Nick v. Craig

151 A. 573, 301 Pa. 50, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 449
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 13, 1930
DocketAppeals, 241 and 242
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 151 A. 573 (Nick v. Craig) 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
Nick v. Craig, 151 A. 573, 301 Pa. 50, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 449 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

Six of a syndicate of twenty persons, who were the equitable owners of a tract of land, each of the twenty having the same financial interest therein, filed a bill in equity for an account, against the substituted trustee, who held the legal title for the syndicate, and a land company, which had agreed to develop and sell the land for the benefit of the syndicate; the other equitable owners being made defendants, in order that all possible interests might be parties to the suit. The decree, as originally entered, awarded certain sums to each of the plaintiffs, but, through an oversight, failed to allow them interest on the money of Avhich they had been deprived. On appeal therefrom, we remitted the record, with a direction to determine this question also: Nick v. Craig, 298 Pa. 411. The final decree, subsequently entered, allowed the interest, and directed the land company to pay to the trustee, for the benefit of each plaintiff, a specified sum, which the trustee, in turn, was directed to *54 pay to those thus found entitled. From that decree, the trustee and the land company have each prosecuted one of the present appeals. That taken by the trustee could probably be quashed, since he is not harmed by the decree, his sole duty under it being to distribute to the several plaintiffs the sums which the land company pays to him for their benefit. Inasmuch, however, as we intend to charge both appellants with the costs in the court below (that matter having been overlooked when the final decree was entered), we will treat the case as if no objection could properly be made to the appeal by the trustee.

The agreement, which is the basis of the action, is signed by all the members of the syndicate, as parties of the first part, by the trustee, who originally held the legal title to the land for the benefit of the syndicate, as party of the second part, and by the land company, as party of the third part. At that time the land company had an undisclosed option to purchase the property for $70,000. The agreement recites the then existing titles to the land, that the syndicate desired to purchase it from the land company for $100,000, payable as therein stated, and that “for the purpose of subdividing and selling the same in lots or parcels, and to facilitate sales and deeds which may from time to time be made, [the tract] shall be forthwith conveyed by good and sufficient deeds of general warranty to the [trustee], in trust......for the benefit of [the syndicate], subject to a right of sale” by the land company; that the $100,000 to be paid by the syndicate “is to cover all taxes and interest to January 1, 1919, and that said premises are to be conveyed to [the trustee] free and clear from all encumbrances......[that the land company] hereby agrees to contract for and pay all expenses incurred in the development and selling the lands above described, including plotting and marking of lots, preliminary rough grading of all streets, printing, advertising, office expenses, clerk, office and hiring of salesmen, and in- *55 eluding all other services and expenses performed by or incurred by [the land company], unless special expenses are incurred by express agreement with [the syndicate] in which event such expenses shall be paid as then agreed upon... i.. All moneys derived from the sale of said lots shall be paid to [the trustee] and shall be by him divided or applied as follows: ...... [to the land company] 33% per cent......of all moneys derived from the sale of lots during the preceding month. It being understood and agreed that said commission or compensation is to be in full of all services rendered or expenses incurred by it, and that it will furnish at its expense all necessary letter heads, pass books, contract blanks, deed-forms and papers required to carry out their agreement in connection with the sale of lots, and shall also secure abstracts of title......and have the title insured.” It further specifies that the other 66% per cent is to be used in paying interest on a purchase-money mortgage provided for, and on account of its principal, when directed by the syndicate, the taxes, and such bills as the syndicate may direct, and that the balance “shall be divided among [the members of the syndicate] according to their respective interests in this contract..... .the interest of each......[member to] be and is hereby declared to be in the proportion that the amount subscribed for and actually paid in......bears to the total amount of the consideration, to wit, the sum of $100,000...... It is also agreed and understood that this contract shall terminate June 15, 1924, at which time all unsold lots shall be conveyed, all contracts for sale of lots be assigned or transferred, and all moneys belonging to [the syndicate] shall be paid or turned over by [the trustee to the syndicate] or to such person or company as they may direct, and [the land company’s] interest in all lots unsold at that time [shall cease]...... For the faithful performance of this agreement the parties hereto bind themselves, their heirs, successors, administrators and assigns by these presents.”

*56 There is neither averment nor proof that anything was omitted from or added to the agreement by fraud, accident or mistake; hence, it must be construed exactly as it is written, and all prior negotiations as to its terms must be considered as merged in it. In construing it, however, appellants ask us to decide that the clause which says the land company “hereby agrees to contract for and pay all expenses incurred in the development and selling ithe lands above described, including plotting and marking of lots,” etc., etc., excludes everything preceding the word “including,” unless it is embraced within the language which follows. This we cannot do, for not only would it make “including” to operate as “excluding,” despite the plain language to the contrary, but it would also result in making the preceding words absolutely useless, which is not permissible, unless no other course is reasonably possible: Orth & Bro. v. Board of Education, 272 Pa. 411; McFadden v. Lineweaver & Co., 297 Pa. 278. We need not stress this point, however, since, among the things in the same sentence and following the word “including,” is the clause “and including all other services and expenses performed by or incurred by” the land company. So, also, immediately following the provision that the land company shall get % of the “moneys derived from the sale of lots,” there appears the further clause: “It being understood and agreed that said commission or compensation is to be in full of all services rendered or expenses incurred by” the land company. It follows, that, under the agreement, the land company could not have any claim against the syndicate for “services rendered or expenses incurred,” “unless special expenses are incurred by express agreement with [the syndicate] in which event such expenses shall be paid as then agreed upon.” That is, the fact that they are special expenses and how they are to be paid, must both be agreed upon before the services are rendered, and if this is not done no right to repayment can arise, bv virtue pf the agreement, even *57 though appellants’ other contention, hereinafter fully considered, is sustained, viz., that all the members of the syndicate are bound by the actions of a majority thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
151 A. 573, 301 Pa. 50, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nick-v-craig-pa-1930.