Page v. Wilson

28 A.2d 706, 150 Pa. Super. 427, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 1, 1942
DocketAppeal, 30
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 28 A.2d 706 (Page v. Wilson) 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
Page v. Wilson, 28 A.2d 706, 150 Pa. Super. 427, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186 (Pa. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Keller, P. J.,

Opinion by

This appeal is concerned solely with the application of payments for rent of real estate made by the lessee.

On May 17,1924 Maney & Page entered into a written lease with William P. Wilson, under which they leased to him a suite of offices on the second floor of the Maney & Page building in Sayre, Pennsylvania, to be used as a law office, for the term of five years from June 1, 1924 to May 31, 1929, inclusive, for which the lessee agreed to pay as rent the sum of $360 annually, payable $30 each and every month in advance. The lease authorized the Prothonotary or any attorney of any court of record in Pennsylvania “to appear for and to confess a judgment against the said party of the second part [lessee] and in favor of the said party of the first part [lessors] for the whole amount of said rent as hereinbefore set forth”. A later clause in the lease provided: “It is further agreed that the terms and conditions of this agreement and lease shall in no way be changed or altered except by a writing signed by all of the parties hereto; and if the said party of the second part shall continue in possession of the said premises after the expiration of said term [of five years], at the option of the said party of the first part such holding over may be held and deemed a renewal of this agreement for another like term, the same as though a new agreement of leasing, identical with this, had been executed and delivered by the said parties hereto for a succeeding term”.

*430 William P. Wilson, the lessee, did not himself occupy the leased premises, but permitted his nephew, Howard P. Wilson, to occupy them, and the latter conducted his law practice there. He continued in possession of the offices after May 31, 1929, and the lessors exercised their option of holding such continuance of possession to be a renewal of the lease for another term of five years (ending May 31, 1934), as provided in the lease.

Howard F. Wilson paid the lessors whatever payments of rent were made up until January 16, 1932. He did not comply strictly with the terms of the lease as respects the payments being made monthly in advance; but until 1932 they were made reasonably regularly. His payment of $180 on January 16, 1932 paid the rent up to and including August 31, 193.1 and $20 on account of September, 1931. On September 13, 1933, Walter T. Page, acting partner of Maney & Page, wrote William P. Wilson informing him that no rent had been paid since January 16, 1932 and that the rent due to 'September 1, 1933 amounted to $700.

On September 22, 1933 William P. Wilson sent Page his check for $100, which the latter credited on September 25, 1933, and later notified Wilson that said payment covered the rent due to December 31,1931.

It will be noted that the five year renewal term expired on May 31, 1934. At that time there was due on said lease the sum of eight hundred and forty dollars. 1

No new lease was executed, but Howard F. Wilson occupied the leased premises up to and including December 31, 1935, when he surrendered possession.

On September 13, 1934 Page, in response to a request of William P. Wilson for a statement of the “Howard F. Wilson office rent account,” furnished him a statement, showing the amount due to September 1, 1934 to be $960. That letter, as well as his prior letter of *431 September 13, 1933 showed that the lessors, as they received payments of rent applied them to the oldest rentals due and unpaid.

Following this letter, payments were made by William P. Wilson to Page by check, as follows:

September 14, 1934 .................$100
June 18, 1935 ...................... 70
August 31, 1935 .................... 90
January 20, 1936 ................... 100
September 14, 1936 .................. 100
September 6, 1937 .................. 100 $560

Walter T. Page, who outlived James B. Maney, died on January 1, 1939. His daughter, Jeannette Palen Page, was granted letters testamentary as executrix of his will, and by virtue thereof became liquidator of the partnership of Maney & Page.

On February 2, 1940 as liquidator she filed the above-mentioned lease in the Prothonotary’s office and by virtue of a confession therein contained, affidavit of default, and leave of court to enter judgment on an instrument over ten years old, she caused judgment to be entered on said lease against William P. Wilson for $1800 and costs, “Execution thereon to be limited to $870, -with interest from June 1, 1934 and costs.”

Thereupon on petition of William P. Wilson setting forth that he had paid all of the rent due under said lease, except $280, the court granted a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened and defendant let into a defense; which the court on September 11, 1941 made absolute as to any amount claimed in excess of $280.

Two days later this order was revoked, in order to permit a fuller consideration of the subject, but on November 3, 1941 after due and careful consideration, the court reinstated its order of September 11, 1941. Plaintiff appealed.

The court below relied largely on the principles re *432 lating to appropriation of payments enunciated by Chief Justice Gibson in Harker v. Conrad, 12 S. & R. 301, which the plaintiff contended had been overruled or departed from in later decisions of the Supreme Court.

While we have found no decision expressly overruling Har ker v. Conrad, supra, the trend of later decisions in this Commonwealth has departed in some particulars from the rules announced by Chief Justice Gibson in that case. He said: “Although as between the immediate parties, the creditor has a right to appropriate, where the debtor has failed to do so, yet this right must be exercised within, at the furthest, a reasonable time after the payment, and by the performance of some act which indicates an intention to appropriate. It is too late to attempt it at the trial; and were it otherwise, there would, in the absence of an actual appropriation by the debtor, be no rule on the subject but the will of the creditor, which would in all cases be decisive; but such is not the fact. In default of actual appropriation, the matter is to be determined by rules and circumstances of equity. The debtor has a right to make the application, in the first instance, and failing to exercise it, the same right devolves on the creditor; but where neither has exercised it, the law nevertheless presumes, in ordinary cases, that the debtor intended to pay in the way which, at the time, was most to his advantage. Thus, if it were peculiarly the interest of the party to have the money received in extinguishment of a particular demand, the law intends that he paid it in extinguishment of such demand, and that the omission to declare his intention was accidental.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 A.2d 706, 150 Pa. Super. 427, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-wilson-pasuperct-1942.