235 Pa. 144 | Pa. | 1912
Opinion by
The plaintiff sued upon a written contract under seal between it and the defendant, dated April 29, 1910. By the terms of this contract the plaintiff agreed to furnish bricks for a building operation of the defendant at stipulated prices, in quantities as ordered by the latter, and the defendant agreed, inter alia, to pay $2,400 in the form of six promissory notes dated as of the last delivery of the bricks and payable in ninety days thereafter, and to give as collateral six properties subject to certain mortgages, which properties were to be held in trust by a trust company, and in the event of the non-payment of the notes at maturity to be conveyed to the plaintiff as collateral security for the $2,400 debt. The plaintiff averred that the houses were so conveyed to its nominee and that subsequently, after notice to defendant, they were sold at public auction; but that instead of anything being realized from the collateral the settlement showed a deficit of $2,308.
The defendant filed an affidavit of defence in which he denied that the bricks were purchased under the aforesaid written contract, and averred that they were furnished in pursuance of an oral agreement made February 1, 1910, with Robert Paschall, general manager of the plaintiff company, whereby $2,400 of the account was to be paid by the conveyance to the plaintiff of the equities in the houses in question. The defendant in his affidavit admits signing the written contract sued upon, but attempts to evade his liability thereunder, by averring that his signature “was procured fraudulently through artifice and misrepresentation;” that “Sometime in June, 1910, after the plaintiff had entered upon the performance of its oral contract, and a large part of the brick work of the operation had been completed, for which it had supplied all the bricks
A comparison of tbe written contract and tbe alleged oral agreement shows identical terms, except in tbe important particular, that by tbe former tbe properties
The averment “that the plaintiff accepted the said conveyance in full payment of its claim of $2,400” is materially faulty in that it fails to state any date or particulars; to say that one “accepted” something in full payment, is merely to aver a conclusion. If the defendant desired to stand upon this defense, it was his duty to give the facts upon which it was based, so that the Court might determine whether such facts, if proved, were sufficient to justify the conclusion. The conveyance referred to by the defendant is evidently the same one which the plaintiff avers, and which the written contract shows, to have been a transfer of the properties as collateral. Under the circumstances we feel that the affidavit of defense was insufficient and that the judgment should have been entered for the plaintiff.
The assignment of error is sustained, and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to make the rule absolute and enter judgment for the plaintiff.