Schaeffer v. Jones

143 A. 197, 293 Pa. 529, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 553
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 10, 1928
DocketAppeals, 58 and 59
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 143 A. 197 (Schaeffer v. Jones) 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
Schaeffer v. Jones, 143 A. 197, 293 Pa. 529, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 553 (Pa. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Walling,

This suit in equity, brought to compel the vendors to specifically perform a contract for sale of land, resulted in a final decree dismissing plaintiff’s bill and therefrom he brought this appeal. Intervening plaintiffs also appealed from the same decree. The defendants, Richard L. Jones and others, herein called “the Jones’ heirs” *532 and Richard J. Bond and others, herein called “the Bonds” were relatives and owners as tenants in common of a one-hundred-and-four-acre farm, situated on the State Road in Upper Darby township, near Philadelphia, the Jones’ heirs owning five-twelfths and the Bonds seven-twelfths thereof. By reason of suburban developments, it became of such great value that early in 1925, the owners considered the advisability of putting the same upon the market. In furtherance of this, representatives of both sides met on April 18, 1925, when methods of sale, price, etc., were discussed. On behalf of the defendants, it was suggested that “for sale” cards be placed upon the premises. This the Bonds objected to, saying it would cause annoyance by undesirable applicants. One of the Bond brothers, intervening plaintiffs, tried to get the Jones’ heirs to set a price per acre for their interest and in so doing said his sisters would sell for $3,000 an acre. After consultation, one of the defendants said they would sell for $5,000 an acre, which one of the Bonds said was much too high, and nothing definite was accomplished. Twelve days later, on April ■30th, Martha Bond,' mother of the intervening plaintiffs and a part owner of the farm, wrote the defendant, M. L. Jones, stating, inter alia, “Rich and Erv [her two sons] came up to try to buy the Bryan farm [the one in question being so called], and would have bought it if they could have come to reasonable terms with you folks that night, after figuring out the cost of developing Erv decided he did not want to go in on it, and Rich is now considering another property, practically half the price he was offering for yours and which he feels is as good a proposition, therefore he is not interested in buying from you; for which I am very glad, as I feel it would be a very big chance for him to take.” Five days thereafter, W. A. Loomes, an experienced realtor, was introduced to defendants and given verbal authority to sell their interest in the farm. He met Rupert C. Schaeffer, the plaintiff, who made an offer of $4,000 *533 an acre for the farm. Loomes reported this to defendants as an offer of $3,750 per acre. It being refused, further negotiations followed, Schaeffer finally increasing his offer to $5,000, which defendants accepted. Thereupon Loomes, on May 28, 1925, drew a contract for the sale of the entire farm to Schaeffer for this amount and signed as agent for the parties on both sides, which they ratified: The hand money, $15,000 was paid and the contract provided for final settlement on or before September. 15, 1925. It was a cash sale and Loomes informed the Jones’ heirs that the purchaser was a Philadelphia millionaire. In fact, Schaeffer was a resident of Delaware County and not of great wealth. Becoming acquainted with facts to which we will refer, defendants tendered a return of the hand money and refused to carry out the contract. Thereupon plaintiff filed this bill, in which and in later sworn pleadings he deliberately stated, inter alia, that he was the real purchaser in his own right and for his own profit. He made a somewhat similar statement when first called as a witness, but, later in his testimony, frankly admitted that he had no interest in the purchase, but took title as a “straw man” for the use of the Bonds' and at the request of his son, who was their attorney; that they furnished the hand money and also the balance due the Jones’ heirs at time of settlement; also that the pretended sale to him by the Bonds and the security given by him to them was a mere pretence. The manifest object of this sham arrangement was to give the Jones’ heirs the impression that the sale was to a third party.

Loomes says he did not know until some days after the contract was drawn that the Bonds were the real purchasers. As a matter of fact he did know it, at least on that day (May 28, 1925), as the checks for the hand money came directly from the Bonds, $6,000 of which he retained as commissions, $5,250 of which he returned to the Bonds and the balance of $3,750 was in the Bonds’ check which he deposited and sent in place his own *534 check of like amount to the Jones’ heirs. Furthermore, he fixed his commission, in case the sale fell through, at what it would be on the share of the Jones’ heirs.

Again Loomes had been in consultation with one of the Bonds about this farm before he undertook to sell it for the Jones’s heirs and had been given encouragement by the Bonds that if they secured the farm he would be employed to resell it, as he was, almost immediately after the contract was signed. In the summer of 1925, before the controversy arose as to carrying out the contract, he sold one piece thereof for the Bonds and received a commission of $500 out of the hand payment. Moreover, he never tried to secure any customer for the farm except Schaeffer and falsely reported to his principals the first offer made by the latter. The above sketch of the facts are found more at large by the chancellor, with other facts found in addition.

The chancellor refused to decree a specific performance of the contract and recommended a dismissal of the bill. This refusal was based largely on two grounds. First, that plaintiff had deliberately sworn falsely to the pleadings filed in the case in a manner calculated to deceive the chancellor and defeat justice and was therefore not in court with clean hands. Under such circumstances, equity would not grant him relief: Comstock v. Thompson, 286 Pa. 457; Brown v. Pitcairn, 148 Pa. 387; Orne v. Kittanning Coal Co., 114 Pa. 172; and see Miller v. Fulmer, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 106, also opinion of Judge Sulzberger, in Rice v. Findley Co., 19 Pa. Dist. 601. And, secondly, that Loomes, as an agent, had been unfaithful to his principals and had deceived them by misinformation and false statements; also concealed from them the fact that he had received encouragement from the real purchasers to the effect that he would be employed to resell the property in case of a purchase thereof by them. There is a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether the Bonds gave Loomes such encouragement, but, under all the facts and circumstances, we are unable *535 to say the chancellor erred in finding that they did. Of course, as the present chancellor did not see the witnesses or hear the testimony, we would feel at liberty to reverse the finding, if convinced of error: Gilbraith’s Est., 270 Pa. 288. The chancellor properly treats Loomes as being unfaithful to his principals, the vendors, at the encouragement of the vendees. If so, the vendors cannot be compelled to perform the contract. See Wilkinson v. McCullough, 196 Pa. 205; Rich v. Black & Baird et al., 173 Pa. 92; Finch v. Conrade’s Executor, 154 Pa. 326; Everhart v. Searle, 71 Pa. 256; Lightcap v. Nicola, 34 Pa. Superior Ct. 189; Shamokin Mfg. Co. v. Ohio G. F. & I. Co., 39 Pa. Superior Ct. 553.

After the chancellor had filed his findings and entered a decree nisi, the two Bond brothers, Richard J. and V. Ervin, were permitted to intervene as plaintiffs and file exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
143 A. 197, 293 Pa. 529, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaeffer-v-jones-pa-1928.