This was originally an action at law, brought by the plaintiff on a certain promissory note which the defendants gave her toward the purchase price of a parcel of land in Florida. The suit was returnable to the Caledonia *Page 279
county court, and on motion of the defendants it was amended into chancery and transferred to the docket of that court. After this transfer, the defendants did not file a formal complaint in equity with a prayer for specific performance as good practice would require, but they set up in their motion the facts relied upon to entitle them to that equitable relief. The plaintiff demurred to the motion on the ground that the contract relied upon by the defendants was available to them in defense to the action at law; that such contract lacked mutuality; and that the defendants were guilty of laches. This demurrer was included in an answer, and, being brought on for hearing, was sustained; the "equitable bill" was dismissed, and the case was ordered re-amended into an action at law. The defendants appealed. We treat the case as though the pleadings were in proper form, as did the court below. The plaintiff now says that the attempted appeal is fatally defective in that it only covers "the decree in sustaining the demurrer," which is not a final decree. But we think the appeal, though inaccurate, is well enough. Chancery cases are not appealable piecemeal. This appeal is from the decree, which is an entirety, and brings up the whole case. SeeEssex Storage Elec. Co., Inc. v. Victory Lumber Co.,
Can the defendants avail themselves of the contract set forth as a defense in the action at law?
These facts amount to this: The defendants, on January 8, 1926, bought of the plaintiff a lot of land in Florida, paying therefore $5,000 in cash and giving two promissory notes for $5,000 each. The land was conveyed to the defendants, and they mortgaged it back to the plaintiff to secure the two notes. On December 4, 1926, which was before either note fell due, the defendant E.M. Crane, by and with the authority of defendant Alice B. Crane, his wife, made a written offer to the plaintiff to the effect that the defendants would convey the land back to her if she would surrender the notes and cancel the mortgage. On January 10, 1927, by her letter of that date, the plaintiff accepted this proposition. Thereupon a deed of the land was executed and tendered to the plaintiff, who refused to accept it or to carry out the aforesaid arrangement. It is quite apparent that the allegations show an unexecuted accord only. It *Page 280
was not the new promise, but its performance, that was to satisfy the original contract and wipe out the rights of the plaintiff thereunder. Such an accord is not a defense to an action on the original contract, as is abundantly shown by our cases. Manley v.Vt. Mutual Fire Ins. Co.,
It is said that an application of this kind is addressed to the discretion of the court of chancery. And so it is. But this discretion is a judicial discretion, to be exercised in conformity with established principles and rules, and is therefore *Page 281
subject to review. Gove v. Gove's Admr.,
So far as the claim of laches is concerned, we need only say that this defense cannot be raised by demurrer. Collins v. Barre,
The contract as pleaded is one that a court of equity can and should enforce by its decree. In equity, one who agrees to receive certain property in satisfaction of his debt will be held to the performance of his agreement. Very v. Levy, 13 How. 345, 14 L. ed. 173, 179. That was a case where a creditor agreed to take his pay in certain goods handled by the debtor. He afterwards attempted to foreclose a mortgage securing his debt. The court referred to the fact that at law a mere accord is no defense, but held that in equity the creditor would be held to his agreement. It was therein said that to bring a case within the principle governing such cases, three things are necessary: An agreement not inequitable in its terms; a valuable consideration for such agreement; readiness to perform and absence of laches on the part of the debtor. So far as necessary to be shown by the allegations, all these elements are here present. To the same effect is Cook v. Richardson,
Decree reversed, order vacated, and cause remanded. *Page 282