19 N.Y.S. 934 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The principal question which arises in this case is whether the defendant should be required to perform the contract referred to in the complaint, as far as he is able, with an allowance to the plaintiffs out of the purchase money for the value of the inchoate right of dower belonging to the defendant’s wife. It is an elementary rule of law that courts of equity will not specifically enforce any contract unless it be complete and certain. It has been held, but not in this state, that where the wife did not sign the land contract with her husband and she refused to join in the deed, that the purchaser might obtain a decree for partial performance with an abatement from the purchase price of the wife’s inchoate dower interest, which might be arrived at by directing a portion of the price to be retained by the vendee secured by mortgage, and to be paid on the death of the wife, or the extinguishment of