2 Pa. 34 | Pa. | 1845
— A purchaser is not bound to take a doubtful title ; and why should the defendant below have been bound to take the property under something more than a suspicion,’ that the conveyance from Schroyer to the plaintiff was tainted with fraud by the 13 Elizabeth ? Because, it is said, it was his duty, if the title was not such as he had bargained for, to give back the possession, and declare bis determination to abandon the contract. And, for not having done so, he is to pay a sound price for an unsound title i I am aware that the taking of possession may be a waiver of objection to the title, as was intimated in Colton v. Wilson, 3 P. Wms. 193, and directly decided in Cal-craft v. Roebuck, 1 Ves. jun., 225; but it appears from Hearn v. Tomlin, Peake’s Cases, 192, that the vendee may safely take possession at the time of the contract, as was done here, because he cannot be held to waive objections of which he was ignorant. But whose business was it to move towards a rescission of the contract ? Not the defendant’s. He was at liberty to fold his arms and await the movement of the plaintiff, whose cue it was to take the next step towards an abandonment, or a completion, of the purchase. It was not for the defendant to know what title the plaintiff should be able to make, when he should come to tender the conveyance. The plaintiff’s power to perform his part was best known to himself; and if he found the defect
It seems that the encumbrances, except the quit-rents, were discharged before tender of the conveyance and suit brought; but if the quit-rents could not be extinguished, the defendant w:as not bound to receive the title, unless he had agreed to take it with that particular encumbrance upon it. By the abstract of the articles before us, which, in the absence of fraud or mistake, must be taken to contain all the terms and conditions of the bargain, it appears that he was to have “ a good and sufficient deed clear of all encumbrances;” and the testimony of Schroyer that he asked, shortly after the bargain, for the name of the person to w'hom he was to pay the rents, cannot alter the terms of the plaintiff’s covenant, which certainly is not to be satisfied by the conveyance of "a title irremediably encumbered. It is true that w'hen a defect goes only to a part of the property, and that not the principal one, it may be compensated by a deduction from the purchase money; as in Stoddart v. Smith, 5 Binney, 335; but not where there, is a canker in every part of it. ■ The jury ought not, therefore, to have been instructed that they were at liberty to make the defendant take the property, with compensation for the quit-rents as the equivalent of an unencumbered title.
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awmrded.