Schoonover v. Ralston

25 Pa. Super. 375, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 74
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 28, 1904
DocketAppeal, No. 76
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 Pa. Super. 375 (Schoonover v. Ralston) 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
Schoonover v. Ralston, 25 Pa. Super. 375, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 74 (Pa. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion by

Pouter, J.,

Joseph Potter and Alexander Ralston, on March 20, 1890, entered into an article of agreement in writing under the provisions of which the former agreed to sell and convey by “ a clear and lawful deed,” to the latter a tract of land containing one hundred and twenty-seven acres, more or less ; Ralston agreeing to pay for the property the sum of $900, one half to be paid the first day of May, 1890, and the other half the first day of May, 1891; the conveyance of the property to be made after the last payment. Joseph Potter died intestate in the month of August, 1891, and letters of administration upon his estate were issued to Schoonover on the 27th day of that month.

The administrator having presented his petition to the orphans’ court of Clearfield county setting forth the provisions of the written agreement between Potter and Ralston, that Potter died without having made any provision for carrying out the said contract, and that the petitioner desired to close up the transaction, prayed the court for a decree of specific performance of the contract. Ralston, the defendant, appeared in that proceeding and acquiesced in the making of the decree by filing a paper in the following language: “ Alexander Ralston, the purchaser of said lands, joins in the prayer of the petition and asks that it be granted; he further says that he is ready to carry out the said agreement on his part.” The orphans’ court granted the common prayer of the parties and on January 5,1898, decreed that “ it appearing that the said contract made by Joseph Potter and Alexander Ralston has been so far executed that it would be inequitable to rescind it and as spe[378]*378ciñe performance thereof is prayed by the administrator of said estate and also by Alexander Ralston, the purchaser, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that specific performance of said contract be had.”

The administrator subsequently tendered to the defendant a deed in proper form, which the latter declined to accept and pay the purchase money. The administrator subsequently brought this action of ejectment, to enforce payment of the balance of the purchase money alleged to be due. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, finding that there was a balance of purchase money unpaid amounting to $737.88, with interest from September 21, 1890 ; and a specific finding upon a question specially submitted to the jury, that “ Alexander Ralston, did have actual knowledge that the coal under the premises in dispute was sold prior to March 20,1890, by Joseph Potter to John G. Reading.” The court at the trial reserved the question whether the right of the plaintiff to recover must be totally defeated, for the reason that, prior to the contract with defendant, Potter had sold the coal, and, the defendant under the terms of his agreement being entitled to the coal, the administrator was unable to comply with the terms of the contract, and ought not to be permitted to collect the purchase money. The learned judge of the court below subsequently entered judgment in favor of the defendant non obstante veredicto.

The learned judge filed an opinion in support of the conclusion at which he arrived, and based his judgment upon the ground that the defendant was entitled to hold possession without electing to either affirm or rescind the contract, until he is made whole and restored to his former position, to wit: by being refunded the purchase money he has paid, and reimbursed for hnprovements made. The learned judge held, to put it in other words, that this administrator, because he could not convey all that the decedent had contracted for, must now tender the defendant all the purchase money that he had paid and the value of all his improvements, and that then, after all that has occurred, the defendant would still have a right of election to affirm or rescind his contract. We must hold that these parties have gotten far past the point at which any such rule could be applied.

[379]*379The title to the coal in this land, if there is any coal there, was vested in John G. Reading by deed from Potter which was duly recorded on December 14, 1882. The jury found that the defendant has had actual knowledge since prior to March 20, 1890, that the title to this coal was in Reading. He went into possession of this land knowing that fact. There was no evidence in this case that the defendant had ever spent one cent in improving this land. The only evidence that he had paid any part of the purchase money was contained in an indorsement on the contract, in these words : “ Received August 24, 1892, on the within article $501, by probate account of Alexander Ralston; (signed) B. D. Schoonover, administrator,” etc. What this “ probate account ” embraced does not appear in evidence. If it was simply an application upon this purchase money of some independent claim or claims which this defendant had against the estate of the decedent, the defendant certainly would not have the right to demand that those independent claims should be paid in money before he should be required to surrender possession of the lands upon which he had actually paid nothing. Assuming, however, that this receipt means that the defendant paid the amount mentioned to the administrator on August 24,1892, then he paid it knowing that Potter had been dead for over a year and that this administrator could not convey to him the coal underlying the tract of land. A purchaser upon discovery of the facts which would warrant his rescission of a contract, has the right to rescind and demand the restoration of what he has paid on the contract or lie may elect to affirm the contract and demand compensation in damages for the failure of the other party to perform. It is not necessary in this case to inquire whether, as between the original parties to a contract for the sale of real estate, the purchaser upon discovery of the fact that his vendor cannot deliver all of the property covered by the contract is bound to notify that grantor of his election to rescind or affirm the contract, or may wait for years and then say first pay me back what I have paid and the value of my improvements, and then I will exercise my right to affirm or rescind. There must in every case a time arrive when the party is put to his election and after which he will not be permitted to declare a rescission of a contract. This defendant, since 1891, has been [380]*380dealing with an administrator, an officer to whom the law has committed the settlement of a decedent’s estate. The orphans’ court has jurisdiction of the accounts of the plaintiff and his actions are subject to the control of that tribunal. The jurisdiction to declare a specific performance of a contract of a decedent for the sale of real estate is vested exclusively in the orphans’ court, under the fifteenth section of the Act of February 24, 1884, P. L. 70 : Cobb v. Burns, 61 Pa. 278 ; West Hickory Mining Association v. Reed, 80 Pa. 38. A contract for the sale of land converts the right to the purchase money into personalty, which upon the death of the vendor passes to his personal representative, and under the jurisdiction of the orphans’ court. When in 1898 the administrator presented his petition for a specific performance of this contract, the defendant voluntarily appeared; they thus submitted themselves personally to the jurisdiction of a court which had exclusive jurisdiction of the subject-matter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Pa. Super. 375, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoonover-v-ralston-pasuperct-1904.