8 Paige Ch. 473 | New York Court of Chancery | 1840
It is a general rule, that a specific performance of an agreement may be decreed if the complainant is in a situation to perform on his part, and make a good title, when the cause comes before a court for a decree. But even if this case comes within that rule, so that the court would compel the defendant to take the Illinois lands if the complainant is able to make a perfect title at the time he asks for a decree, (which is certainly a matter of great doubt upon the facts disclosed in the defendant’s answer,) I think the vice chancellor erred in applying that rule to a motion to dissolve the injunction. Where a party applies for an injunction, or a ne exeat, or for a receiver to dispossess the defendant of the possession or control of his property, it is not sufficient for the complainant to show that he may hereafter be in a situation to ask for a specific performance of the contract; but he must show a present right.
In the case referred to by Mr. Dickens, in a note, (2 Dicken’s, Rep. 497,) Lord Thurlow is said to have denied an application for a ne exeat, against a purchaser, Who Was going abroad, because it did not appear by the bill that the complainant was then in a situation to make a good title to the lands purchased by the defendant. And in the subsequent case of Morris v. McNeil, (2 Russ. Rep. 604,) Lord Eldon discharged a ne exeat upon that ground alone. He there says, "unless the court can make it out to be quite clear that there must be a specific performance, it cannot grant the writ.” That principle is equally applicable to this case; where the complainant asks for an injunction to restrain the defendant from receiving the rents and profits of his own property, when he is not himself in a sitúa
If the allegation of the defendant in his answer is true, however, that the complainant voluntarily abandoned the agreement, when he found that he could not complete it on his part, it is doubtful, at least, whether any court of equity will allow him to set it up again ; for the purpose of claiming a specific performance thereof after the whole object of the defendant in entering into the original agreement has been defeated.
The order appealed from must be reversed, with costs, and the injunction must be dissolved.