69 S.E. 760 | N.C. | 1910
This action was brought to recover the sum of $6,000, alleged to be due by the defendant under a contract with the plaintiff to purchase from him a tract of land in Rowan County. Plaintiff alleged that he entered into written contract with the defendant where by he agreed to sell and convey to him his farm in the said county for $6,000; that he tendered a deed for the land and demanded the payment of the purchase price.
The defendant objected to an exception in the deed of certain timber on the land, where upon the plaintiff tendered, with the deed, a collateral agreement which he alleged had the effect of removing the objection raised by the defendant; but he again refused to pay the money and accept the deed, even with the agreement, for the stated reason that he had made, or was about to make, other investments and would not be able to pay for the land.
The plaintiff further alleges his readiness and ability to perform his part of the contract, and renews his tender of the deed and the agreement to the defendant, although he is not bound, as he is advised, to tender the agreement, as the objection of the defendant to the deed is not a valid one, and the plaintiff's tender of the deed is sufficient compliance by him with the terms of the terms of the agreement.
In a second cause of action the plaintiff seeks to recover damages which he has suffered by reason of a breach of the contract by the defendant.
Before the time for answering had expired, and before any answer was actually filed, the defendant requested the court, in writing, to remove *43 the case from the county of Catawba, where the plaintiff resides, to the county of Rowan, where the land is situated and the defendant resides. The court refused to change the place of trial. The defendant excepted and appealed.
In this answer, the defendant denied all of the material allegations of the complaint and specially averred that the Salisbury Realty and Insurance Company, alleged in the complaint to have made the contract of purchase on his behalf, was not his agent and had no authority to make any such contract for him, and further, that neither the defendant nor any one in his behalf with authority to do so has ever made or signed any contract or any note or memorandum thereof in (56) writing for the purchase of the said land.
We need not consider the question, which was much debated before us, whether an action for the specific performance of a contract to convey land is in form or effect one for the recovery of land, or any estate or interest therein, or for the determination of such right or interest within the meaning of those words as used in Revisal, sec. 419, which requires actions of that character to be tried in the county wherein "the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated," subject to the right of removal in cases mentioned in the statute. Even if a suit for specific performance be considered as strictly one in personam — and this question we do not decide — there is another clause of the statute which applies to this case and localizes the action. It is provided in the same section that an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage must be tried in the county where the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated. In Fraley v. March,
In Knight v. Houghtalling,
In this case the plaintiff, it is true, asks for a judgment for the purchase money, but he adds a general prayer "for such other and further relief as he may be entitled to" — that is, not only for a money judgment, but that he may also have full relief according to the facts he has alleged, and within the scope of the case made by his complaint, the allegations of the complaint being sufficient in form and substance to fully warrant a judgment for a specific performance of the contract in every respect, and at least for the declaration of the vendor's lien upon the land and a direction for a sale thereof to satisfy the debt. Even under the former system, when the two jurisdictions of equity and law were kept separate and distinct, it was settled by actual adjudication and the highest authority that "a prayer for general relief covers and includes a prayer for specific performance," or any particular relief permitted under a general prayer, where the statement in the body of the bill was sufficient to authorize the granting of such specific relief. Tayloe v.Ins. Co., 9 How. (50 U.S.), 390. "We do not pause to consider the scope of the relief which it might be possible to accord on such a bill. Doubtless, the specific prayers of this bill are in many respects open to objection, but there is a prayer for general relief, and, under that, (58) such appropriate decree as the facts might be found to justify could be entered, if consistent with the case made by the bill, and not inconsistent with the specific prayers in whole or in part, if that were also essential." Kansas v. Colorado,
In was held in Jones v. Van Doren, 130 U.S. at p. 692, that when specific relief is demanded a court of equity will decree such relief as the facts stated in the bill will justify and which is essential to render the specific relief which is sought by the bill complete and effective, if there be a prayer for general relief. English v. Foxall, 2 Peters, 595; *45 Texas v. Hardenburg (sometimes cited as Texas v. White,) 10 Wall., 68;Stevens v. Gladding, 17 How. (58 U.S.), at p. 455; R. R. v. Trust Co., 79 Fed., at p. 187.
If the plaintiff makes out his case, as stated in the complaint, at the final hearing, he will be entitled, upon the present frame of his pleading and prayer for relief, not only to a judgment for the recovery of the purchase money, but also to a declaration of his lien upon the land as a security for the debt, and, besides, to an order for the sale of the land and the application of the proceeds of sale to the payment of the debt; and if they are not sufficient for that purpose, then to judgment for the excess. R. R. v. Trust Co., supra.
Returning to the original proposition, if it be true, that an action of this kind is in substance, though perhaps not in form, one for the foreclosure of a mortgage, or, more properly speaking, a lien in the nature of a mortgage (McKay v. Gilliam,
This Court has recently held in Bridgers v. Ormond,
In Barnes v. Strong,
Our present procedure is more liberal, if anything than was that of the former court of chancery, for now we have held that no general or even specific prayer is necessary, as a proper prayer is implied. Knight v.Houghtalling, supra, Relief is granted upon the case presented by the pleadings and afterwards established by proof.
Can it be said that plaintiff will not be entitled to have the land sold to pay the judgment as the complaint now stands? The authorities we have cited, and many others, answer this question in the affirmative, and this being so, the case falls directly within the rule stated in Fraley v.March, supra, and Connor v. Dillard, supra. It should, therefore, have been removed.
Reversed.
Cited: Baber v. Hanie,
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