3 Watts 163 | Pa. | 1834
The opinion of the Court, which was delivered by
This was an ejectment by Trout against Stokely to recover the possession of the lot in question, or the payment of the balance of the purchase money. The verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff below. We have only a very short abstract of part of the evidence, and a short sentence of the charge of the court. I gather the following facts from the testimony, or rather from the parts of it brought before us.
On the 13th of February 1827, Trout and Stokely entered into the following agreement:
“Articles of agreement between George W. Trout and J. Stokely, both of Westmoreland county, and state of Pennsylvania: witnessed.!, that the said George W. Trout, for and in consideration of the
It would seem from the fact that the purchaser is the defendant in this ejectment, that possession was given; and from the verdict being for the plaintiff, to be released on the payment of the balance of the purchase money, that part of the purchase money has been paid. We also know that a deed was executed by Trout and wife to Stokely and offered to him, but rejected; but for what reason we do not know: the deed is not on our paper book, and we are to decide on the legality of it, without seeing it or knowing why it was objected to: of course we cannot say there was error in deciding it to be sufficient. The man who enters into articles of agreement to sell land, and puts the buyer into possession, may not be able to make a good title, and may not be able to recover the purchase money: but if the buyer will not pay, he must restore the possession, or it will be recovered from him in ejectment by the seller. I state this as a general rule: there may be exceptions; as where the buyer having paid part, offers the balance and demands a deed; and especially if a large part has been paid,' or improvements made : but we have no evidence of any such offer here. This brings us to the second error assigned, that the before recited article of agreement is in fact a deed of conveyance, and left no right in Trout, and therefore he could not support an ejectment.
We do not think so. It is commenced, “articles of agreement between,” &c. &c. It does not purport to be the consummation of the contract; it stipulates for something tobe done by each party; and expressly, that the seller is to make a more complete deed for the property, and the buyer to pay at a future day.
This subject has been considered often in this court. We have two cases, Stouffer v. Coleman, 1 Yeates 393, and Irvine v. Campbell, 6 Binn. 118, in which the effect of articles resembling a deed as strongly as this paper does, were considered, and it is decided that the purchaser has a lien for that part of the purchase money which, by the agreement, was not due when a third person bought at she
Judgment affirmed.