49 A.2d 692 | Pa. | 1946
Argued October 7, 1946. The learned court below having decreed specific performance of a written contract entered into by defendant, Mary Szpakowski, and plaintiff, John F. Cochrane, for the sale of her restaurant and retail liquor business, she took this appeal.
The following facts were found by the learned chancellor, and being fully sustained by the evidence, they have the force and effect of a verdict of a jury and are binding upon us: Sec. ofB'king v. Southw'n B. L. Assn.,
Appellant contends (1) that equity does not have jurisdiction; (2) that even if it has, time was of the essence of the contract, and, therefore, appellee is not entitled to equitable relief inasmuch as he did not place the balance of the purchase price in the hands of the escrow agent until two days before June 15, 1945, the last date set for closing, and did not forward application for transfer of the license to the Board until the last date set for closing; (3) that since the contract contained no provision for an assignment of the lease, the chancellor erred in reforming the agreement to include an implied promise to assign; and (4) that the chancellor *361 erred in admitting in evidence a letter from the Chairman of the Liquor Control Board to the effect that the Board would approve a transfer of the license if appellee secured an assignment of the lease or a new lease for the premises.
As to the first of these arguments, it is well settled, as we said in Strause v. Berger,
The question of jurisdiction raised here is analogous to that in Unatin 7-Up Company, Inc., v. Solomon,
Appellant relies on Meehan v. Owens,
Nor do we find merit in appellant's second contention that time was of the essence of the contract. "In equity time is not ordinarily regarded as of the essence of the contract in the absence of an express stipulation, a manifestation of intention from the contract or subject matter involved, or an implication from the nature of the contract or circumstances of the case": 12 Am. Jur. § 308, p. 863. See also 25 Rawle C. L. 255, 256, § 58. Time was not expressly made the essence of the contract in the instant case, and from a careful reading of the contract it is clear that the parties did not intend to make it so. The agreement specifically states that "provided said sale is approved by the Liquor Control Board." It was impossible for the parties to foresee the exact length of time the Board would consume in arriving at a decision on the application for transfer. We are satisfied that the delay of appellee in placing the balance of the purchase price in the hands of the escrow agent and in forwarding the application to the Board was not unreasonable under the circumstances here presented. Certainly appellant suffered no loss thereby.
The chancellor committed no error in directing an assignment of the lease to appellee, for that was the real intention of the parties in providing in the contract that "Possession to be given upon transfer of said Liquor License." At the trial, appellant herself admitted that when she signed the agreement she intended to assign the lease to appellee, and that the only reason she did not do so was because the transfer was not completed by June 15, 1945. *364
We do not agree that the chancellor committed error in admitting into evidence the letter of the chairman of the Liquor Control Board as proof that transfer of the license would be approved by the Board upon appellee's securing the lease for the premises. The Act of 1933 Special Sessions, November 29, P.L. 13, which states in Section 3: ". . . any action or order of the Board shall require the approval of at least two members", is not here involved. Information concerning the present status of an application upon which no decision has been rendered by the Board is not an "action or order of the Board" within the meaning of the statute. The admission of the letter into evidence was clearly within the discretion of the chancellor.
Appellant, in violation of her written contract, has taken an arbitrary stand in her refusal to surrender the premises or to assign the lease to the premises and has thus made it impossible for the Liquor Control Board to issue its approval of a transfer of the liquor license at those premises.
We have considered with care all the assignments of error and are convinced that there is no merit in any of them.
Decree affirmed, at appellant's costs.