Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
Levi and Arthur Staton were the legatees and devisees of" their deceased father, Harvey Staton. The close of the late war between the states found them in possession of 889 acres of land, the subject of this dispute, the most valuable part of' it being the 16th section, on which are all of the improvements, it being estimated as worth some $7,000 or more, and the other land about $1,000. The slaves having been emancipated, the personal estate was of little value. Bryant was a creditor of' Harvey Staton, and obtained two judgments against Arthur Staton, executor of the will of Harvey Staton, to the aggregate amount of about $7,000, in November, 1865, which were a lien on all the personal property of the testator in the hands of' his executor, and on the 16th section mentioned, as well as-a charge upon the other land described, which was liable on proper proceedings to be sold to pay said judgments. The judgments of Bryant were nearly equal in amount to the value-of the entire estate of Harvey Staton, in the hands of his ■ devisees and executor when they were obtained. In the autumn of 1865 a contract was made between Arthur and Levi Staton, by the terms of which Levi was to renounce all interest in the real and personal estate of Harvey Staton to Arthur, for $1,000, to be paid him by Arthur, who was to have the-whole estate and pay all the debts of Harvey Staton remaining unpaid. Besides the judgments in favor of Bryant, there-was due for the purchase-money of the 16th section mentioned'
The principle on which the doctrine of estoppel by conduct rests is that it would be a fraud in a party to assert what his previous conduct had denied, when on the faith of that denial others have acted. When silence becomes a fraud, it will operate as an estoppel. Estoppel by conduct “ arises from an act, or declaration of a person intended or calculated to mislead another, on which that other has relied, and has so acted, or refrained from action, as that injury will befall him if the truth of the act or declaration be denied.” McMaster v. Insurance Co., 55 N. Y. 222.
The conduct of Levi Staton was well calculated to create the belief that he had relinquished all claim on the estate of Harvey Staton, and that Arthur was authorized to dispose of it as he did. The estate was incumbered with debts nearly, if not quite, sufficient to consume it. The real interest of Levi was small, if anything, in value, being contingent on the payment of the debts of the estate. The chief part of the estate was liable to sale, under execution, upon the judgments of Bryant, as well as exposed to proceedings by the trustees for the purchase-money of the 16th section, and all of the land was liable to be sold, on proper proceedings, to pay Bryant’s judgments. Levi had relinquished his interest to Arthur, and Bryant withheld execution of his judgments to give opportunity to Arthur to pay them as he could. Iustead of resorting to a forced sale, as he might have done, Bryant concluded a fair purchase of the estate from Arthur. Having done this, he assumed control of the estate as his, subject to the paramount charge on the 16th section. Levi knew Bryant had contracted with Arthur for the land in the belief that Levi had no claim upon it. He must have kuown that Bryant was, in fact, ignorant of the deed Arthur had made to him, and that Bryant, as a creditor who had a claim on the estate superior to that of devisees, had accepted the conveyance of the land as a satis
Levi cannot now be allowed to change his attitude towards Bryant and the estate. If Bryant, trusting to the acquiesence
If, after all this, Levi asserts his legal right to the land, it, must be with the same result which would have attended its assertion at the outset. Lapse of time makes no difference, because it was permitted to elapse with his consent, as justly implied from his silence, after knowledge of the transaction.. The interest of Levi in the estate was what might be left after its liabilities were all discharged. The judgments of Biyanti bound it, and the purchase-money of the 16th section was. recognized by Arthur, the executor, as a valid charge, and the note of Bryant for that was not given until more than a year after Bryant’s purchase of the land, one of the conditions off which purchase was that this demand should be paid by Bryant. As Levi made no objection then, he cannot now object that the 16th section was not liable for the purchase-money because of the bar of the statute of limitations.
When Bryant bought the land, the legal title was in Levii Staton, one half-interest by devise, and the other half by the-deed from Arthur; but both were subject to the paramount, rights of creditors, and Levi could hold the land only subject, to these paramount rights. Bryant knew that Levi had:
We have stated some of the principles sanctioned by the-authorities. See Bigelow and Herman on Estop., passim; Crest v. Jack, 3 Watts, 238; Knouff v. Thompson, 16 Pa. St. 357; Hill et al. v. Epley et al., 31 Pa. St. 331; Brant v. Virginia Coal Co., 9 U. S.
Guided by them, we must hold that Bryant and his co-complainants cannot, as to the legal title of Levi Staton, claim an. estoppel. Bryant knew of that, and cannot build an estoppel
The decree will be reversed and cause remanded for an account to be taken of the amount due on the judgments of Bryant, computing interest to date, and the amount of the •claim in favor of the township trustees of the 16th section, •discharged by Bryant, with interest on it'at the rate the note was bearing, and the taxes paid by Biyant or his grandchildren on the land, and of the value of the improvements made upon the land by Bryant or his co-complainants, and of the value of the rents, and for a final decree in accordance with this opinion and the principles of equity. But in taking the account of the rents, they should not be estimated as in case of an annual leasing to different persons in quantities to suit them, with all the trouble and hazards of such leasing; but the plantation should be considered as a whole, and leased for a term of years, from January, 1868, to the autumn of 1873, upon undoubted
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring.
The relief prayed in the bill was in the alternative either that the appellant might be enjoined from asserting his legal title, or that the appellees might be allowed to vacate the satisfaction of the judgment and subject the land to its payment and to the amount paid to the trustees of the school fund. I think the facts warranted the granting of either form of relief.
Note. — The following is a part of the decree of this court which it is thought embraces a new and important principle:
“It is further ordered that, in taking the account for rents, the commissioner shall ascertain by proof the fair value of a lease of said lands, from the 1st day of January, A. D. 1868, to the 1st day of January, A. D. 1874, as if they were leased for the whole term, in one contract, to a responsible tenant, with undoubted security, who would pay the rent promptly at the end of each year, without a resort to legal proceedings, or the use of any other means to secure payment than a readiness-by the appellees to receive the money, and with the obligation on the part of said tenant to keep the premises in such good repair as is necessary for the convenient use and occupation of the same. That, in making such estimate of rent, he shall adopt and report such sum as the said land would readily have brought without, any further effort on the part of the lessor to secure a tenant than giving notice in. the neighborhood that the said land was for lease. Said commissioner, for the year 1874, and all subsequent years up to the 1st day of January of the year succeeding the making of his report, shall ascertain and report the value of said rent on a yearly leasing of the same, but to be governed in all other respects, in ascertaining the rent, according to the principles hereinbefore mentioned and stated in the opinion. The said commissioner shall also ascertain and report the value of all permanent and valuable improvements made by the appellees, or any of them, as-they exist at the date of stating the account. And the same shall then be credited, by said appellees in taking said account, but the rent shall not be increased at anytime on account of the same.”