105 N.Y.S. 838 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
This action was brought for the specific performance of a pur.chase of a piece of real property. The answer of defendant denied all the allegations of the complaint and set forth that the alleged contract of sale was void under the Statute of'Frauds. The court found that the defendant was the owner of a certain piece of land in the city of New York which included the land described in the' complaint; that the defendant engaged one George W. Bard as its auctioneer to -sell this property, and said property was offered for sale at public auction by said auctioneer; that the said auctioneer duly struck down and sold .to the plaintiff in this actión the land described in the complaint for the sum of $5,880, which said sum was the bid made and offered by the plaintiff and accepted as the final bid for said lands by the auctioneerthat the plaintiff after the said lands were knocked down to him subscribed in duplicate a memorandum of his' purchase and delivered one of these memoranda to the auctioneer and paid to the auctioneer on account of the purchase price the sum of $588, and received from the auctioneer' a memorandum acknowledging payment by the plaintiff of the said sum on account of the purchase price of the land as
The terms of sale which were subscribed by the defendant pro- - vided that the premises described would be sold under the direction of the George W. Bard Real Estate Company, George W. Bard, auctioneer, under the conditions that ten per cent of the. amount bid was to be paid to the auctioneer at the time arid place of sale for which a receipt would be given and twenty per cent of the. purchase money might be paid in cash on' the delivery of the deed on the 19th day of January, 1906, at the office of the George W. Bard Real Estate-.Company; that seventy per cent of the purchase money might be provided for to be paid by the purchaser assuming the mortgage now .on the property and executing to the vendor a bond and mortgage to cover the difference existing between the thirty per cent before mentioned and the amount of mortgage now on the premises to be assumed by the purchaser; that the bidding would be kept open after the property was struck ddwn, and in case any purchaser should fail to comply with the above conditions of the sale the premises would be put up for sale under the direction of. the auctioneer under the same terms of sale and the purchaser held liable for any deficiency. The memorandum of purchase executed by the plaintiff was as follows:
“ I, C. E. Byrne * * * have this day of December 19,1905, purchased the premises shown by the numbers, diagram O, 31E, 31F, 31G, 31H, on auctioneer’s map or diagram, or as read at the beginning of sale, by description in terms of sale, for the sum of $1,470 each, and I hereby promise and agree to comply with the terms and conditions of the above mentioned sale as- read at the beginning of said sale. (Signed) CORNELIUS E. BYRNE.
“ December 19, 1905.”
. There was delivered to the plaintiff an instrument dated the same day which recited that there was received from “ O. E. Byrne
I have serious doubts whether these memoranda, taken together, were a sufficient compliance with the statute; but assuming that they were and that, if the authority of the auctioneer to complete the transaction had been unrevoked at the time the sale was’ actually made and the transaction completed -by the payment of the ten per cent and the signing of the receipt by the auctioneer and the entry of the sale to the plaintiff in the auctioneer’s book, a ■ valid contract was evidenced by the writing, it ■ seems to me clear .that the authority of the auctioneer to proceed.f urther with the sale was revoked by the. president of. the defendant in the presence of thé plaintiff. Immediately tipon the auctioneer’s announcing that '.lie had'accepted plaintiff’s bid the president of the defendant publicly and in the presence of the plaintiff objected to the bid' being received by the auctioneer.as such bid was not, the hid of the plaintiff. The president of the- defendant and the plaintiff were at the -time' the only bidders' for the property.. When the auctioneer ■ announced that he had accepted plaintiff’s bid the president of the defendant at once ¡untested against, awarding the property to the plaintiff claiming that it was his bid that.had been made at the price named .and insisting that the-property shoiild be again exposed for sale. At this time no memorandum -of any kind had been made. The only authority that the' auctioneer' had to make a sale of the property or to sign a'memorandum of sale which would bind-the defendant was-the authority conferred upon him by'the defendant under the terms of the sale. It cannot be disputed but that -at any . time prior to the completion of a valid sale, evidenced by some memorandum in writing, the defendant could, revoke the authority of the auctioneer to . sell the property. When 'the auctioneer refused to comply with the' request of the president of the defendant and insisted that he had knocked the property down to the
.The general rule under which a court of equity acts in determining whether or not the specific performance of a contract should be enforced is well settled. Judge Martin in Stokes v. Stokes (155 N. Y. 581, 590) says: “ Specific performance will never be decreed where it would be inequitable. It is immaterial whether the fact that it is inequitable arises from-the provisions of the contract, or.from external facts or circumstances which affect the situation and relations of the parties, for in either case it may constitute a sufficient ground for a court óf equity to withhold this peculiar relief and to leave the parties to-their legal remedy.” In Heller v. Cohen (154 N. Y. 299) it is said" that “ the right of specific perforriiance by a. decree of a court of equity rests in judicial discretion-, and may be granted or withheld upon a consideration of all the circumstances and in the exercise-of such discretion.” And in Gotthelf v. Stranahan (138 N. Y. 345) it was said: “ But even if the contract by its’true interpretation imposes upon the defendant the legal obligation to pay the assessment, this is not decisive of the right of the plaintiff to relief by way of specific performance. This equitable remedy cannot be claimed as a matter of right. It is discretionary with the court 'to grant or withhold it in furtherance of justice or to prevent injustice. Where by reason of circumstances attending the making of the contract, such as fraud, accident, mistake, or where unconscionable advantage has been taken, or where by reason of circumstances which have intervened between the making of the contract and the bringing of the action, the enforcement of the equitable remedy would be inequitable and produce results not within the intent or understanding- of the parties when the bargain was made,-and. there- has been no inexcusable laches or inattention by the party resisting performance in not foreseeing and providing for contingencies which have subsequently arisen, the court may and .will refuse to specifically enforce the contract and will leave- the party to his legal remedy. The'cases are very numerous under this head, and no hard and .fast rule can be formulated by which it can be readily determined how the discretion of the court in a given case should be exercised.” (See, also, Willard v. Tayloe, 8 Wall. 564.)
For the reasons stated I think the judgment-appealed from should be.reversed and a new trial ordered, with-costs to the appellant to abide the event. -
Patterson, P.- J., and Clarke, J., concurred; .Houghton and . Lambert, JJ., dissented.
Judgment reversed, new trial" ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.