22 Conn. 608 | Conn. | 1852
Where the specific execution of a contract is sought to be enforced, the plaintiff must show; that the relief asked for, is strictly equitable, in reference to the parties, and the subject matter of the contract, or the court will not interfere. This principle is so obviously just as to need no authority to support it. A different rule would, to a great extent, destroy the equitable character of the court, and, not unfrequently, convert it into an instrument for the enforcement of unconscientious contracts, rather than a tribunal where such contracts may be set aside. Upon this principle, the court refuses to compel the execution of contracts, founded upon fraud, imposition, or mistake; and, where such execution will operate as a surprise upon the party
Upon these plain and obvious principles, without going at all into the examination of cases, on this subject, we are satisfied, that this bill must be dismissed. It is true, that the written memorandum of the contract sought to be enforced, in a rather enlarged sense of the words used in it, might entitle the plaintiffs to the right of maintaining their fountain, at the place where it was first located. The writing states, that the plaintiffs proposed to buy of the defendant, the privilege of digging a fountain upon his land, at a suitable place north-west from Judge Judson’s house, in the village of Canterbury : and to dig trenches and lay pipes, and conduct the water therefrom, to said village. The expression, his land, is, no doubt, broad enough to include any land of his, north-west of the village ; and, as he owned, in his own right, an undivided portion of the land where the plaintiffs erected their works, and also had a life estate in the other portion, which belonged to his wife, it might properly enough all be said to be his land; and, had this been the only land of his, which would answer the description, the conclusion must have been, that it was this land which was intended.
But, the report of the committee, as we understand it, shows, that it was not the expectation of either party, that the fountain should be established on the land which he only owned, in the qualified sense alluded to. It appears, in the first place, that he. had a large quantity of other land, adjoining this, (which belonged to him and his wife,) which was owned by him alone, and which, therefore, answers the description in the writing, perfectly. Now, when we consider,
In this opinion, the other judges concurred.
Bill to be dismissed.