1 F. Cas. 1091 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia | 1830
after stating the substance of the bill, answer, and evidence, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: In bar of the plaintiff’s claim, under the assignment of Mr. Langley, the defendant pleads the statute of frauds, and the statute of enrolment of conveyances. Sales at auction are considered out of the statute of frauds, because it has been decided that the auctioneer, or his clerk, is th.e agent of the purchaser, and authorized by him to sign his name in the sales-book which contains the terms of sale; and that his entry in the book is a memorandum in writing, of the agreement, signed by a person thereunto lawfully authorized by the person to be charged therewith agreeably to the 4th section of the statute of 29 Car. H. c. 3. Mr. Langley, therefore, on the 12th of July, 1826, had a valid interest in the property, which he could, in equity, assign. His assignment to Mr. Arden was by a written agreement, signed by both of them, and therefore not within the statute of frauds.
The statute of enrolment of conveyance, 1766, c. 14, relates to estates at law only, not to the transfer of equitable interests. Th.e words are, “No estate of inheritance, or freehold, or any declaration or limitation of use, or any estate for above seven years, shall pass or take effect, except the deed or conveyance by which the same be intended to pass or take effect, shall be acknowledged,” &c., and enrolled, &c. Tt is believed that it has never been decided, that a contract to sell land, or an equitable interest in land, is void for want of acknowledgment and enrolment. Neither the statute of frauds nor the statute of enrolment is a bar to plaintiff’s claim, under the assignment of Mr. Langley. On the 13th of July, 1826, th.e plaintiff had as good a right to complete the sale, by a compliance with its terms, as Mr. Langley had. The time for complying with the terms of sale was not limited by the advertisement, nor by any verbal notice at the time of sale. The terms advertised, were: “One fourth of the purchase-money in six months, the remainder in equal instalments of one, two, three, four, and five years; the interest to be paid annually upon the whole amount; the several payments to be secured in such manner as the commissioners may hereafter determine and fix upon.” A reasonable time, therefore, must have been allowed for the purchasers to obtain and tender to the commissioners the security for the payment of the purchase-money.
The plaintiff, in his bill, has averred that he repeatedly offered to comply with the terms of sale, for the moiety of Langley’s interest; but he does not say when he made the offer, nor that it was made before the commissioners had returned Mr. Brown, as the purchaser. Nor does it appear by any averment or evidence in this cause, that the commissioners had any notice of the plaintiff’s claim, as assignee of Langley, until after they bad made their report to the court. The defendant, indeed, does not deny that the offer was made,- but he avers, that if any agreement was made, by which the plaintiff acquired any interest in the purchase, he never complied with the terms