150 A. 656 | Pa. | 1930
As a result of a decree of specific performance entered by the court below and affirmed by us (
We are called upon to determine only one question. In their account defendants charged themselves with the rents and income received from the date of the agreement, and claimed, among other credits, the sum of $18,425, representing interest which they allege is due to them on the deferred portion of the purchase money from October 1, 1918, a date fixed in the agreement, to May 1, 1924, when the deed for the property was delivered to plaintiff. The court awarded to plaintiff the net amount of the rents and income, but refused to allow defendants the credit claimed for interest, in this connection saying that the agreement of sale made no provision for interest on the unpaid purchase money (though we think it does) and that defendants and their decedent in his lifetime had deprived plaintiff of the possession, use and enjoyment of the property from the time when delivery thereof should have been made until May 1, 1924, when it was conveyed in compliance with the decree. The chancellor determined that there was no liability upon plaintiff for the interest, that it bore no relation to anything so far as rents, issues and profits are concerned, and that, as defendants had not demanded interest at the time of the delivery of the deed and the acceptance by them of the mortgage of $55,000 provided for in the agreement, they were estopped from claiming it. In the chancellor's view the claim for interest under the conditions as they appeared was on the same plane with a claim for waste and depreciation, and the case of Head v. Meloney,
Turning to the agreement, we find that it is dated May 13, 1918, and gives plaintiff the option to purchase the property upon certain payments being made by him, which the chancellor found had been completed, and proceeds, "if the said Hans A. Leafgreen [plaintiff] shall make all of said payments in strict accordance with the terms hereof then the balance of the purchase price of said property amounting to fifty-five thousand ($55,000) dollars may be paid by said Hans A. Leafgreen in four (4) years, with interest thereon from and after October 1, 1918, at the rate of six per cent per annum," with a further provision that this deferred payment should be secured by a mortgage on the property, and bonds "with interest at six per cent per annum, payable semiannually, evidenced by interest coupons." We thus see that the contract specifically provided for the payment of interest on the deferred payments. We said when the case was here before (
Whether the agreement had provided for the payment of interest by the vendee on the unpaid purchase money or not, under well-established equitable principles, as he receives, by the court's decree, the net rents and income from the property from the date of the contract, May 13, 1918, to the date of the deed to him, May 1, 1924, he is required to pay the interest or forego the income. Equitably he cannot have both. "The vendor is regarded as trustee of the land for the benefit of the purchaser, and liable to account to him for rents and profits, or for the value of the use and occupation, and the purchaser is treated as trustee of the purchase money unpaid and charged with interest thereon unless the money has been appropriated, and no benefit has accrued from it to the purchaser": Howell's Est.,
The net rents and income in the hands of defendants (vendors) and which the chancellor decreed should be paid to the plaintiff (vendee) including interest thereon from May 1, 1924, which was also allowed, amount to $21,321.12, as set out in the decree, which takes account of an item of $300 paid to plaintiff's attorneys, allowed as a credit. The actual net rents and income (excluding interest) amount to $16,135.32 and the interest claimed by defendants to $18,425. As the chancellor has found that the vendors unwarrantably kept the vendee out of possession and as the rents and profits are less than the interest, following the principles heretofore adverted to, we conclude that defendants cannot claim the interest, but we will leave them in possession of the rents and income. In this view of the matter, the interest on the rents and income amounting to $5,485.90, (calculated from, not before, May 1, 1924), assessed against defendants necessarily drops out.
As to the contention of plaintiff that the property had been injured by defendants while they were in possession of it and that allowance should be made to him for *375 this, it is sufficient to say that the chancellor adversely concluded as to this claim, which we think was proper.
The first, third and fourth assignments of error are sustained, with directions to the court below to reframe its final decree in accordance with this opinion; costs on this appeal to be equally divided between the plaintiff and defendants.