230 Pa. Super. 276 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1974
Opinion by
The instant appeal arises following a judgment for the plaintiffs-appellees in an ejectment proceeding in Centre County. The plaintiffs in this action were and are the lessors of a property in Port Matilda, Pennsylvania, which has been leased to the defendant-appellant for some sixteen years.
The genesis of the relationship between the parties, which ultimately led to the instant dispute, was in 1956. At that time the appellee Mr. Barraclough was desirous of becoming a service station operator. A deal was struck with the appellant (hereinafter re
The lease between the Barracloughs and Atlantic had an original term of fifteen years from January 28, 1957, with a rental of one hundred sixty-eight ($168.00) dollars per month. It provided for the automatic renewal of two terms of five years each with a rental of one hundred twenty ($120.00) dollars per month unless Atlantic should give ninety (90) days prior written notice of termination before any renewal term.
Atlantic’s rental payment of November 1971, operated to complete the payments on the Barracloughs’ mortgage debt. After receipt of the final payment, the bank on December 9, 1971, sent Atlantic a letter saying that the mortgage was paid and that all future checks should be sent to the Barracloughs. It also sent a Power of Attorney to the Recorder of Deeds of Centre County authorizing that official to mark the mortgage satisfied.
On January 7, 1972, on the strength of paragraph 22 of the lease
On October 10, 1972, the appellees filed the instant action, praying for ejectment and damages for alleged continued wrongful possession of the property by Atlantic. On this appeal, the appellees argue that the appellant clearly breached the lease contract by defaulting on rental payments for two months. Appellees claim they were entitled to terminate the lease on the basis of their rights as established in paragraph 22 of the lease (quoted supra). The appellants counter that the appellees were not in a position to take advantage of the termination clause (paragraph 22), as the Bar
The delay in changing the direction of payments from the bank to the Barracloughs by Atlantic, while not met with approval by this Court was certainly no more than a minor technical breach by the appellant. This Court might be inclined to feel differently if, for instance, Atlantic had either simply failed to forward any payments to either the bank or to the appellees or had continued paying the bank rather than the appellees for any fraudulent or malicious reasons. Cf. Russell v. Stewart, 204 Pa. 211, 53 A. 771 (1902). None of those situations are apparent here however. Atlantic not only paid the rental payments when due, as they had done continuously for over fifteen years, but made a prompt attempt to remedy their error in February 1972 when they forwarded the December 1971 and January 1972 rental payments to the appellees.
What appellees have sought through this proceedings was essentially to enforce a forfeiture clause in a contract. See West Penn Sand & Gravel Company v. Shippingport Sand Company, 367 Pa. 218, 80 A.2d 84 (1951). While the instant appeal is from an action at law, we are required to apply equitable principles
Although a forfeiture may be sustained in equity in some circumstances, equity should scrutinize the transaction to assure that all of the rights of the party from whom forfeiture is sought have been respected. See Murray v. Iron Hall of Baltimore City, 9 Pa. Superior Ct. 89 (1898). Atlantic of course claims that it was never given proper notification, as required by the lease, of the “change of ownership of rentals” from the bank to the appellee. Paragraph 25, supra, required Atlantic to be furnished with “. . . the original or a certified copy of the instrument or proceedings
When a party has honestly and faithfully performed all material elements of its obligation under a contract, but has failed to fulfill certain technical obligations, causing no serious detriment to the injured party, it would be odious and inequitable to compel forfeiture of the entire contract. Instead our Courts apply the equitable doctrine of substantial performance. See Sgarlat v. Griffith, 349 Pa. 42, 36 A.2d 330 (1944). (This case discusses the Restatement of Contracts which is in accord with this view.) In light of all of the above, we hold that appellees’ prayer for ejectment was improperly granted. Further, since the appellant was found to be in wrongful possession of the property since early 1972, damages were assessed on the basis of the fair rental value of the property during that time, in disregard of the rental established by the parties in the lease agreement. On the basis of our conclusion that the lease should not have been forfeited, this assessment of damages was incorrect. Any damages that have been shown by the Barracloughs for the late receipt of the December 1971 and January 1972 rentals are de minimis.
Costs to be paid by the appellant.
Mr. Barraclough operated the service station until 1963. He then secured another dealer to operate the station for Atlantic and since 1963 a succession of dealers has operated the station. There is no allegation by any party that this change in operators was a breach of any agreement or in any other way affects the rights or liabilities of the parties in this action.
“If ATLANTIC defaults in the payment of rental hereunder and such default continues for fifteen (15) days after receipt from LESSOR by ATLANTIC of a notice of such default . . . , LESSOR, . . . in addition to other legal remedies, shall have the right to enter upon said demised premises, declare this lease terminated and take immediate possession thereof.”
“No change in the ownership of rentals hereunder shall be binding upon ATLANTIC until fifteen (15) days after ATLANTIC shall have been furnished with the original or a certified copy of the instrument or proceedings by which said change of ownership of rentals was made.”
An action of ejectment is a kind of “queer duck” in the law as it may be considered either an action at law or an equity action depending upon the type of disxrate involved. The historical evolvement of the ejectment action to its present state and the differences between the legal and equitable actions would be cumbersome and unnecessary to include in this opinion; also, they are well explained in Standard Pennsylvania Practice, Chap. 67, §§1-4 and in Ooodrich-Amram Procedural Rules Service, §1501-2. This mention is made of the differences simply to note that this Court is mindful that purely equitable ejectment actions would be outside the appellate jurisdiction of this Court and solely within the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. See The Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act of 1970 (17 P.S. §211.202(4)).