Tomb v. Lambert

35 Pa. D. & C.3d 17, 1985 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 383
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Potter County
DecidedApril 12, 1985
Docketno. 277 of 1984
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Pa. D. & C.3d 17 (Tomb v. Lambert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Potter County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tomb v. Lambert, 35 Pa. D. & C.3d 17, 1985 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 383 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

FINK, P.J.,

The basic facts which have given birth to approximately two and one-half pounds of pleadings are as follows: defendants were the owners of a tract of land situate in Potter County containing 58.13 acres. Defendants and plaintiffs entered into an agreement with option to purchase with reference to said tract of land whereby defendants were to sell said acreage to plaintiffs for the sum of $35,000 upon the exercise of the option within three years from the date of contract. The date of the contract was June 1, 1981. On April 23, 1984, plaintiffs, by registered mail, exercised the option to purchase as set forth in the agreement.

In or about the months of July or August, 1983, before the exercise of said option by plaintiffs, defendants had entered into an agreement with a third party for the removal of certain timber situate on the premises, the value of which plaintiffs allege was $2,800. At the time plaintiffs sought to exercise the option they were aware of the timber sale aforementioned but, nonetheless, consummated the purchase pursuant to the option by paying the purchase price of $35,000. Plaintiffs now seek to recover the value of the timber cut from the premises prior to the option exercise through a complaint in assumpsit alleging a breach of the option agreement between the parties’ litigant.

[19]*19The issue comes before the court on a motion for judgment on the pleadings filed by both parties, and although the parties acknowledge that the pleadings raise at least one disputed fact, the court finds that the fact in dispute so raised is not relevant and, therefore, will decide the issue of whether or not there is a cause of action stated by plaintiff or whether defendants raise a valid defense. We would understand that such a decision would be dispositive of the dispute between the parties, there being no other disputed issue of fact. There is, essentially, an agreement between the parties for the judicial disposition of the matter as indicated.

Defendants raise a defense which defense counsel calls the “doctrine of merger”, that is, that any cause of action that plaintiff had arising from the agreement between the parties merged in the exercise of the option to purchase the subject property and subsequent acceptance of the deed of conveyance by plaintiffs and, therefore, plaintiffs have no cause of action on which to predicate their claim.

Defendant cites three rather ancient cases, Stoever, et al. v. Gowen, et al., 280 Pa. 424 (1924); Dick v. McWilliams, 291 Pa. 165, 139 Atl. 745 (1927); and Dobkin v. Landsberg, 273 Pa. 174, 116 Atl. 814 (1922), which, essentially, stand for the proposition that when a deed is made and accepted in full execution of a contract for sale of land, the contract of purchase is merged in the deed. Defendants assert that at least there is a presumption of merger arising by the acceptance of the deed by plaintiffs and the payment of the total purchase price therefor.

Plaintiff, on the other hand, asserts the doctrine of equitable conversion under the facts, viz., that the original agreement containing the option to purchase vested in plaintiffs’ equitable title to the real [20]*20estate. Therefore, defendants during the period of the option until exercised or expired are considered in law trustees of the realty for plaintiffs. Plaintiffs cite the case of Payne v. Clark, 409 Pa. 557, 187 A.2d 169 (1963). Plaintiffs further present the legal proposition that when the option is exercised by optionee, his equitable title relates back to the date of the option and equitable ownership reverts to the granting of the option, P.L.E., Sales of Realty, Section 19.

Each of the respective positions of the parties are tenable under the facts, therefore, we must consider each of the positions. As above stated, defendants “stake their claim” on the doctrine of “merger”, viz., that any cause of action arising from the agreement of sale is merged in the conveyance by deed of the property which was the subject matter of the agreement of sale. This court would believe that argument could be had that defendants were actually arguing a doctrine of “waiver”, viz., plaintiffs by accepting the deed and paying the full “option price” had waived any right they had to assert a claim that they were not getting that for which they had originally bargained in their option agreement where plaintiffs knew of the cause of action at the time they accepted the deed and made the full payment. It could, likewise, be argued that plaintiffs’ position was really an “estoppel”, that is, that an estoppel was created by the acceptance of ¡he ultimate deed and payment of the full purchase price and, therefore, plaintiffs would be estopped to assert that they got less than they had originally bargained for in their option agreement.

As above set forth, defendants set forth various cases to support their contention that the doctrine of merger was, indeed, applicable to the set of facts in the instant case. The basic principle, as pronounced [21]*21in the cited cases by defendant, ultimately appears to operate against them, viz., “merger is a matter of intention of the parties and may be shown by their declarations, acts or conduct at the time of the execution of the agreement in question or from the terms of the writing itself.”

All parties agree that there are no essential disputed matters of fact, therefore, the only source which this court has to determine the intention of the parties is, indeed, the writing itself which forms a part of the pleadings. The option granted to plaintiffs by defendants is contained in an agreement of sale between the parties of an adjacent tract of land containing 14.67 acres. The wording of the option reads as follows: (the first party being defendants and the second party being plaintiffs.)

“Parties of the First Part agree to give the Parties of the Second Part an option for a period of three (3) years from the above written date to purchase the balance of this parcel containing 58.13 acres at a price of $35,000 provided the entire balance owing under this agreement is paid off at such time. In addition, the Parties of the Second Part will, in the event the option is not exercised, have a first refusal between the third and fifth year from above written date (June 1, 1981) exercisable at the expiration of the fifth year to purchase the 58.13 acre tract at a mutually agreeable negotiated price.”

The pleadings further disclose that plaintiffs (erroneously referred to as defendants in Paragraph 4(c) of plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment) on April 23, 1984, exercised the option to purchase the 58.13 acres of land. It is further alleged, and apparently agreed, that in the months of July and August of 1983, defendants caused a timber cutting to transpire on the subject property which, in turn, caused the removal of timber valued at $2800.

[22]*22Plaintiffs seek the $2800 that they allege they had been diminished by the timber cutting during the period of time that they had granted to them an option to purchase. It appears to the court that the essence of defendants’ position is if there was a cause of action at all, plaintiffs would be compelled to assert their cause of action and perhaps at the same time tender the purchase price of $35,000 into court perhaps along with a petition requesting the court to accept the payment of “tender” into court which may or may not be reduced by the ultimate outcome of litigation concerning the timber cutting and then paid to defendants in return for a deed pursuant to the option.

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Related

Payne v. Clark
187 A.2d 769 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1963)
Dick Et Ux., to Use v. McWilliams
139 A. 745 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
Dobkin v. Landsberg
116 A. 814 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1922)
Stoever v. Gowen
124 A. 684 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1924)
Byrne v. Kanig
332 A.2d 472 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Pa. D. & C.3d 17, 1985 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomb-v-lambert-pactcomplpotter-1985.