Vittor Et Ux. v. Szymanski

184 A. 27, 321 Pa. 345, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 702
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 22, 1936
DocketAppeal, 11
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 184 A. 27 (Vittor Et Ux. v. Szymanski) 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
Vittor Et Ux. v. Szymanski, 184 A. 27, 321 Pa. 345, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 702 (Pa. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Kephart,

Appellees, Louis Yittor and wife, agreed to exchange their farm property, which was subject to a mortgage of $3,200 and another encumbrance, for a city property belonging to appellants, Michael SzymansM and wife, and $600 cash, $500 of which was paid by note on the execution of the agreement. On default or breach of the contract, the deposit of $500 was to be forfeited. The farm was worth $7,300 and the city property $6,000. The Yittors were to mortgage the town property for $2,500 and with $1,900 from that mortgage together with the $1,300 owed by the Szymanskis for the higher value of the property which they were to obtain, the mortgage of $3,200 on the farm property was to be satisfied and the considerations equalized. Appellees surrendered possession of the farm to the Szymanskis and delivered a deed to them as provided in the agreement. The one encumbrance was satisfied but the mortgage of $3,200 remained. Appellants refused to convey the town property and placed a mortgage on it and another property for $3,000 but did not satisfy the farm mortgage with that money. Yittor and wife filed a bill in equity for specific performance and also asked that appellants be required to accept a mortgage for $2,500 and provide the money to be borrowed thereon, in accordance with the original agreement. A decree was entered requiring appellants to convey and appellees to assume $1,900 of the $3,000 mortgage given by appellants, provided that if appellants paid $600 to appellees, the latter were to assume $2,500 of the mortgage. This appeal followed.

*348 Appellants contend that the agreement provided an exclusive remedy in case of breach or default through forfeit of the deposit. Apart from the fact that appellants’ objection to carrying out their part of the agreement comes too late, since made after receipt and acceptance of appellees’ deed for the farm, the fact that a contract is for the exchange of real estate ordinarily shows of itself that the parties intend to be satisfied with nothing less than an exchange of title unless it clearly states otherwise. This contract indicates that the parties were not to be given an alternative right of conveying or paying a forfeit. The contract provides that on breach by appellants, their “deposit of five hundred dollars (given in the form of a judgment note) is hereby forfeited.” Calling the initial payment a “deposit” demonstrates that ultimate payment and exchange of properties was intended. Appellees were “to give a first mortgage on the property at 422-424 Taylor Street,” and this could be done only after a conveyance of property by appellants so that appellees could give the mortgage. The clause providing for forfeiture of deposit in event of breach was a provision to secure performance rather than to give absolution for nonperformance. Similar clauses in analogous cases have been so construed.

Thus in Gross v. Salsich, 144 Wis. 419, defendant was to exchange properties with plaintiff and agreed “that in case I should not be able to give you then the deed I shall pay you the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) on the 21st day of December, 1905.” Defendant did not offer to convey until December 28, 1905. Plaintiff sued for the $500. Of the promise to pay, the court said: “This provision of the contract was manifestly intended as security to indemnify plaintiff against loss in case it should turn out that defendant could not convey a merchantable title to the lot. We think it clear that this is the true construction of the agreement between the parties and that it was not contemplated that the agreement be in the alternative for the conveyance of the lot, *349 or the payment of $500 in case defendant were unable to convey a good title. ... If the defendant had refused to convey under any circumstances, the situation would be quite different.”

It seems to be well established that where a contract for the sale or conveyance, rather than the exchange of land, stipulates for payment even of “liquidated damages” in case of default, such stipulation does not preclude the remedy of specific performance: Nolan v. Kirchner, 98 N. J. Eq. 452; Hooker v. Pynchon, 8 Gray (Mass.) 550; Asia Investment Co. v. Levin, 118 Wash. 620. Since this is the rule where a conveyance of land by only one party is contemplated, it applies even more forcefully where an exchange of properties is involved.

In Kettering v. Eastlack, 130 Iowa 498, the parties contracted to exchange lands and defendant agreed in addition to pay $7,100. Either party who failed to perform was to forfeit “the sum of $500 as liquidated damages.” Specific performance was granted. As to the damage clause, the court said: “If the contract were in the alternative, so that the defendants had the option of conveying or paying a stipulated sum by way of liquidated damages, then, no doubt, it would be improper for a court of equity to interfere [authorities]. But the mere fact that liquidated damages are provided for as a part of the contract does not convert it into an optional contract under which the obligor is entitled to relieve himself from the duty of specific performance by paying the liquidated damages. Where it is apparent that the intention was that the obligor convey, and the provision for damages or penalty is simply a means of securing conveyance, the obligor cannot relieve himself from the duty to convey, which equity will enforce, by tendering payment of the penalty or damages. . . . It is plain in this ease that the contract was to convey, and not primarily to pay damages.”

Appellees agreed to convey their farm property “free from all encumbrances” and the agreement, which was *350 dated March 1, 1930, further provided: “The conveyancing and granting of the deeds aforesaid and all matters incidental thereto are to take place within ninety days of the date hereof.” Appellants contend that appellees are not entitled to specific performance because the deed given by the latter was not free from encumbrances. There was in fact a mortgage of $3,200 on the farm (the other lien being satisfied) when appellants accepted a deed. The agreement was not clear as to the purpose of the $2,500 mortgage, but the testimony shows that they were to provide the money to satisfy the $3,200 mortgage. The covenants in the agreement were not independent but mutual and dependent as stated in Pead v. Trull, 173 Mass. 450, where Holmes, J., construing a contract to exchange lands, declared the presumption is that, in an exchange, performance on the two sides is to be concurrent. Appellees’ failure to tender a deed free from encumbrances is due to appellants’ failure to place them in a position to remove the $3,200 mortgage.

Appellants urge that the Yittors were in default in tendering a deed six days after the ninety-day period for performance had elapsed. Whatever weight such contention might have had if made promptly, the argument seems unavailing in view of appellants’ conduct, for they received and accepted the deed for the farm, it was recorded as a conveyance to them, and one of appellants took possession and worked the farm. What appellants really wanted to do was to take the farm, try out farming and if they liked it, keep the property; if they did not like it, they would turn the farm back, meanwhile retaining the town property.

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Bluebook (online)
184 A. 27, 321 Pa. 345, 1936 Pa. LEXIS 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vittor-et-ux-v-szymanski-pa-1936.