78 Pa. 84 | Pa. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court, October 18th 1875. .
The defendant below purchased of the plaintiff an undivided interest in certain real estate in Schuylkill county, and conveyed to him a house and lot in the city of Philadelphia, in part payment of the consideration, and agreed that he would make good any loss the plaintiff might sustain in the sale thereof, if he came out whole in the sale of the land. The plaintiff sold the house and lot for about one-seventh of the price for which the property was conveyed to him, and brought this action to recover the difference. The defendant admitted that he had sold the land at a profit, but alleged that the plaintiff had fraudulently sold the house and lot at an undervalue, and for this reason, among others, was not entitled to maintain the action. It appeared from the plaintiff’s own testimony, that he sold the property to his brother at private sale, without advertising it, or giving the defendant notice of his intention to sell it; and it was shown by a number of witnesses, well acquainted with the property, that it was sold for a price greatly below its value, and for much less than it would have brought at public sale. The defendant contended that the circumstances under which the property was sold, as disclosed by the evidence, showed that the sale was collusive and fraudulent, and he requested the court to charge the jury that if there was any evidence of collusion' in the sale, from the plaintiff to his brother, there can be no recovery by the plaintiff. In answer thereto, the court said, that if there ivas any collusion between the plaintiff and his brother, in the sale of the property, then the plaintiff cannot recover more than the difference between a fair price for the house and the amount paid to the defendant. This instruction is assigned as error, and presents the only material question in the
If it had been honestly and fairly made, though for less than the actual or market value of the property, tbe plaintiff might be entitled, as'the court instructed the jury, to recover the difference between what the property was fairly worth and the price at which it was conveyed to him. But if it was collusive, and made with the intent of defrauding the defendant, the plaintiff, if entitled to maintain the action, can only maintain it through and by means of the fraudulent sale. But what difference does it make, so far as it respects the plaintiff’s right to maintain the action, whether the fraud through which he claims was in the making of the contract, or in making the sale ? If a right of action cannot arise out of a fraudulent contract, why should it arise out of the fraudulent performance of a condition of the contract upon which the right of action depends? To hold that it might, would be a palpable disregard of the maxim that no man shall take advantage of his own wrong, nor be allowed to found any claim upon his own iniquity:
Judgment reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.