Court Opinion

ID: 6249369
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 21:09:51.549652+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:22.895755
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Mr. Justice Brown,
There was sufficient shown by the appellants to take appellee’s sale of her farm out of the statute of frauds. Wishing to sell it, she sent for Charles F. Yandegrift, :a real estate agent, and asked him to expose it to public sale on March 19, 1906. Iiedid so on that day, after reading the conditions.of sale signed by himself as her agent. She was present at the sale, and, after a conference with Yandegrift, authorized him to sell the property to McCormick, one of the appellants, at his bid of $10.00 per acre, subject to an annuity charge-. The property w7as thereupon knocked down to him and he signed the agreement to purchase it in the presence of the appellee. On the same day he paid her agent $120 — ten per cent of. the purchase money — in accordance with the conditions of sale, and the agent procured from her and handed over to him the title papers to the property. • Shortly before April 1, 1906, when possession of the farm was to be given to the purchaser, the appellee vacated it and McCormick- took possession. He paid the annuity of $100 due- April 1, 1906, -as well as that due the following year. On April 2,1906, he tendered the balance of the purchase money and demanded his deed, which the appellee refused to give him. Subsequently'he paid fire insurance tax on the barn and contents and: expended $4Q0 in improving the farm. This ejectment w7as .brought on August.28, 1906, and a verdict directed -for the -plaintiff, on- the ground that her contract for the sale of-her- farm was void because she was a married woman u7hen she signed it and her husband had *126not joined in it. The case was tried upon that theory alone, and it is the only one advanced on this appeal- in asking that the judgment on the verdict be sustained.- The effect of sustaining it would be to drive the appellants from the farm and restore it to the appellee without repayment by her to McCormick of the percentage of the purchase money which he paid her agent, or reimbursement for what has been paid for annuity dues, fire insurance tax and improvements.
There was a time when there would have been no relief for McCormick as the vendee of the appellee from what he has shown to be her unconscionable conduct, for, until recent years, a married woman, under her plea of coverture, could retake land from her vendee in possession of it without refunding a dollar of the purchase money, though all of it had been paid to her, and without reimbursement for any improvements made, if the land had not been sold or conveyed in the precise mode pointed out by the statute. But this was when her incapacity to contract at all in relation to her real or personal estate was the rule and her capacity the rare exception. Now her capacity to contract in all respects as if she were unmarried is the rule, and her incapacity the exception. As to her real estate the words of the Act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 344, are: “ a married woman shall have the same right and power as an unmarried person to acquire, own, possess, control, use, lease, sell or otherwise dispose of any property of any kind, real, personal or mixed, and either in possession or expectancy, and may exercise the said right and power in the same manner and to the same extent as an unmarried person, but she may not mortgage or convey her real property, unless her husband join in such mortgage or conveyance.” A married woman may, therefore, no longer repudiate her contract for the sale of her real estate, in which her husband has not joined, on the ground that it is void, and keep what has been paid to her on account of it or expended by her vendee in pursuance of it. Glidden v. Strupler, 52 Pa. 400; Grim’s Appeal, 105 Pa. 375, and other cases cited by counsel for appellee, are not now authority for permitting a married woman to profit by her moral dishonesty, except when she undertakes to do what the act of 1893 says she still may not do. For the consequences of not doing that which she undertakes to do by virtue of the *127powers conferred upon her by that act she is as answerable for damages as if unmarried.
Under the act of 1893 a married woman may “sell” her real estate and make any contract “ necessary, appropriate, convenient or advantageous ” to the exercise of her right to sell; but she may not perform her contract to sell without the joinder of her husband in the conveyance. She, therefore, knows when she enters into a contract to sell that she takes the chances, as well as her vendee, that her husband may not join in the deed, and that neither can compel specific performance if he refuses to join. But she knows that her contract or agreement to sell is a valid one, even if neither she nor her vendee may be able to have it specifically enforced, and, therefore, whatever the vendee may pay on it, or expend in pursuance of it, must be returned to him by her, when she finds that she cannot specifically perform. The words of the act would be meaningless if any other effect should be given to them. The appellee contracted to sell under the power conferred upon her by the statute to make the contract, but if not able to perform it, she must place her vendee in the same position he was in before he contracted with her. This is the rule as to all persons sui juris, and married women, who now are of this class in the acquisition, ownership, possession, control, use, lease and sale of their real estate, except when they actually convey, are subject to it. “The act of 1893 gives a married woman the same power that a feme sole has to sell her real estate, except that she may not make a valid conveyance unless her husband joins in the deed : ” Jenkins v. Railroad Co., 210 Pa. 134. Our Brother Stewart, when on the common pleas, properly said of the act of 1893, in Reed’s Estate, 3 Pa. Dist. Rep. 503: “ The act makes a clear distinction between the executory contract of sale and the actual conveyance of the wife’s land, so far as regards the manner of their execution. It gives her the right to contract for its sale in the same manner, and to the same extent, as an unmarried person; but when she comes to convey, she may do so only by her husband joining in the deed. If her right to contract for its sale be qualified, in like manner with her right to convey, she is no better off with respect to her real estate than she was under the act of 1848. It is this right to contract, and her *128personal liability in connection therewith, that marks the advance made. The refusal of the husband to join in the, wife’s deed cannot operate to relieve her from liability under her contract, any more than her refusal to join in the husband’s would relieve him from liability under his. Can there be any doubt that'the damages in both cases would be measured by the same standard.? The only possible difference between the two as to result is, that the husband could be required- to perform specifically, so far as his own estate in the land is concerned, while performance could not-be decreed against the .wife on her contract since her individual deed would be ineffectual for any purposes. This difference emphasizes the distinction found in the act. The wife’s contract, Unlike that of -the husband, conveys no interest in the land, legal or equitable, but creates a'personal liability only.”
• The appellee is entitled to regain possession of-her land only after paying McCormick what a jury may find is due him for the purchase money, the annuity and the fire insurance tax paid -by him, and for whatever expenditures he made for-improvements before he was notified that the contract would not be specifically performed because the husband-of the appellee would not join in the deed. • This equitable result would have been reached- by a conditional verdict which the jury ought.to have been directed to render, if they believed the facts testified to by -the appellants and their witnesses. ■ -
" As to the. first assignment of error, which complains of the court's permission to the appellee to reopen her case after she had closed,- and there was an intimation that a- nonsuit would be directed, nothing more need be said than that it was not an improper exercise of judicial discretion.
'The first, second and third assignments of'error are. overruled. The fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth are sustained, and the judgment is reversed with a venire facias-de novo. ■ 1 ;;