277 Pa. 32 | Pa. | 1923
Opinion by
Plaintiff prayed specific performance of a contract to sell him a certain piece of real estate, on the exercise of an option, “at any time within......five years,......for $23,000, less $2,500 [already] paid defendant.” The bill avers plaintiff notified defendant, within the required time, of a desire to exercise the option and that he was ready and willing to pay the “balance of purchase money [due on the real estate,] less the liens and charges against the same,” but defendant refused to accept “any sum of money” from plaintiff and refused to perform his, the vendor’s, part of the agreement. The bill then avers there are of record a mortgage and judgment aggregating $13,600, and also some tax claims, making the total liens against the property $14,138.02, and that plaintiff is prepared to pay the purchase money less these charges.
A demurrer was filed on seven grounds, all bad in form, because too general or as speaking demurrers, except, possibly, the fifth, which states, “plaintiff has failed to aver......he tendered to defendant the purchase money stated in the bill and agreement attached thereto, marked ‘Exhibit A,’” and the seventh, which asserts plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law. The demurrer was sustained.
Assuming the fifth reason for demurrer to be good in form, we have before us the question, Did the court below err in sustaining it and dismissing plaintiff’s bill on the ground that he was bound to take the property subject to the liens and pay the full purchase price mentioned in the contract?
In support of its position the court below cites four authorities, none of which, on the facts involved, holds anything conclusive of the present appeal. The discursive language in these and other cases upon the general subject now before us has lent such confusion to the relevant rules of law that we deem it wise to restate them; for, as we shall remit this record under an order
The primary inquiry in this class of cases, where the question arises as to whether or not a purchaser must take subject to an unmentioned encumbrance or defect in title, is (as stated in Steinhauer v. Witman, 1 S. & R. 437, 446) “What was the true meaning of the contracting parties? Was it contemplated, mutually, that the purchaser should hold the land under a good right, or that he should run his chances of getting a title, and be exposed to all hazards?” See also Smith v. Sillyman, 3 Wharton 588, 600.
Where a defect or encumbrance is unknown to a purchaser at the time he accepts a deed, the burden is on the vendor to show his vendee agreed to assume the risk thereof, and, in the absence of such proof, the vendee may deduct the amount of such encumbrance from unpaid purchase money (Christy v. Reynolds, 16 S. & R. 258); this is true though the deed contains a covenant of general warranty: Roland v. Miller, 3 W. & S. 390, 394; Peck v. Jones, 70 Pa. 83, 85. Of course, if the encumbrance is removed by the vendor after suit brought on the bond of the purchaser, from that time it ceases to be a defense to the action: Withers v. Atkinson, 1 Watts 236, 248.
Some obscurity appears in the authorities, however, when we consider the rules that govern where, in the absence of fraud, accident or mistake, a defect of title or existing encumbrance, known to the vendee, is not mentioned in the agreement of sale. In such case, it is clear that, if the purchaser procures a warranty covering the encumbrance and thereupon gives his bond or other additional obligation for the purchase money, in a suit on such bond or obligation, ordinarily he will not be permitted to detain any portion of the purchase money as further security (Fuhrman v. Loudon, 13 S. & R. 386; Lighty v. Shorb, 3 P. & W. 447; Wilson v. Cochran, 48 Pa. 107); but in these cases there is some question as to
The case just mentioned, Wolbert v. Lucas, would indicate by its syllabus that, under any and all circumstances, “a purchaser who has received his deed, and given a mortgage for the purchase money, may deduct therefrom encumbrances [even if] known to him at the time he made the contract”; but this broad statement is not in entire accord with our prior or subsequent decisions, and the explanation of the case lies in the reference, on page 75 of the report, to “the evidence exhibited in the paper-book,” which the court no doubt construed as showing a prima facie right in the vendee to deduct the encumbrance there in question. This case does lay it down broadly, however, that in such a controversy as the one now before us, where the vendor contends the vendee must pay, either directly or indirectly, more than the named consideration money, he, the vendor, is “bound to show it to the satisfaction of the jury”; in other words, the burden of proof is on him: see also Tod v. Gallagher, 16 S. & R. 260, 263; Roland v. Miller, 3 W.& S. 390, 395.
The present defendant maintains, and the court below held, that the last three of the decisions in the parenthesis next above are conclusive of the controversy before
The case last mentioned (together with some of those before cited) was relied on by defendant to sustain his position; but, in so far as it has any bearing on the question before us, it supports a contrary conclusion. There, the vendor agreed in the sale to repurchase at- a certain price, within one year, at the option of the vendee ; then, on the exercise of the option, the vendor contended that his vendee should convey the property freed of a mortgage which he, the vendor, had placed on it before the original sale. Under these circumstances, in affirming, per curiam, the judgment of the court below, we held that “a covenant for the removal of the encumbrance......cannot be written into the agreement as a condition of the repurchase provided for by it”; that is to say, the original sale of the property without a covenant regarding a known, but unmentioned, encumbrance, did not serve, in the absence of any collateral obligation given by the original vendee for the purchase money, to relieve the original vendor of his responsibility for payment of such encumbrance.
It may likewise be noted, in connection with the four authorities relied on by appellant and cited by the court below, that in each of them the existence of the defect or encumbrance was known to the vendee when he made his purchase; whereas here, the liens in question were unknown, so far as the record before us indicates, and the court below erred in assuming plaintiff bought with knowledge of them merely because they were matters of record, — this, on the facts here disclosed, was not of itself sufficient to fix the vendee with the kind of knowledge
In view of the principles stated (reference to which, with additional authorities, may be found in 27 R. C. L. 480, 481), the learned court below erred in deciding, as matter of law, that plaintiff, having failed to require a covenant for the payment by defendant of the present encumbrances, must bear the burden thereof himself. This is a case where all the facts should be brought forth and passed on, in the light of the principles to which we have referred, before a final determination is reached. If it develops there was an agreement between the parties that the vendee was to buy subject to liens or encumbrances, or take the risk of them, then, of course, his present tender would not be good. If, on the other hand, it should appear that the sale was clear of encumbrances, or that plaintiff had no knowledge of them and nothing was said about them, he would be entitled to specific performance of the contract; and, this would be the case also even though he knew of the encumbrances, unless additional evidence indicates that, on the exercise of his option of purchase, he, and not defendant, was to assume liability for them: cases cited, supra.
Finally, on the present record, no question arises as to the adequacy of the tender, or the failure to produce the required money, since plaintiff alleges that, when he expressed a desire to settle for the purchase of the property, defendant “refused to accept any sum of money,” and entirely declined to carry out the contract: see Shrut v. Huselton, 272 Pa. 113, 116.
The order appealed from is reversed and the bill is reinstated, with leave to defendant to answer; defendant to pay costs of appeal.