Opinion by
This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment entered on plaintiffs’ motion for judgment on the pleadings which consist of the complaint in assumpsit and answer. The action was for the return of the payment made by plaintiffs to defendant under a contract for the purchase of land and the construction of a dwelling thereon. The question involved is whether the court below erred in entering judgment without granting leave to defendant to amend her answer.
Plaintiffs in their complaint alleged that defendant breached the contract in failing to perform on the date set forth therein, and that therefore they were entitled to the return of the $2,000 paid under the contract. The contract was executed by the parties on July 11, 1955, and provided that defendant would sell a certain piece of ground to plaintiffs and construct thereon a new split-level house in accordance with the plans and specifications attached to the contract. After the execution of the contract the parties further agreed that for an additional consideration plaintiffs would purchase from defendant an adjacent piece of ground. The complaint further set forth that a provision in the contract to the effect that a $2,000 ground settlement was to be paid before starting construction on the house was added by defendant after the signing of the contract. It was also averred that possession was to be delivered on October 1, 1955, and that as of the date of the preparation of the complaint (October 17, 1955) no substantial construction had been commenced. Defendant answered that the provision of the contract relative to the payment of $2,000 was added subsequent to the signing thereof by understanding of the parties, *316 and that the delay in delivering possession was caused by. plaintiffs’ failure to make timely payment of the $2,000 before the starting of construction on the house. The $2,000 was not paid until August 16, 1955, after which* according to defendant’s answer, defendant “immediately started to fulfill the terms of the contract.” Plaintiffs thereupon took the deposition of defendant’s agent concerning a letter to which reference was made in the answer. Plaintiffs then moved for judgment on the pleadings which the court below granted. Defendant’s subsequent petition to open the judgment and for leave to file an amended answer ivas refused. Defendant has appealed from the final judgment.
We recently had a similar situation before us in
Lehner v.
Montgomery,
In our view the present proceeding is not one in which the elements essential to plaintiffs’ case were so clearly admitted by defendant as to warrant the entry of a summary judgment. The basis of plaintiffs’ complaint is that defendant breached the contract in failing to perform on the date fixed for the delivery of possession. The real question, therefore, seems to be whether the contract specifically provided that time for performance was to be of the essence. The provision providing for possession to be delivered on or before October 1, 1955, is a separate paragraph in the contract. Between this provision and the purported “time of the essence” provision is a paragraph, unrelated, to the date for performance, pertaining to taxes. The paragraph relating to time follows the latter and reads: “Settlement to be made, on or before . .. . and said time is hereby agreed to be the essence of this agreement.” No date was inserted. Obviously this provision does not relate or refer in any way to the paragraph in which it was specifically stated that possession was to be delivered by October 1, 1955. Since no..date was.agreed upon as being of the essence, the
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contract became one in which performance, at least with respect to settlement, was to be within a reasonable time.
Suchan v. Swope,
Being of the opinion that the time for delivery of possession was not of the essence, the question remains whether defendant’s failure to deliver possession on October 1, 1955, amounted to a breach of sufficient materality to warrant plaintiffs’ attempt to cancel the contract and demand the refund of the money paid. The failure to deliver possession on the date specified is admitted in defendant’s answer, but it is further averred therein that the delay was caused by plaintiffs’ action in postponing the payment of the ground cost until
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August 16, 1955.
1
It is also averred in the answer that defendant began to fulfill the terms of the contract immediately upon receipt of the entire $2,000. Although lacking in detail, which may be supplied in an amended •answer, it cannot be construed as a sufficient admission by defendant of an unwarranted failure to deliver possession by October 1, 1955, to justify a judgment on the pleadings. The reasonableness of defendant’s delay, the excuse, as well as the extent and reasonableness of the subsequent performance and the time within which it was done, are in dispute, and as such are all matters for the fact-finder after full development of the facts. They are not for the court in a summary proceeding. See
Pittsburgh Rivet Co. v. Western Tool and Forge Co.,
It is a recognized principle that, where time is not of the essence, the mere failure to perform on the date mentioned in a contract is not per se a breach which wholly destroys the contract.
Shrut v. Huselton,
We cannot approve of the procedure followed by the court below in passing upon the motion for judgment on the pleadings. It appears that the court below considered the deposition taken by plaintiffs, which was outside the record. The motion for judgment on the pleadings under Pa. R. C. P. No. 1034 is in the nature of a final demurrer before trial. It is, as its name implies, directed to the pleadings, and its purpose is to determine whether on the pleadings it would be useless to proceed to trial. If the essential elements of a plaintiff’s case or a defendant’s defense are not pleaded or are admitted the court should, if the defect is clear and not amendable, enter the appropriate judgment. However, only the pleadings and documents properly attached thereto may be considered. See
McCoy v. Home Insurance Co.,
A party should not be required to submit to a summary judgment on the basis of matters outside the record, which he does not have an opportunity to fully develop, explain, or contradict as he would at a trial. We are not impressed by plaintiffs’ argument that the deposition in the instant case was merely to produce an unattached document to which reference was made in defendant’s answer. If defendant referred to and depended upon a document in her answer without at *321 taching it to tlie pleadings the proper procedure would have been for plaintiffs to make a preliminary objection in the nature of a motion to strike off or a motion for more specific pleading. Pa. R. C. P. No. 1017. It cannot be assumed without question that the letter was a document upon which a part of the defense was based or that it was merely evidence of a matter averred in the answer. In the latter instance, it would not properly be a part of the pleading. In any event, innovations in the form of practice should not be countenanced where the rules adequately provide a procedural remedy.
Unquestionably, the answer in the instant case raised several factual issues. Although some of the averments might have been more clearly pleaded, they were present with sufficient clarity to preclude a motion for judgment on the pleadings. The motion should have been refused with leave to defendant to file an amended answer. The circumstances attendant upon the alteration of the contract, whether the failure to pay promptly the ground cost of $2,000 caused the delay in construction, whether said delay was reasonable and who was responsible for it, what steps, if any, were taken by defendant toward fulfillment of the contract and whether such action was with reasonable timeliness — are all matters which should be clarified by an amended answer and subsequently determined on the merits if the amended answer is otherwise sufficient to raise the issues. The present contract is not without ambiguity, purporting as it does to provide for the sale of ground and the construction of a house. The relations arising therefrom should be the subject of a full inquiry and a proper deteiunination.
Kittaning Coal Co. v.
Moore,
Judgment is reversed with a procedendo.
Notes
That this was a condition precedent to the start of construction must for instant purposes be accepted as true. The answer admits that this provision was inserted after the signing, but states that it was a provision which was “understood” by the parties. Whether this was a prior, contemporaneous, or subsequent understanding is not clear and should be clarified in an amended answer. The inference most favorable to defendant from the wording of this portion of the answer is either that it was a contemporary agreement which was mistakenly omitted by the scrivener or that it was a subsequent modification of the original purchase.
See, also,
Iseman v. Joe F. Sherman Company, 377
Pa. 426, 434,
