209 Mass. 147 | Mass. | 1911
This is a bill in equity by the trustees in bankruptcy of the J. G. Small Company, a Massachusetts corpora
Before 1909 the defendant Small was carrying on business on the premises in question under the name of J. G. Small and Company, and had a written lease which expired on December 81,1908. In January, 1909, he procured from the owners a new lease for five years from January 1, 1909. In April, 1909, the business carried on by the defendant Small was incorporated by him under the name of the J. G. Small Company, with a capital of $50,000, and all of the assets of the business except the lease were conveyed by him to the corporation. The corporation occupied the premises as tenant at will under the defendant Small and the business was carried on as it had been before the corporation was formed.
In December, 1909, the defendants Brewer and Macauley and the defendant Small, and one Levett who had a nominal interest, entered into a written agreement whereby it was agreed that Small should transfer to Brewer and Macauley each one hundred and fifty shares of the capital stock of the corporation and that Brewer and Macauley should each thereupon pay into the treasury of the corporation $15,000 in cash. It was also agreed that Small should pay in $5,000 in cash which he did. Nothing was said in the written agreement about an assignment of the lease, and the master finds that the defendant Small had been requested by Brewer and Macauley to assign the lease and had refused before the written agreement was entered into. Shortly after the execution of the agreement Brewer and Macauley told the defendant Small that they would not carry out their contract
We assume in favor of the plaintiffs, but without so deciding, that there was sufficient consideration for Small’s promise to assign the lease, and that there has been such part performance as to take the ease out of the statute of frauds. But we think that the covenant not to assign except with the written consent of the lessor, which is wanting, constitutes an insuperable objec
An assignment by the defendant Small would be a violation of the covenant and would give the lessor an immediate right of re-entry. There is nothing to show that the lessor has waived his right of re-entry. It would be futile, therefore, to compel the defendant to assign the lease. Under such circumstances equity will not enforce specific performance. Gannett v. Albree, 103 Mass. 372. Squire v. Learned, 196 Mass. 134, 136. Thompson v. Guyon, 5 Sim. 65. Gregory v. Wilson, 9 Hare, 683. Lewis v. Bond, 18 Beav. 85. Hurlbut v. Kantzler, 112 Ill. 482.
Moreover the lease provides that if the lessee becomes bankrupt or insolvent, or if an assignment of his property is made for the benefit of his creditors, the lessor may re-enter. It would violate the spirit and intent of these conditions to compel an assignment to the trustees in bankruptcy of a bankrupt corporation. The assignment when made would be an assignment by the lessee though made by order of court, and would be subject to the conditions of the lease. See Shee v. Hale, 13 Ves. 404. It would stand on a different footing from an assignment by operation of law, as to which see Bemis v. Wilder, 100 Mass. 416. The case is entirely different from a case where by reason of some infirmity in the title a party is unable to convey all that he has contracted to convey, but the other party to the contract is willing to accept partial performance with a proportionate reduction in the consideration. Park v. Johnson, 4 Allen, 259. In such a case the contract is enforced between the parties to it and there is no element of forfeiture involved. More analogous are the cases in which the holder of a liquor license has been required to transfer it to an assignee or purchaser subject to the possibility that the commissioners may issue a license to him. In re Fisher, 98 Fed. Rep. 89. Fisher v. Cushman, 103 Fed. Rep. 860. In re McArdle, 126 Fed. Rep. 442. But the conditions on which such licenses are issued are not at all like those contained in the lease in this case. If they were, we may fairly assume that the court would not have felt that it could compel a transfer. As it was, there being no conditions such as exist in the lease in the case at bar, and a practice having grown up on the part of
What cannot be done directly by enforcing specific performance cannot be done, we think, indirectly by means of a decree requiring the defendant Small to hold as trustees for the plaintiffs’ benefit. From the nature of the case the court, for reasons already stated, cannot treat that as done which should have been done. A decree that the defendant Small should hold the lease in trust for the plaintiffs would be in substance and effect a decree that in equity and good conscience the plaintiffs were entitled to a transfer notwithstanding the conditions of the lease were such that a transfer could not be made and would be plainly inconsistent with the denial of specific performance. The same reasons which prevent a decree for specific performance operate against a decree requiring the defendant Small to hold the lease in trust for the plaintiffs or for the corporation.
In view of the conclusion to which we have come on this branch of the case it is unnecessary to consider the effect of Macauley’s failure to pay the balance of $10,000.
Bill dismissed.
The case was reserved by Richardson, J., for determination by this court.