29 A.2d 77 | Pa. | 1942
This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a bill in equity to compel specific performance of a contract for the sale of real estate consisting of a house and lot in the Borough of Brownsville, Pennsylvania.
Nathan Kaufman purchased the property in dispute for residence purposes, in 1923, taking title in the name of his wife, Dora Kaufman. Early in 1938 the Kaufmans offered to sell the property to Samuel S. Sidle for $10,000, and Sidle expressed a desire to buy at this figure if given *551 three years to make payment. A lease agreement was entered into, dated March 10, 1938, with Dora Kaufman as lessor, leasing the property to Sidle for a term of three years, beginning April 1, 1938, at a monthly rental of $75, and on the same date the Kaufmans joined in the execution of a written option, giving Sidle the exclusive right to purchase the property for the sum of $10,000, at any time within three years from April 1, 1938, provided he notify the Kaufmans of his election to accept the option on or before January 1, 1941. By the terms of the option agreement it was also provided that in the event of exercise of the option Sidle should be entitled to apply on account of the $10,000 purchase price the amount of rentals paid by him under the lease agreement less interest on $10,000 at the rate of 6% per annum and all taxes and insurance on the property paid by the Kaufmans during the term of the lease. Sidle took possession of the premises on April 1, 1938, under the agreements and made substantial alterations and improvements, costing $3,000 to $4,000, without objection on the part of the Kaufmans.
On February 9, 1941, the dwelling on the property was rendered uninhabitable by a fire and the Sidles took up temporary quarters in the Monongahela Hotel, Brownsville. Following the fire Kaufman and Sidle had two meetings, in Miami Beach, Florida, to discuss adjustment of the insurance due by reason of the fire loss and on neither occasion did Kaufman assert a failure on the part of Sidle to accept the option on or before January 1, 1941. At that time neither was aware of the exact amount of insurance on the property, and a question had arisen as to its collectibility because the policies did not disclose the existence of Sidle's option. On March 12, 1941, Sidle, still in Florida, wrote to the Kaufmans, requesting an extension of the "matured date of the option" until such time as the fire loss could be adjusted, and in reply received a letter from the Kaufmans' attorney, dated March 14, 1941, stating as follows: "The option provides *552 that if you wish to purchase, you must notify the owners of the property on or before January 1, 1941. Since you served no notice of acceptance on or before the above date, the option has expired and it follows that you have no interest in the property or in any settlement Mr. Kaufman may make with the insurance company for the destruction of the property by the recent fire." As it developed, the amount of fire insurance carried on the dwelling exceeded the option price and the Kaufmans received the total sum of $10,310 in settlement for the loss.
On March 27, 1941, five days before the date fixed for closing the transaction, Sidle offered to place in escrow the purchase price of $10,000, to be paid over to the Kaufmans provided they deliver a proper deed and account for the rents received, less interest on $10,000 at six per cent from April 1, 1938, and taxes and insurance, and pay over to him the balance together with the $10,310 proceeds of the fire insurance. The Kaufmans rejected this offer, refused to recognize that Sidle had any further interest in the property for the reasons stated in their letter of March 14, 1941, and on April 15, 1941, they conveyed the property, in its damaged condition, to Reuben Shure, a cousin of Nathan Kaufman, for a consideration of $3,000. Shure, to finance the transaction, then borrowed the sum of $7,000 from Louis Altman and Bertha Altman, of Brownsville, giving them a mortgage on the property in that amount. Of this sum $5,000 was advanced by the Altmans at the execution of the mortgage and the balance of $2,000 was retained by them to be used by Shure in making necessary repairs.
