Stelmack v. Glen Alden Coal Co.

14 A.2d 127, 339 Pa. 410, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 637
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 8, 1940
DocketAppeal, 18
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 127 (Stelmack v. Glen Alden Coal Co.) 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
Stelmack v. Glen Alden Coal Co., 14 A.2d 127, 339 Pa. 410, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 637 (Pa. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Barnes,

This is an appeal from the order of the court below entering judgment for the defendant in an action of assumpsit brought by plaintiffs to recover the cost of repairs to their building which was damaged as a result of mining operations conducted by the defendant. The suit is upon an oral agreement, and the sole question is whether the contract is supported by a consideration.

,On July 3, 1922, plaintiffs purchased a certain lot of ground situated in the city of Scranton, upon which was erected a building containing stores and residential apartments. The deed to them incorporated by reference and was made subject to certain reservations, conditions and releases respecting the mineral rights in the land, which appeared in prior conveyances in the chain of title of the property. Among them Avas the following provision: “It is also expressly understood and agreed by and between the parties to this deed that the right to surface support to the said surface or right of soil is not hereby conveyed. . . . That in no event Avhatever shall the parties of the first part, their heirs or assigns, be liable for any injury or damage that may be caused or done to the said surface or right of soil, or to the buildings or improvements that are now or hereafter may be put thereon, by reason of the mining and removing of said coal and minerals.”

The original grantor reserved the right to remove coal and other minerals, with the express understanding that “the exceptions and reservations aforesaid have materially reduced the amount of the consideration of this Indenture, and that any damages of any nature Avhatsoever, that may occur by reason of the mining and removing of all of said coal and other minerals have by such reduction, been fully liquidated and paid and satisfied. ...”

The defendant company is the present owner of the coal and mineral rights in the premises, and is actively engaged in mining operations. The plaintiffs aver that they were informed in 1927 by a duly authorized agent *413 of the defendant that mining was about to begin under their property which would cause a subsidence of the soil. He is alleged to have made an oral agreement with them, on behalf of defendant, that if they would permit the coal company’s employees to enter upon their land and prop up their building to prevent its collapse, or to minimize any damages which might occur, the company would make all repairs necessary to restore the property to its original condition.

Plaintiffs permitted ties and supports to be erected about their building which rendered it “unsightly” and resulted in some loss of rents, although it is not contended that the work was performed negligently. As mining operations continued during the period from 1928 to 1935, it became necessary, according to plaintiffs, to reconstruct the building, due to the further subsidence of the surface. From time to time the defendant made repairs to the property, but later refused to restore it to its previous condition.

In the present action for the breach of the alleged oral agreement, plaintiffs seek to recover the sum of $3,185, representing the amount expended by them for the repair and restoration of their property. The court below excluded all evidence of the oral agreement, upon the ground that plaintiffs had failed to show that it was supported by a consideration, and directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. From the order of the court in banc refusing a new trial, and entering judgment for the defendant, plaintiffs have taken this appeal.

Plaintiffs contend that (1) there was consideration for the oral agreement because of the detriment suffered by them in permitting the defendant to enter upon their land and place props and ties about their building; (2) the promise to repair was supported by a “moral consideration”; and (3) they are entitled to recover under the doctrine of promissory estoppel.

That consideration is an essential element of an enforceable contract is one of our fundamental legal con *414 cepts, and there are but few exceptions to the rule. “Consideration is defined as a benefit to the party promising, or a loss or detriment to the party to whom the promise is made”: Hillcrest Foundation, Inc., v. McFeaters, 332 Pa. 497, 503. The terms “benefit” and “detriment” are used in a technical sense in the definition, and have no necessary reference to material advantage or disadvantage to the parties.

It is not enough, however, that the promisee has suffered a legal detriment at the request of the promisor. The detriment incurred must be the “quid pro quo,” or the “price” of the promise, and the inducement for which it was made. “Consideration must actually be bargained for as the exchange for the promise”: Restatement, Contracts, Section 75, Comment (b); and see Union Trust Co. v. Long, 309 Pa. 470, 475. If the promisor merely intends to make a gift to the promisee upon the performance of a condition, the promise is gratuitous and the satisfaction of the condition is not consideration for a contract. The distinction between such a conditional gift and a contract is well illustrated in Williston on Contracts, (Rev. Ed.) Yol. 1, Section 112, where it is said: “If a benevolent man says to a tramp,— fif you go around the corner to the clothing shop there, you may purchase an overcoat on my credit,’ no reasonable person would understand that the short walk was requested as the consideration for the promise, but that in the event of the tramp going to the shop the promisor would make him a gift.”

In the present case it clearly appears that the defendant’s offer to repair the plaintiffs’ building was entirely gratuitous. The permission to enter upon the land and to erect props and ties was sought by defendant merely for the purpose of conferring a benefit upon plaintiffs as a voluntary act, and not as the price or consideration of its alleged promise to restore the building to its original condition. The placing of supports about the structure was of no conceivable advantage to the defendant, *415 for, as we have seen, it had no liability whatever “for any injury or damage that may be caused or done to the said surface or right of soil, or to the buildings or improvements” under the provisions of the deeds in plaintiffs’ chain of title. The interest of plaintiffs alone was served by the defendant’s efforts to prevent the collapse of the structure and to minimize the damages resulting from the mining operations. As this was done at the expense of the defendant, and solely for the protection of the plaintiffs, we are unable to see how it could have constituted a consideration for the defendant’s promise, and converted a purely gratuitous undertaking into a binding contract.

Plaintiffs’ second point is also without merit. The principle asserted in some of our decisions that “moral consideration” will support a contract, has no application to the situation here presented. The limitations upon this doctrine were clearly stated in Stebbins v. County of Crawford, 92 Pa. 289, where we said (p. 292) : “A moral obligation is sufficient to support an express promise, where there has been a pre-existing obligation which has become inoperative by positive law. ... In all these cases there is a moral obligation founded upon antecedent valuable consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 127, 339 Pa. 410, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stelmack-v-glen-alden-coal-co-pa-1940.