Opinion bt
Defendant agreed to purchase from plaintiffs a property in the City of Lancaster, if the title thereto was marketable, but, alleging it was not, defendant refused to carry out the contract. Plaintiffs thereupon sued to recover the purchase money; and, on a trial by the court without a jury, obtained a verdict and judgment, from the latter of which the present appeal was taken.
It may be said, in passing, that the court below erred, in its opinion following the trial, by directing, at one
It is admitted George Hoover obtained title to the premises in controversy, by deed dated January 14,1811; that he died testate in 1846, -by his will giving all his property to his wife for life, and upon her death directing his executors to sell it and divide the proceeds among his seven children, one of whom was Joseph Hoover; and that it never was sold by his executors, or by any other representative of his estate, or by his heirs at law, or any one deriving title through them. Joseph Hoover died on July 4, 1898, in possession of the property; but when he entered into possession, and under what title, does not appear, though he had been in actual possession for upwards of fifty years, and his daughter, who was given a life estate under his will, continued in possession for some twenty years afterwards. After her death, his will directed his executors, who are the plaintiffs here, to sell the property, and the contract in suit was made by them because of that provision. Neither the personal representatives of George Hoover, nor any of his other six children, nor any one deriving title through them or any of them, are parties to the suit. Plaintiffs claim that Joseph Hoover acquired title either by grant, which was not shown, or by adverse possession; and the question on this appeal is: Had he such an ownership as vested in his executors a “good and marketable” title, which they could compel defendant to take?
Since “an action for the purchase money of land is in legal effect a petition or bill for specific performance of the contract of purchase, and is governed by the same
It is undoubtedly true, a good title may be acquired by adverse possession, and, in exceptional cases, a marketable title, which a purchaser may be required to take. The instances in which it may be compelled are rare, however, because proof of the fact of open, notorious, continuous, visible and hostile possession, necessarily rests in parol, and “where the title depends on the existence of a fact which is not a matter of record, and the fact depends for its proof entirely upon oral evidence, the case must be made very clear by the vendor to warrant the court in ordering specific performance”: 36 Cyc. 635-6. This is also broadly suggested in Speakman v. Forepaugh,
Out of all the cases brought to this court, where a vendor endeavored to compel a vendee to take a title depending solely on proof of adverse possession, we have found but two which have been successful, — each because of express admissions in defendant’s answers. In Dallmeyer v. Ferguson,
' Shober v. Dutton,
The present case, however, wholly lacks any admission or conclusive proof of the essential facts requisite to a marketable title. For all that appears, Joseph Hoover may have entered into possession as one of the seven heirs of his father, in which event his title presumptively would not have been adverse (Tulloch v. Worrall,
If the plaintiffs wish to clear their title, the legislature has given them abundant opportunities so to do, by the Acts of June 10, 1893, P. L. 415; April 16, 1903, P. L. 212, and April 18, 1905, P. L. 202; and, if the circumstances justify it, by a bill quia timet.
The judgment of the court below is reversed.
