6 Watts 500 | Pa. | 1837
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The several matters embraced in the assignment of errors may be resolved into three questions. First, Can the letter of attorney, and the receipt or acquittance endorsed thereon, taken either together as one instrument or separately, be so considered as to embrace the interest, which William Lytle, the father of the plaintiffs below, acquired under his father’s will in the real estate of the latter? Secondly, If not, were there any facts or circumstances testified to which made it the'duty of the court to have left the construction thereof to the jury, to be determined therefrom by them, whether William Lytle released or intended to release to his brother Abraham, his interest in their father’s real estate? And thirdly, Could the statute of limitations, under the evidence given, be considered as forming a bar to the recovery of the plaintiffs below?
As to the first question, his Honour, the Judge of the court below, in his charge to the jury, took the power of attorney and the acquittance endorsed thereon together, as having reference to the same object, and forming parts of the same transaction; and was decidedly of opinion that they could not be construed as embracing the real estate, or airy thing more than that portion of the personal estate of the testator, to which William was entitled under the will. On the second question, he was also of opinion, and so instructed the jury, that no circumstance was disclosed by the evidence which would warrant the conclusion, that the parties were ignorant of the legal meaning of the terms and phrases employed therein, and therefore to construe the acquittance into a deed for land, though it might possibly be in conformity to what the parties intended, yet it would be clearly contrary to their own expressions of intention: in short, that there was no evidence given in the cause which would warrant the inference that the parties intended to embrace the interest of William in the real estate under his father’s will. On both these questions we think his Honour instructed the jury correctly. The power of attorney is drawn up in terms, the meaning and import of which are as free from ambiguity as any that could have been selected, and peculiarly appropriate to William’s interest in the personalty alone; so much so, that they completely exclude all idea of any interest in the realty being either included or intended to be so. There is a precision and perspicuity in the language going to show that William’s interest in the personal estate was all that was intended to be embraced, which it would not be very_easy, perhaps,
Then as to the acquittance endorsed on the letter of attorney, what is there in it tending to show that the 200 dollars, therein iñentioned as received by William and paid by Abraham, was for any thing but the legacy designated in the letter of attorney? It is stated to have been received “ in full satisfaction of his legacy bequeathed to him by Robert Lytle, deceased;” thus using almost the identical terms of the letter of attorney; and being written at the same time on the back of it, renders it impossible, even by the utmost stretch of imagination, to come to any other conclusion than that the same legacy or thing was not only intended to be, but is precisely the same with that specified in the letter of attorney, and thereby authorized to be received from Mr Heth, the executor. The letter of attorney, and the acquittance, then, taken together, furnish evidence only, at most, of a purchase by Abraham Lytle from William Lytle, of the legacy or amount coming to the latter out of the personal estate of their late father.
Next what are the circumstances relied on, which, it is alleged, made it a question of fact proper to be left to the jury, to be decided by them, whether William’s interest in the real estate of their father derived from the will of the latter, was not actually embraced in the purchase as well as that in the personal? The only circumstance appearing in the evidence, that has been laid hold of for this purpose is, that the 200 dollars paid by Abraham and mentioned
Then as to the difference in amount between the sum received by William of Abraham for his legacy, and the real sum coming to him under the will out of the personal estate, it may be very rationally and fairly accounted for from the other circumstances given in evidence, without embracing his interest in the real estate: for they are sufficient to remove every ground for the slightest suspicion that otherwise might arise, of something more having been the subject of the purchase between the parties. I allude he e first to the circumstance of the administration account of the executor not being settled at the date of the acquittance, nor for two years afterwards, which rendered it next to impossible for Abraham and William to know, at that time, the amount that would be coming upon settlement thereof to the latter; so that the probability is, they must have guessed at it, and in doing so, made it 200 dollars, instead of about 90, as it turned out to be afterwards, upon a settlement being made by the executor of the estate. The terms of the acquittance would also seem to favour this idea, because it is therein stated expressly to be an acquittance and discharge “from every manner of amount;” so that no more should be claimed thereafter on account of the same from Abraham, let the amount thereof be what it might, either more or less; showing also, perhaps, that each had agreed to take the risk of any loss that might accrue on account of the true sum differing thereafter materially from the one so agreed on. Next are
But admitting that the circumstances proved were such as barely to excite some suspicion that the 200 dollars were given for something more than the legacy or portion coming to William out of the personal estate, without any evidence whatever being given tending to prove either mistake or fraud being committed in the writing or obtaining of the receipt or acquittance; upon what principle or ground can it be claimed, that the construction thereof should have been left to the jury? Surely, without some evidence tending to show either mistake or fraud in this respect, it belonged to the court, and Avas its peculiar duty, to direct the jury in the construction which the laAv put on the poAver of attorney and the acquittance; and it became the bounden duty of the jury, under the oaths or affirmations taken by them, to find their verdict in conformity to the construction so given by the court.
There was certainly not the least tittle of evidence given on the trial, going to shoAV, that any thing more Avas intended to be paid for, by the 200 dollars, than the legacy, Avhich is described in the letter of attorney and acquittance'; but had there been any tending to prove that William’s interest in the real estate was sold, and intended to have been included in the acquittance, then other questions might have arisen of pretty serious import. For, as his interest in the real estate is certainly i not mentioned in the acquittance, it might have been made a question, Avhether enough was done by the parties to take the purchase-out of the statute of frauds; and -if so, Avhether the agreement on the part of William to sell such interest had been fairly obtained or not: but from the state of the evidence, it is .manifest, these questions cannot be raised, and need not be discussed, or decided here.
In respect to the construction of releases, hoAvever, it may be further observed, that generally, Avhen such an instrument contains a particular recital, or words in any other form, showing that a
Then as respects the statute of limitations being a bar to the recovery of the plaintiffs belotv, which is the third question. The statute cannot be considered under the circumstances of this case, as having commenced running before the expiration of the term in the lease, taken by Abraham, of the testator in his lifetime; which did not expire until the 1st of April 1817. But the writ of ejectment here being sued out in April 1836, the action Avas, therefore, commenced nearly two years before the twenty-one years, the time required by the statute, had run. Until the 1st of April 1817, Abraham Avas entitled to the possession of William’s interest in the real estate under the lease, and his holding it to that time, was, therefore, perfectly consistent with William’s claim to it. And, although the partition made of the estate, between Abraham and one of the other devisees thereof in 1814, was altogether repugnant and incompatible Avith William’s right in it, yet it does not appear, that he had any knowledge of it whatever; and the disclaimer of the tenant cannot affect the right of the lessor or his assignee, so as to render the possession of the former, adverse to the right of the
Judgment affirmed.