32 Pa. 58 | Pa. | 1858
The opinion of the court was delivered by
These writs of error are to the same record, and may be considered together.
There is but a single question presented in the first case, and it arises out of the charge of the court in answer to the 1st, 2d, and 3d points of the plaintiff in error; and that is, as to the con-elusiveness of the recovery by the plaintiff, in the Circuit Court of the United States, against Alexander Porter and Thomas Richey, under whom the defendants in error claim. The court below ruled, that it was not conclusive, and to this the plaintiff in error excepts.
An ejectment was brought by Alexander Cooper and wife, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Pennsylvania, in 1822, was tried in 1828, and the plaintiffs recovered the land, by virtue of title in Mrs. Cooper, subject to valuation for improvements made by the defendants under a tax title, to the amount of $400. The defendants continued in possession of the land, and the amount found in their favour for improvements not having been paid by the plaintiffs, they issued a jñ. fa., in December 1829, for its recovery, and levied on the land in question. These proceedings brought out Alexander Cooper, from Virginia, who entered into articles of agreement with Porter and Richey, in May 1830, for the sale to them of the land, for the sum of $900; four hundred dollars to be paid in hand, being a credit to them of the assessed value of their improvements, and the balance to be paid in five annual instalments. The defendants, on making this agreement, gave to Mr. Cooper a power of attorney, directed to George Selden, Esq., to satisfy the valuation on the records of the Circuit Court, which was accordingly done. In addition to this, the defendants paid on the contract the further sum of $170, and proposed to pay the balance of the purchase-money, if Cooper would make the title. This he refused to do, alleging as a reason, that his wife, in whom the title was, would not consent to sell. Nothing further was done in the premises, until the death of Cooper, in 1852. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Cooper conveyed the land in trust to the plaintiff, who brought this ejectment in the Common Pleas of Venango county, to August Term 1854, and recovered in 1857, subject to pay for improvements to the defendants, the sum of $1897.58 within three months.
The ruling of the learned judge of the Common Pleas against
It may be said, that no fraud is imputable to the real owner of the land in this matter. This may be conceded. But would it be anything short of this, to permit that owner to appropriate an advantage, in discharge of the land, brought about by such means ? We think not. The act of the agent in effecting it, must either bind in whole or in nothing. His contract was either good, and the defendants entitled to hold as purchasers, or it was bad, for want of authority, and the defendants entitled to be remitted to their rights. The plaintiff repudiates its binding qualities, and the contract and satisfaction falls with this determination, 3 Casey 285 ; and the defendants, as a consequence thereof, must be permitted to reclaim their lost ground. We are clearly of opinion, that the court was right in permitting a recovery for improvements, and that there was no error in refusing to charge as requested. The judgment in this case must be affirmed.
And now as to the second case.
. The defendants in the foregoing ease are plaintiffs in error in this. But as there appears to "be no bill of exceptions sealed to
The second assignment of error is, on account of an extension, by the court, of the time fixed by the jury for the payment by the plaintiff of the amount assessed to the defendants as the value of the improvements. After the rendition of the verdict, the defendants moved for a new trial, and filed their reasons therefor. The motion was made on the 1st of May 1857, and was not disposed of until after the three months fixed by the jury had transpired. When the motion was dismissed, judgment was directed to be entered on the verdict, and the time extended one month. This was the legal termination of the suit. There was no judgment in the ease, until this time, and as the motion was made by the defendants, it was they who delayed the entry of judgment, which in law is the end of controversy. The plaintiff was not bound to do anything, until judgment was entered, for non constat a new trial might be granted. It has been the practice of this court, to extend the time in which to make payment in cases of conditional verdicts in ejectment for purchase-money, on affirming judgment, when the time had been fixed in the verdict and has elapsed, or partly so; especially so, if the delay of the writ of error has been the act of the party who was to pay. And recoveries for the value of improvements, on the defeat of a tax title, resemble those in ejectment for purchase-money so entirely, and the power of the jury in both classes of cases being now conferred by statute, the practice may be properly assimilated. We think the court committed no error in ordering an extension of time.
We see no error in this record, and the judgment is affirmed, and the time for paying the valuation of improvements as found by the jury, extended for two months from this date, with interest from the 1st of August 1857.