Walker v. Saricks

63 A.2d 9, 360 Pa. 594, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 11, 1948
DocketAppeal, 227
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 63 A.2d 9 (Walker v. Saricks) 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
Walker v. Saricks, 63 A.2d 9, 360 Pa. 594, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 267 (Pa. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Allen M. Stearne,

This appeal involves the construction of a written contract. Plaintiff (appellee) instituted an action of assumpsit to which defendant (appellant) filed an amended affidavit of defense and new matter. Plaintiff filed a reply to the new matter and moved for judgment on the pleadings under Rule 1034 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. The court below entered its order sustaining *596 the motion. This appeal followed. The admitted facts are as follows: ■

Prior to August 21, 1945, the plaintiff was the lessee of a siding on the Pennsylvania Railroad at or near Mahaffey, Clearfield County,-Pa., .known as the Troy No. 10 siding. He erected tipple, and dumping facilities at this point. He also possessed a strip mining lease on real estate known as the .Paul Duff property at Clover Run, Pa. The defendant was engaged in strip mining nearby and had his ow;n siding facilities on the Clover Run branch of the Pennsylvania Railroad. On August 21, 1945, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract providing, inter alia, as follows: “J. D. Walker, [Plaintiff] party of the first part, owning tipple and siding facilities at Mahaffey, Pa., and a coal stripping operation on the Paul Duff property at Clover Run, Pa., and it being planned to dump and ship the said coal at Mahaffey, Pa., and J. G. Saricks, [Defendant] having leased coal and developing a siding , and stripping operation along the Clover Run Railroad, it being close and nearby the J. D. Walker operation, desires for economical reasons to operate both propositions and agrees hereby to compensate J. D. Walker in the following manner for discontinuing his operation. . . Under the terms of the contract, compensation was to be paid to plaintiff at the rate of five cents per ton on thirtydhree and one-third percent of all the coal "put over both tipples and sidings” unless more than one-third of all the coal was marketed over plaintiff’s tipple and siding at Mahaffey in which case plaintiff was to receive five cents per ton on all coal marketed over this siding. The contract also contained the following provisions with relation to the plaintiff’s siding at Mahaffey:

1. — That defendant would surrender possession of the siding in the event he discontinued operations in the Clover Run area and in the event no coal was loaded *597 over either siding for a period of thirty days, this right being optional on the part of plaintiff to accept or reject same.

2. —That defendant would pay the siding rental, repairs, taxes and insurance while in possession.

3. —That failure of the Railroad Company to comply with conditions contained in the agreement should not make plaintiff liable for damages.

Upon execution of the contract, plaintitff assigned the Paul Duff lease to defendant and defendant went into possession of the Troy No. 10 siding. Plaintiff was paid in accordance with the terms of the contract until April 1, 1946. Defendant refused to make payment for any tonnage loadéd thereafter because on that date the railroad cancelled the plaintiff’s rights in the Troy No. 10 siding and thereafter plaintiff sold his tipple to a third person. Defendant contends that the discontinuance of the right to use the siding and the sale of the tipple excused him from further performance under the contract.

In this appeal, defendant invokes the doctrine of implied conditions, whereby a contract may be discharged through subsequent impossibility of performance. He relies upon the principle enunciated in Wertz v. Klinger, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 523, 526, viz: “. . . where a contract is entered into of a continuing character, or to be performed at a future time, dependent upon the continuing existence of a particular person or thing, or the continuing ability of the obligor to perform, . . . subsequent death, destruction, or disability will excuse the obligor from compliance with the terms of the contract.”

Defendant asserts that under the terms of the written contract is the implied condition that the duty of defendant to perform continues only as long as the right to use the Troy siding and tipple continues. When *598 the railroad cancelled plaintiff’s lease to the siding and when he subsequently sold the tipple, defendant claims that his performance was rendered impossible. Defendant maintains that the contract is ambiguous and testimony should be taken in order to show the surrounding circumstances under which'it -was executed. The learned , court below held that the written contract was not ambiguous and therefore parol testimony to establish implied conditions^ which would thus contradict or vary the terms of the written contract, should not be received. This was a correct ruling.

This Court said in Gianni v. R. Russell & Co., Inc., 281 Pa. 320, 323, 126 A. 791: “Where parties, without any fraud or mistake, have deliberately put their engagements in Writing, the law declares the writing to be not only the best, but the only, evidence of their agreement: Martin v. Beren, 67 Pa. 459, 463; Irvin v. Irvin, 142 Pa. 271, 287. All preliminary negotiations, conversations and verbal agreements are merged in and superseded by the subsequent written contract . . . and unless fraud, accident or mistake be averred, the writing constitutes the agreement between the parties, and its terms cannot be added to nor subtracted from by parol evidence: Union Storage Co. v. Speck, 194 Pa. 126, 133; Vito v. Birkel, 209 Pa. 206, 208.” See also: Regional Agricultural Credit Corp. v. Barabas, 159 Pa. Superior Ct. 402, 48 A. 2d 85; Hamtleton et al. v. Hartman et ux., 160 Pa; Superior Ct. 447, 51 A. 2d 511. In McCormack v. Jermyn, 351 Pa. 161, 40 A. 2d 477, Mr. Justice Horace Stern said, p. 166:

“A verbal agreement differs from a written one in this, that in the construction of the latter all negotiations leading up to the. contract are presumed to be merged in the writing;- moreover, oral testimony is not admissible to explain the written-document in the absence of an -ambiguity .requiring such explanation.” See *599 also: Barnsley v. Shaffer et al., 358 Pa. 415, 57 A. 2d 870. Whether the writing is the entire contract between the parties so that the parol evidence rule is applicable is a question of law for the court: Lester v. Century Indemnity Company, 356 Pa. 15, 19, 50 A. 2d 678, and cases therein cited.

An analysis, of the contract in question discloses no ambiguity. The first part of.the.writing refers to the “J. D. Walker operation.” The contract provides that defendant “agrees ... to .compensate J. D. Walker . . . for discontinuing his operation.” The term “operation” as used in this contract embraced more than the mere right to use a siding and tipple. The agreement recites that plaintiff owned “a coal stripping operation on the Paul Duff property at Clover Run” and certain rights, in a railroad siding. When plaintiff promised to “discontinue - his operation” by written agreement, he gave up an - important property right.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A.2d 9, 360 Pa. 594, 1949 Pa. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-saricks-pa-1948.