7 Blackf. 227 | Ind. | 1844
— This was a bill in equity for the specific performance of a contract for the sale of land, and to enforce a vendor’s lien. The material facts of the case as they appear by the pleadings, exhibits, and depositions, are the following:
The Circuit Court decreed, that Brumfield and Smith should pay to Palmer the amount due on the note, within thirty days from the date of the decree, upon which payment the deed was to have been delivered to Smith. And it was further decreed, that if Brumfield and Smith failed to pay the money within the time limited, the sheriff of Marion county should be a commissioner to sell the lot, &c. Costs decreed against all the defendants.
The first question presented in this cause is, whether the right of the vendor, or of his assignee of the note for a part of the purchase-money who stands in his place, to a specific performance of the contract, has heen lost by a failure to tender a deed at the proper time. The legal effect of the contract under consideration was, at law, according to the repeated decisions of this Court, that the payment of the note for 400 dollars, the last instalment of the purchase-money, and the delivery of the deed of conveyance, were to be simultaneous acts. The day for their performance was the 25th of December, 1840; and neither party could secure a recourse against-the other for non-compliance, unless he had himself evinced a readiness to comply. As neither party took any steps on that day towards the performance of the contract, the remedy of both at law was forfeited; and either might have viewed the contract as rescinded. But Courts of equity do not generally view time as being of the essence of a contract, unless it appear from its terms, or by the conduct of the parties, that the design of the contractors was to render it essential. 2 Story’s Eq. 85. — 1 Sugd. on Vend. 426. There is nothing in the nature of this contract which shows that the parties considered the particular day, on which the deed was to have been made, as material; and neither .of them has treated the contract as if he so viewed it. Neither of them evinced a readiness, at the stipulated time, to perform on his part. On the contrary, Smith was absent at that time, and for several months afterwards, and did not, so far ás we are informed, leave any agent to act in his stead. Besides, he retained possession of the purchased premises, and
As the contract is not rescinded, the complainant must have a remedy to enforce the payment of the note assigned to him; and as he cannot sustain a suit at law against the maker, Brumfield, as has been shown, his only remedy is in equity by enforcing a specific performance of the contract of sale, of which the note forms a part. His remedy, in this shape, against Brumfield is quite clear. And it is equally clear that Perry, the vendor, held an equitable lien for the unpaid portion of the purchase-money on the property sold, as against Brumfield; and there can be no doubt that the lien of Perry, had he not assigned the note, would have followed the property in the hands of Smith, as he was a purchaser with notice. But the question still remains, did the assignment of the note by Perry to the complainant carry with it the vendor’s lien? We think it did. This principle was settled in the case of Lagow et al. v. Badollet et al., 1 Blackf. 416; and it is sustained by the decisions of the Courts of Kentucky. Johnston v. Gwathmey, 4 Litt. 317.—Edwards v. Bohannon, 2 Dana, 98.
The fact disclosed by the evidence, that Perry had not completed his title at the time stipulated for the mutual performance of this contract, and his consequent inability then to convey, (had these matters been embraced by the pleadings,) could not have affected the right of the complainant to bring this bill. As the contract was not rescinded, it was sufficient that the vendor’s title was perfected before the final hearing of the cause. Hoggart v. Scott, 1 Russ. & Mylne, 293.
The Circuit Court was correct in sustaining the bill. But
The Court reversed the decree, and rendered a decree, conformably to the above opinion, for the complainant.