Roland v. Miller

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

This was an action of debt, founded upon a bond of #1300, conditioned for the payment of #650. The defendant below, who is also the defendant here, put in the plea of payment, with leave to give the special matter in evidence, which was, that *392he had executed the bond to the plaintiff to secure the payment of the balance of $2725, being the amount of consideration money, which the defendant was to pay to the plaintiff for a lot of ground No. 151, situate in the borough of Reading, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, sold by the plaintiff to the defendant, upon the terms and conditions contained in an article of agreement, made in writing between them, under their respective hands and seals, bearing date the 15th of October 1838; that the defendant had discovered since the purchase and the giving of his bond, that one-half of the lot so purchased was charged, at the time of his purchase and long before, with the payment of the interest of $919.33, annually, to the widow of Peter Rightmyer, during her natural life, who was still living, and with the principal, upon her death, to the heirs of the said Peter. The defendant, after having shown that one-half of the lot was so charged, by the production of the records of the Orphans’ Court, which were read in evidence, offered to give in evidence the article of agreement, which was objected to by the plaintiff, but admitted by the court, to which the plaintiff excepted; and this exception is made the ground of the first error. The evidence thus offered was clearly admissible. It is impossible to perceive even the shadow of an objection to it, at the stage of the trial in which it was offered. The objection to the evidence was founded upon an allegation, that according to the final arrangement between the parties in consummating the purchase, by the plaintiff’s making a title to the lot, it was done by the plaintiff’s executing two deeds of conveyance to the defendant, one for the eastern half of the lot, and the other for the western half of it; that the purchase money was apportioned, allowing $1925 thereof as the consideration for the eastern half of the lot, upon which the charge rested; and $800, the residue thereof, as the consideration for the western half, on which the charge did not exist; and that the bond in suit was given to secure the payment of $650, part of the $800, which was the consideration agreed on for the western half of the lot: and in order to prove this, as the ground of his objection to. the defendant’s giving the articles of agreement in evidence, the plaintiff offered to give the deeds in evidence. It would have been very wrong in the court to have interrupted the defendant in giving his evidence, as the plaintiff’s counsel wished, and to have permitted the plaintiff to give evidence of facts, which, even if true, would have rendered the evidence offered by the defendant of no avail. It would not only have been grossly irregular in the court to have permitted the plaintiff to have done so, but would have answered no such end as the plaintiff desired, because the evidence offered by the plaintiff, as well as that offered by the defendant, was to prove matters of fact, which could not be decided by the court alone; and hence the evidence offered by the defendant would have to go to the jury at all events.

*393The second error is an exception to the opinion of the court, rejecting what the plaintiff proposed, to prove by Daniel Engle. We think the evidence was clearly inadmissible, because it would only at most have proved what had passed between the parties some time previously to closing and putting in writing the agreement for the purchase of the property; and therefore could not control, or alter in the slightest degree, that which was finally agreed on afterwards, and reduced to writing between them. The writing executed between them must be considered as containing their last agreement on the subject, unless it were obtained unfairly, or through mistake, which is not alleged.

The third error is likewise an exception to the opinion of the court, rejecting what was alleged to be a copy of an agreement between John Rightmyer and Jacob Rightmyer, relating to part of the lot purchased by the defendant of the plaintiff. To render the copy of an agreement admissible, instead of the original, which is considered the best evidence, and therefore ought always to be produced if it can be had, it must be first shown, that there was such an agreement made and in being, as that contained in what is offered as a copy of it; and that it is either lost, destroyed, or for some sufficient reason cannot be had ; and again, in the next place, that the writing offered as a copy of it is truly so. But here the writing called a copy was offered without even a spark of evidence being given, to show that any agreement of the kind had ever been made or known to exist. It would therefore have been most gross error in the court, if it had received the paper, purporting to be a copy, in evidence.

The remaining errors consist of exceptions to the charge of the court. First, that “ the court erred in charging the jury to find a conditional verdict in favour of the defendant, instead of leaving it to the jury as a question of fact, to decide whether the bond was given for that part of the property upon which the charge existed, or the other which was wholly unencumbered.” In point of fact, it does not appear that the court did charge the jury to find a conditional verdict in favour of the defendant, but that they might find for the plaintiff the. amo'unt due on the bond, principal, and interest, to be paid when the encumbrance, which was clearly proven to exist, should be removed from the land purchased by the defendant from the plaintiff; so that the court advised the jury that they might find a conditional verdict in favour of the plaintiff, not the defendant; which, from the aspect given to the case by the evidence, was at least as favóurable for the plaintiff as he had any right to claim. And it would have been error in the court to have submitted it, as a question of fact, to the jury, to be decided by them, whether the bond in suit was not given exclusively for the payment of the consideration of that half of the lot upon which the charge or encumbrance did not exist. Because there was no evidence given which tended to prove it; and again, *394because the articles of agreement between the parties for the purchase of the property showed exclusively, without a tittle of evidence to the contrary, that the bond in suit was to be given for the payment of $650, as a part of the $2725 which was agreed to be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff as a consideration for the whole of the pi’operty, and not for any particular portion of it. From the articles of agreement, it is impossible to apply the money mentioned in the bond, which was given in pursuance of the articles, to one part of the lot or property more than to the other, as any portion of the purchase money thereof. It can only be regarded as part of a gross sum that was to be paid as a consideration for the whole lot, which formed the subject of but one entire contract of purchase. The circumstance of the plaintiff’s afterwards, when the bond was given, making two deeds of conveyance to the defendant, that is, a separate deed for each half of the lot, in which the whole purchase money is apportioned, by allowing in the one deed $1925, as the consideration for the eastern half, and $800 as the consideration for the western half, does not in the least go to show that the bond was given for the one more than the other. It would seem that the plaintiff held the lot by two different titles, that is, one half of it by one title, and the other half by another title, which most probably prompted the making of the two deeds by him for the same to the defendant.' But that had nothing to do with the giving of the bond. The articles of agreement required the bond to be given for the sum mentioned in it, payable likewise as therein stated; and the necessary inference therefore is, that it was given in pursuance and fulfilment of the articles.

In regard to the other exceptions to the charge, there is nothing in them which requires notice, excepting that in which it is assigned for error, that the court charged the jury that the encumbrance or charge, which had been shown to exist on the property purchased, or at least a part of it, was a good defence. It is argued that the court erred in this, because the defendant had taken deeds of conveyance containing a covenant of general warranty, which was sufficient to protect him, if broken, which had not been the case as yet. It is not pretended here that the deféndaní had any actual knowledge of the encumbrance at the time of his agreement for the purchase, or even at the time that he received the deeds from the plaintiff. Indeed, it would seem from the charge of the court that neither of the parties seemed to have a knowledge of the same until some time afterwards. This being the case, it cannot be supposed that any covenant contained in the deeds was taken or inserted specially with a view to protect the defendant against the effect of it. According, then, to the doctrine laid down and settled in the case of Steinhauer v. Witman, (1 Serg, & Rawle 438, 447), and recognised and followed in several cases since, the encumbrance undoubtedly formed a sufficient *395bar in equity to the plaintiff’s recovering the amount or any portion of the bond in suit. The doctrine in Steinhaur v. Witman is that if the consideration money has not been paid, the purchaser, unless it plainly appear that he has agreed to run the risk of the title, may defend himself in an action for the purchase money, by showing that the title was defective, either in whole or in part, whether there was a covenant of general warranty, or of right to convey, or quiet enjoyment, by the vendor, or not, and whether the vendor has executed a deed of conveyance for the premises or not.

Judgment affirmed.