Preis v. Mulholland & Gotwals, Inc.

96 Pa. Super. 104, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 110
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 17, 1928
DocketAppeal 274
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 Pa. Super. 104 (Preis v. Mulholland & Gotwals, Inc.) 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
Preis v. Mulholland & Gotwals, Inc., 96 Pa. Super. 104, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 110 (Pa. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

The action below was assumpsit and was tried by one of the judges of the municipal court of the County of Philadelphia sitting without a jury. The finding was in favor of the plaintiffs for the full amount of their claim; the defendants, claiming that they have a valid defense but were not permitted to prove it by *106 reason of the rulings of the trial judge upon certain offers of evidence made, and questions asked, in their behalf, have appealed.

Under a written agreement of sale dated September 2.8,1925, plaintiffs purchased from defendants twenty-eight lots in the City of "Philadelphia and the present controversy arose over the liability of defendants to reimburse them for certain sums which they were required to pay for the paving of streets upon which four of the lots abutted. The lots all front on the north side of Grange Avenue, an east and west street; fourteen of them comprise the block between the east side of Mascher Street and the west side of Howard intersecting north and south streets, and the other fourteen, the block between the east side of Howard and the west side of Hope, another intersecting north and south street; plaintiffs have built a house on each lot.

At the time of the sale, which was for a consideration of $40,000' and was closed by settlement on October 30, 1925, the streets upon which the lots abutted were graded and curbed but not paved. The dispute grew out of this provision in the agreement of sale: “This agreement includes all street improvements, namely sewer and sewer laterals, water pipe and water laterals to the curb; grading, curbing, asphalt paving, with brick gutters. ’ ’ When Grange Avenue was paved the defendants raised no question about their liability, under this provision, to pay for the paving of that street, but denied any liability to pay for the paving of Mascher, Howard and Hope Streets along the sides of the corner lots abutting upon these intersecting streets. Their contention was that the actual agreement between plaintiffs and themselves was that defendants were to pay only for the paving of Grange Avenue, but through a mistake of the scrivener, who in drawing the agreement was acting for both parties, *107 it was drawn to include payment for “'all street improvements” instead of “street paving to be included for Grange Avenue only.” Howard Street was the next street paved and on June 16, 1926, the owners of property abutting on both sides of that street from Grange Avenue to Nedro Avenue, the next east and west street, including plaintiffs and defendants, joined in a petition to the city for the paving thereof and a contract was awarded to the Union Paving Company. Upon receipt of the bill for the paving of that portion of Howard Street upon which two of the lots abutted, it was sent by plaintiffs to defendants, who refused to pay it, and the Union Paving Company brought suit against plaintiffs, in settlement of which they were required to pay $789.66.

The next street paved was Mascher, the cost of which was charged by the city to property located on the east side thereof and north of Grange Avenue; the amount which plaintiffs were required to pay the Barber Asphalt Company for the lot owned by them on the east side of Mascher Street was $630.41. The paving of Hope Street was contemplated at the time the suit was brought and completed before the trial and the amount plaintiffs were required to pay for the improvement of that street was $376.06. The finding of the trial judge was in favor of the plaintiffs for the aggregate of these payments, $1,796.13, with interest. Defendants’ sole defense was thus pleaded in their affidavit: “It is averred that the parties hereto at the time of' making the said agreement and before that time, had in contemplation only the street paving on Grange Avenue, the street upon which all of the said lots fronted. That the price for said lots was based solely upon street paving for Grange Avenue, only, and not for any streets abutting on the gables or sides of the corner lots, and if defendant had intended to include all paving it would have added the cost of said *108 paving to the price of said lots. At the time of signing said agreement, defendant was under contract with the paving company to pave Grange Avenue, but did not have any contract or contemplate a contract for any of the streets abutting the corner lots mentioned in sale agreement, all of which plaintiffs were fully informed. The street pawing mentioned in said agreement was intended by the parties to said agreement to be specifically restricted to Grange Avenue only. The agreement was drawn by Warren B. Light, a friend of both parties thereto, and he was acting for both parties in drawing it. The parties did not notice the omission in said contract, and had it been noticed before or at the time of signing the agreement it would not have been signed by the parties until corrected to read ‘ Street paving to be included for Grange Avenue only.’ ”

Apparently counsel for appellants sought by these averments to bring their case within the principles announced by Sharswood, J., in Huss v. Morris, 63 Pa. 367, 372. In that case the scrivener of a deed testified that in its preparation, although instructed by the grantor to describe the consideration as the sum of one dollar and his natural love and affection “for his grandchildren,” he, by accident or mistake, wrote the word “heirs” in the deed instead of the word “grandchildren.” The court below admitted the evidence of the scrivener but held that it was not sufficient to submit to the jury. In reversing the Supreme Court said: “It is the well-settled law of this state'that the mistake of a Scrivener in preparing a deed or other writing, may be shown by parol evidence, and the instrument reformed accordingly. It is but an exercise of the equity powers inherent in all our courts, from the earliest days of the province. Many of the cases are complicated with fraud either at the time of the. execution of the writing or in subsequently setting it up *109 contrary to the agreement and understanding of the parties. The cases are too numerous to cite, but 1 will content myself with referring to a few in which the element of fraud had no place: [citing cases]. The English cases are all examined, with Ms usual ability, by Chancellor Kent in Gillespie v. Moon, 2 Johns. Ch. 585, and the rule fully established that equity relieves against a mistake as well as against fraud. ........ Free as the courts have been in admitting parol evidence to correct mistakes, that liberality has been more particularly exercised in reference to the 'statement of the consideration not only in correcting what is wrong but in inserting what has been omitted: [citing cases].”

The conclusion reached in that case was that the evidence tending to show a mistake in the statement, of the consideration should have been submitted to the jury. For some reason, not apparent from the record, the scrivener was not called as the first and most important witness for the defendants in this case. Arthur E. Mulholland, one of the defendants, was the first witness called and counsel for appellants made an offer, the material portions of which were: “I offer to prove that the negotiations leading up to this contract only contemplated paving of the front, which was Grange Avenue,.......

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 Pa. Super. 104, 1929 Pa. Super. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preis-v-mulholland-gotwals-inc-pasuperct-1928.