378 Pa. 275 | Pa. | 1954
Lead Opinion
Opinion by
Plaintiff, C. A. West, is engaged in the real estate business and more particularly in the development of large tracts of unimproved land into residential and commercial lots and the sale of the lots so laid out. Defendant, Peoples First National Bank & Trust Company, is the trustee for certain persons known as the “McKelvey heirs” of a tract of 142 acres of land lying east of the Borough of Wilkinsburg in Allegheny County, this land being generally referred to as the “McKelvey tract.” Following numerous conferences between plaintiff and defendant’s attorney looking to an agreement for its development plaintiff was largely instrumental in obtaining the annexation of the major portion of the tract to the Borough of Wilkinsburg, an annexation which permitted of a much more profitable development of the land.
On October 25, 1943, the parties entered into a second agreement in writing for the purpose of supplementing the earlier one. It provided for the payment of certain tax instalments by plaintiff to be repaid to him from the net proceeds first received by defendant as its share of the proceeds from the sale of real estate. It further provided that the six-year period stipulated in the original agreement should not begin to run until the government modified its then existing regulations and restrictions on building construction, it being the understanding of the parties that defendant should have six years from the date that such modificaiion should occur in which to complete the performance of the original agreement.
It may be noted at the outset that while a joint adventure is not the same as a partnership, and indeed the agreement between the parties expressly de
The principal question in the case is whether the agreement between the parties was automatically terminated by the condemnation of the 58 acres of the tract or whether the conduct of the parties indicated their intention and understanding that the condemnation should not be deemed to have such an effect. Of course, as held under the varying circumstances of many cases,
Plaintiff claims that by virtue of the joint adventure agreement he obtained an interest in the land as such and is therefore entitled to participate as a party in the condemnation proceedings and to receive half the proceeds of the award that may be rendered therein. We agree with the court below that this claim is unjustified. Nowhere in the agreement is there any provision or any indication of an intention on the part of defendant to grant to plaintiff any title to, interest in, or lien upon, the land; its only obligation was to account to plaintiff for his share of the net profits. The cases cited by Rowley in his treatise on The Modern Law of Partnership, amply support his statement (vol. 2, p. 1348, §979) that “where one party advances all the money for purchasing the property and the others are to contribute services for a share in the profits, the title to the property is in the one who fur
This brings us to the final question in the case, namely, the relief to which plaintiff should be held entitled by reason of the fact that he expended money and performed services under the agreement which was terminated through no fault of his own. Defendant apparently concedes that he is entitled to the recovery, on the principle of restitution, which the court below awarded him. In Williston on Contracts, vol. 6, (rev. ed.) pp. 5536, 5537, §1972, it is said that “If per
It is defendant’s contention that plaintiff should not be allowed what it claims is a double recovery, one by way of restitution and the other the proceeds of the sales to M.-& S. Construction Company and the Westinghouse Corporation, the . one resting, upon the assumption that the agreement was terminated and the other that it continued in force. This argument, however, fails to recognize that the agreement remained in effect, as we have held, until after the two sales in question had been made and until the controversy arose in connection with plaintiff’s presentation of an offer for an additional purchase. It was at
Judgment affirmed, costs to be divided equally between the parties.
Examples: Lovering v. The Buck Mountain, Coal Co., 54 Pa. 291; Ward v. Vance, 93 Pa. 499; Greenberg v. Sun Shipbuilding Co., 277 Pa. 312, 121 A. 63; Commercial Coal Mining Co. v. Big Bend Coal Mining Co., 293 Pa. 39, 141 A. 732; Greek Catholic Congregation of Olyphant Borough v. Plummer, Executrix, 338 Pa. 373, 382, 12 A. 2d 435, 439; Dixon v. Breon, 22 Pa. Superior Ct. 340; Wertz v. Klinger, 25 Pa. Superior Ct. 523.
Since the agreement must be held to have been stiU in force at that time its provision (Section Third (2)) was applicable that plaintiff should first receive out of the proceeds repayment of moneys advanced by him in the improvement of the land before division of the proceeds between the parties.'
The injunction granted by the come oelow to prevent defendant from petitioning for the appointment of viewers in the condemnation proceedings pending the determination of plaintiff’s rights, should now be vacated.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
West contended he was a partner or a joint adventurer with defendant in a land development. He could at the proper time have brought an action of assumpsit or a bill in equity for an accounting which would have given him adequate redress for whatever he was entitled to. Instead he filed a petition for a declaratory judgment at a time when litigation was not imminent, and a decision would not settle all the main issues or controversies between the parties or even be a practical help in ending the controversy, and where all parties were not or could not be joined.
Unless our prior decisions in this field are to be ignored or overruled, declaratory judgment proceed
In Lifter Estate, 377 Pa., supra, we said (pages 228-9) : “In Eureka Casualty Co. v. Henderson, 371 Pa. 587, 92 A. 2d 551, Mr. Chief Justice Steen said (pages 591, 592) : ‘. . . whether or not a court will take jurisdiction of a petition for a declaratory judgment or decree is purely a matter of judicial discretion. . . . It was said in Capital Bank and Trust Company’s Petition, 336 Pa. 108, 111, 6 A. 2d 790, 792; “. . . the vital factor in the assumption of jurisdiction is the presence of antagonistic claims indicating imminent and inevitable litigation, coupled with a clear manifestation that the declaration sought will be a practical help in ending the controversy
“The facts in the instant case bring it within the aforesaid requirements; the problems involved are so unusual and difficult, litigation was so imminent and inevitable, and the peril to the Federation was so great and immediate that we consider this to be an appropriate matter for a declaratory judgment.”
In Sterrett’s Estate, 300 Pa. 116, 150 A. 159, the Court said (page 124) : “Moreover, from the Kariher Case down to our latest utterances' oh the subject of declaratory judgments, in -Taylor v. Haverford Twp., 299 Pa. -402, this court has-: uniformly ruled that relief may not be granted under the Act of June 18, 1923, P. L. 840, where another; established remedy is available. . . . As.recently .said,by us in Taylor v. Haverford Twp., supra, ‘We are determined that the De
In the instant ease the majority frankly admit that the rights between these parties, as well as the amount of recovery, if any, must be determined in future or supplementary proceedings.
For these reasons I would hold that declaratory judgment proceedings should be dismissed.