14 Tex. 331 | Tex. | 1855
This is a suit for specific performance. The petition alleges that the plaintiff, Abednego Boze, about five years since, being comfortably settled on his homestead and farm in the State of Alabama, was solicited by Henry Davis (the husband of Frances, who was a daughter of the plaintiff) to remove with his family to Texas, the said Davis offering as an inducement to said removal, to give petitioner a tract of land in fee, upon which he might settle with his family ; that Davis afterwards and often repeated said solicitation and offer, and the petitioner, though old and infirm, induced by the same, did submit to all the hardships and sacrifices of making such removal, and made the same in expectation of receiving from Davis the tract of land so offered by him; that on the arrival of the petitioner, with his family, in January, 1851, the said Davis promptly recognized his obligation to give the said land
The cause has been brought up by appeal, and the only question is whether there was error in sustaining the exception to the petition.
The plaintiff, by brief, furnishes an ingenious argument to sustain the proposition, and to illustrate the principles on which it is based, that under proper circumstances, a parol contract for the sale of land will be enforced, and he refers especially to the case of Dugan v. Colville, (6 Tex. R. 126,) for an enumeration of the circumstances which would raise such an equity in the vendee, as to require a specific performance of the parol contract, on the part of the vendor. This doctrine is admitted by the defendants, as one that is well established, but they deny that it has any application to this case. They insist that there is a well recognized distinction between pur
The defendants refer to numerous authorities in support of their position. These have been examined with some attention, and it is believed that no case can be found, in which any such voluntary promise or contract as that set forth in the petition has been enforced, or, in which Courts have consummated for a donee, a title which has been left imperfect by the parties themselves.
These doctrines are stated very clearly and fully by Judge Story in his Treatise on Equity. After stating that in his discussion respecting bills for specific performance, it has been constantly supposed that the contract was founded on a valuable consideration, he says, in effect, that in respect to voluntary contracts, Courts of Equity do not interfere to enforce them, either against the party himself or as against other volunteers claiming under him. Thus, for example, if a party should enter into a voluntary agreement to transfer stock to another, or to give him a sum of money, or to convey to him certain real estate, Courts of Equity would not assist in enforcing the agreement, or against Ms personal representatives; for the party contracted with is a mere volunteer. (Story, Eq. Sec. 433, 787, 793, 973, 987; 1 Fonbl. Eq. B. 1, Ch. 5, Sec. 2, n. h 3; Ellison v. Ellison, 6 Ves. 662; 18 Ves. 149; 1 Johns. Chan. 336, 337; 1 Craig & Phillips, 138, 141; 1 Mylne & Craig, 226, 237; 8 B. Monroe, 566; 8 Ala. R. 131; 2 Bouvier’s Law Dic. p. 636.)
How far Courts of Equity would interfere to support or enforce the rights of volunteers, seems at one time to have been unsettled, but in the case of Ellison v. Ellison, (6 Ves. 622,) the distinction was taken between perfect and imperfect gifts,
This distinction has been constantly maintained, and imperfect gifts, not completed by the parties, have not been consummated by the Courts. There may be cases of great hardship under this rule, and if the facts stated in the petition be true— and as such the demurrer admits them—the case of the plaintiff is one to which, if possible, the Courts should extend relief. He was induced by the promises of the deceased, to abandon Ms home, remove to a distant country, and expend Ms toil and labor for years on this tract of land, with the assurance that title would be extended to Mm, and that it would be a secure asylum to him in his old age, with its attendant infirmities. To deprive him of this land now, and of the fruits of his toil, and expenditure, is a hardship which appeals strongly to the sympathies of the heart, but to which the law, at least in the state of the pleadings in this case, does not extend any relief.
Much might also be said in favor of the policy of the law as it now exists. It is only in strong cases (where there has been part performance) that the Courts will enforce parol contracts for land, even where a valuable consideration has been paid, and it would probably open a wide door for fraud, if voluntary promises or contracts between friends, made perhaps loosely, and probably with great injustice to other friends, or to relatives equally meritorious, could be enforced.
But be the policy of the law what "it may, there is no doubt of the principle, which forbids the Courts from interfering to enforce such imperfect, voluntary claims, as that of the plaintiff.
Had the plaintiff prayed for compensation for his improvements, provided specific performance was refused, there is no doubt that in Equity he would have been entitled to a decree for such compensation. Although neither Davis nor his representatives can be enforced to consummate the title to this land, yet they cannot enrich themselves at the expense of the plain
Judgment affirmed.