64 Pa. Super. 479 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1916
Opinion by
Under the terms of a written agreement dated August 4, 1913, the plaintiff agreed to sell and convey and the defendant agreed to purchase and pay for certain real estate situated on Moore street in the City of Philadelphia, at the price of $19,000. The defendant paid on account of the purchase-money, at the time of the agreement, the sum of $500, and the covenants of the contract provided that the balance of the purchase-money should be paid in the following manner, viz: “A mortgage of $8,000 at five years, 5 4/10 per cent, and a second mortgage of $5,000 payable any time within six years in installments of not less than $1,000 each year ‘after the first year/ payable quarterly at 6 per cent, and a judgment note of $1,000 without interest, at 90 days from the date of settlement, and the balance of $3,500 in cash oil the day of settlement.” The defendant refused to perform the covenants of this agreement and the plaintiff, on December 5, 1913, entered into an agreement with other parties-to sell the property, which later agree
When one who has entered into an agreement in writing to purchase lands makes default the vendor may subsequently sell the property, after notice, upon the same or as advantageous terms as in the first sale, and if there is a loss he may recover such loss from him who made default under the earlier contract: Bowser v. Cessna, 62 Pa. 148. Such a purchaser is not liable to respond in damages for loss by a resale of the property if it appears that under the first sale he would have acquired a more valuable title than that which has passed to the purchaser at the last sale, or that the terms of the first sale were more advantageous to the purchaser than those of the resale. “Such cases belong to the class in which the certainty of the legal rule fixing the rights of parties is more important than the -theoretical perfection of the rule itself”: Pepper v. Deakyne, 212 Pa. 181. In the ap: plication of these principles to the present case we must consider the terms under which the second sale of the plaintiff took place: The terms upon which the second isale was made are set forth in the written agreement between this plaintiff, of the first part, and P. C. Fritz and Amandus F. Riedel, of the second part. This agreement involves, inter alia, an exchange of parcels of real estate between the parties. The agreement throws no light, upon what valuation was put. by the parties upon the real estate which this defendant had formerly , agreed: to pnra chase, nor upon the two pieces of real estate, which’the
The judgment is affirmed.