Opinion by
This is an appeal by Forrester H. Scott, Executor of John H. Scott, from the decree of the lower court awarding to John S. Kane and George Connell the sum of $1,856.40 out of the portion of the fund awarded to Scott in the preceding case. Scott entered into an agreement with Kane dated December 18, 1912, to sell to him the premises out of which the fund in dispute arose. Scott was not the owner of the property at the time, the title being held by James W. Draper, appellant in the preceding case, who made advances on account of the carrying charges and took title in his own name in 1911. Scott was holder of a junior mortgage against the.property which he had reduced to judgment and ex
Appellant contends that under the agreement he is' relieved from the payment of damages for breach of ■ contract by the clause therein which provides “In consideration of any possible imperfection of title of the; said'first parties to the above premises that the party, of the second part, his heirs or assigns, should have no: recourse, against the said first parties, either at law or5 equity for specific performance of this agreement, or-any part thereof, nor any action for damages beyond the'sum of One dollar, which is agreed to by the parties to this agreement to be the amount of damages sustained-'
Under the Act of June 16, 1836, P. L. 755, section 86, 2 Purd. 1580, pi. 149, the distribution of the proceeds of a sheriff’s sale is to be made “according to law and equity.” Under this act in Kelly’s App., 16 Pa. 59, it was held an acpounting between partners would be considered to properly distribute the remaining proceeds of partnership land sold on execution. In Crouse’s App., 28 Pa. 139, the purchaser under a written agreement, which the vendor was unable to carry out by reason of a defective title, purchased a lien against, the property and had the premises sold under this lien, becoming the purchaser for a sum in excess of prior liens and in excess of the contract price. The court held this surplus belonged to the purchaser. It was said by Mr. Justice Lowkie (p. 143) : “It is argued that by having the land sold he abandoned or extinguished the contract but that depends upon an intention that nowhere appears and upon the right to abandon which does not seem to us to have existed. The embarrassments to the perfecting of the title are sufficient to account for and justify this mode of perfecting it or getting clear of it by a sheriff’s sale and prohibit us from treating this act as an abandonment of it.” Souder’s App., 57 Pa. 498, also holds that an auditor in making distribution of funds may consider not only the lien but also the question who is entitled to receive the money. Connell and Kane were not strangers to the title but equitable owners of the property under their agreement of sale. Being equitable owners and properly brought in as parties to the record, they had a right to present their claim upon the fund derived from the proceeds of the sale, payable to their vendor, and receive out of the amount their loss sustained by reason of the failure of their vendor to give title. The mere
The appeal is dismissed.