agent, after becoming the owner of the demised premises at the death of her mother, must be conclusively presumed to have originally possessed authority to execute the lease now in question, even if such power be found wanting'in the written letter of attorney; (5) that the principal, and her successors in title, including Emma Miller, were estopped by acceptance of rent thereunder from denying the validity of the term created by the new lease; and (6) that Mrs. Miller was also estopped by “her implied representation of authority by signing' such lease.” Since the above are the only points comprehended by appellant’s statement of questions involved, they are all that need be discussed on this appeal. We shall pass on each of them in the course of this opinion, though not strictly in the order stated.

The letter of attorney given to Emma Miller confers no express power to lease or sell real estate; nor does it in fact contain any reference whatever to real estate except authority to pay taxes, etc., thereon. It deals with the personal estate of the principal, conferring certain definite powers to collect moneys owing to her and to pay and discharge her debts. The powers granted are specific, not general; though, after the narration of particular powers, for the management of the principal’s personal estate, and without any break in the continuity of the instrument, there appear general words authorizing every act “needful and necessary to be done about the premises and in the conduct and management of my affairs and estate.” This latter language cannot be given the effect of superimposing, on the limited authority theretofore granted the agent, another authority Avhich would be as broad as the power of the principal herself; on the contrary, it is obvious that.the general words Ave have quoted were intended to confer on the agent only the right to pursue any course her judgment might deem necessary or advantageous in discharging *270 the specific powers named in the letter of attorney. It is a well-known rule that, where particular acts are authorized by a power of attorney and general language is also used in the same instrument, the latter is to be limited in its application to the special objects of the power, and this rule applies here. For examples of the proper application of the rule, see Califf v. Bank, 37 Pa. Superior Ct. 412, and Gross v. Kincaid, 83 Pa. Superior Ct. 514. On the principle involved, see 2 Corpus Juris 558, 559; and on the general rule that letters of attorney are to be strictly interpreted by the courts, and special powers are not to be enlarged unless clearly so intended, see Campbell v. Foster Home Assn., 163 Pa. 609, 632.

The case of Duncan v. Hartman, 143 Pa. 595, relied on by appellant, is distinguishable from the one now before us. There the letter of attorney conferred broad authority on the agent to “diligently manage” certain real property of the principals. We ruled that this “general” but “vague” grant of power would authorize leases to be made by the agent “in the ordinary form and for ordinary terms,” but that it did not necessarily include the right to create a long-term lease, — there 15 years; though it was held competent for the defendant to show that this was “a customary way of dealing with land of that kind in that neighborhood,” and that the parties themselves had construed the grant as including the right to make such a lease. The case concerned a letter of attorney drawn to give general power, not one containing specific powers followed by general language. Moreover, no contention seems to have been made, as in the present case, that the statute of frauds precluded parol evidence to amplify the terms of the authority contained in the writing.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 764, 288 Pa. 264, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-kaldes-pa-1926.