10 Md. 412 | Md. | 1857
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of this court.
The bill in this case was filed by the intestate of the appellant, to restrain proceedings at law by the appellee, to recover the amount of a note or single bill of Daniel Bussard, payable on the first day of October 1816. The facts of the case, as made by the bill and answer, may be thus stated: On the 16th day of June 1816, the appellee, Hobbs, agreed to sell to Bussard, for the sum of $1150, a house and lot of ground situate in Montgomery county, Bussard agreeing to pay therefor, the sum of $1150 on the first day of October thereafter, and Hobbs agreeing, by a written agreement under his hand and seal, to make to him “a good and lawful deed and title,” and to put him in possession on the same day. Neither at the
In regard to such a case as this, it appears to us there ought to be no doubt on the mind of any one, as to what should be the decision on obvious principles of equity and common sense. It presents simply this question: — Whether a person may sell a thing to which lie has no title, and recover the purchase money without transferring the title to the thing sold? It would seem that, the bare slating of the question is to resolve it in the negative. Without pedantically and uselessly wandering through the whole history of jurisprudence, we confine ourselves to the adjudications of our own State, wherein will be found a complete and full disposition of the case. The contract is an unexecuted one. In speaking of such an one, the court, in Buchanan, et al., vs. Lorman, et al., 3 Gill, 77, hold the following language which is conclusive of this case, “A vendee of an estate, in an unexecuted contract, is entitled to have that for which he contracts, before he can be compelled to part with the consideration he agreed to pay. The ability of the vendor to convey should exist, when his duty, by the contract, arises to convey, or at the time of a decree for a conveyance, where time is not of the essence of the contract. And we conceive it to be equally clear, that a vendee is not
Almost any number of cases, both from the English and American authorities, might be adduced in support of the doctrine which we-have taken from 3 Gill. We omit any notice of them, because the case to which we refer, is so apposite and conclusive as to dispense with any necessity for further citations. The two cases are identical in their leading and controlling facts and principles. We think the circuit court erred in not continuing the injunction to the whole claim, and shall accordingly reverse its decrée, and pass one, continuing the injunction. /
Decree reversed and injunction continued.
Concurrence Opinion
delivered a separate concurring opinion.
The great lapse of time since the granting of this' injunction, without a motion, on the part of the appellee, to dissolve , it, until very recently, has much influence with me in coming to the conclusion, that the decision below should be reversed, and the injunction continued.