In his bill, filed May 5, 1941, naming the Kaufmans and their grantee, Shure, as defendants, Sidle averred compliance with the terms of the option agreement and asked for specific performance. At the hearing on the bill and answers counsel for the parties agreed that the only issue in the case, as stated in the pleadings, was whether notice of election to accept the option was given *553
by Sidle on or before January 1, 1941, as required by its terms. Sidle insisted that he informed Kaufman of his acceptance at a meeting in the latter's office at Union-town, Pennsylvania, on December 12, 1940, and contended this also constituted notice to Dora Kaufman, on the theory that Kaufman was her agent for this purpose. The Kaufmans denied that notice of acceptance had been given them, or either of them, at any time prior to January 1, 1941, denied that Kaufman was agent of Mrs. Kaufman to accept the required notice, and urged that the statements relied upon as constituting notice were insufficient for that purpose as a matter of law. The chancellor, however, specifically refused to determine the disputed question of fact as to whether notice had been communicated to Kaufman or to decide whether if given, as testified by Sidle, it was legally sufficient and binding upon Dora Kaufman, taking the view that the bill must be dismissed for failure of Sidle to make an unqualified tender of the purchase price on or before April 1, 1941, the closing day, under the decision of this Court inSpratt v. Greenfield,
Apart from the fact that in each case the property was damaged by fire prior to the closing day, any similarity *554
between Spratt v. Greenfield, supra, relied upon by the court below, and the present case is purely superficial. That case involved the ordinary contract for the sale of real estate, at a fixed sum, to be paid by the vendee at settlement day; the vendee had refused to make settlement on the date for closure, demanding a credit in advance to the extent insurance would be paid to the vendor or a postponement of settlement until the insurance had been collected and an adjustment made; and the bill was denied on the ground that under these circumstances the utmost the vendee might be entitled to demand was the right to have the insurance money transferred to him when collected. Here the contract expressly provided for a credit on account of the purchase price, based upon rentals paid over the period of three years less interest and carrying charges, including insurance, and so far as appears the insurance due by reason of the fire loss had already been adjusted and may have been paid. Moreover, in the present case the vendors had explicitly repudiated the contract by their letter of March 14, 1941; again at the time of Sidle's attempted tender, on March 27, 1941, five days prior to expiration of the time for closing the transaction, they set up the claim that no contract existed; and at all times since, down to the present appeal, they have taken the position that Sidle had no right to tender the purchase price or make any demand upon them for a deed to the property. Under such circumstances it has been held over and over again that the vendee is relieved of all necessity of making a tender as a condition of specific performance, on the ground that the law does not require the doing of a vain and utterly useless act, and hence whether an adequate tender was made by Sidle, or no tender at all, is of no consequence in the disposition of this case. Having expressly declared the contract null and void prior to settlement day, and in the meantime having done no act recognizing its validity, the Kaufmans are not now in position to assert that a full *555
and complete tender was not made: Penna. Mining Co. v. Smith,
The option agreement gives Sidle the exclusive right of purchase at any time prior to April 1, 1941, provided he "shall on or before January 1, 1941," give notice that he "will take, accept and purchase said premises" within the limit of time stated. Sidle testified, on direct examination, that on December 12, 1940, at the meeting in Kaufman's office, he stated to Kaufman, "I am notifying you at this time I am going to buy my home around April 1st when my option expires," and on cross-examination he testified, "I told him, on or before April 1st, I was going to take it over. I had made arrangements for that." It is conceded written notification of intention to exercise the option was not necessary to give rise to an enforceable contract of sale, in the absence of a provision to that effect, but is urged that this testimony and similar evidence given by Sidle and his son, the only other person present at the conference, is not sufficiently positive in its terms to constitute acceptance of an offer, and is, therefore, inadequate for the purpose of showing an election as a matter of law: Warner Bros., Inc., v. Proffitt,
Nor can we accede to the contention that "unless specific authorization existed for the acceptance of notice of the exercise of the option, Dora Kaufman, as owner of the property, was not bound by anything that the appellant may have said to her husband." The existence of an agency for this purpose was not required to be shown by evidence of "specific authorization," but may be implied from the attending circumstances. As said by Judge PARKER (now a member of this Court) in Mitchell v. First Nat. Bank of Confluence,
It is well settled that purchasers and mortgagees of real estate are affected not only by matters of which they had actual knowledge and by what appeared in the office of the recorder of deeds and in the various courts of record whose territorial jurisdiction embraced the land in dispute, but as well "by what they could have learned by inquiry of the person in possession and of others who, they had reason to believe, knew of facts which might affect the title": Salvation ArmyInc. Tr. v. Lawson,
Our conclusion, in accordance with the above views, is that the court below ought to have rendered a decision based upon the disputed questions of notice and agency, as appellant contends, and that the decree dismissing the bill on other grounds was improvidently made. We will, therefore, reverse the decree and remit the record for findings and conclusions on these issues and the entry of an appropriate decree based thereon.
The decree is reversed and the record is remitted to the court below for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion; costs to abide the final result.