94 So. 67 | Ala. | 1922
The nature of this cause was stated on a former appeal.
Here we briefly note also our opinion that the bill shows a case to which the statute of frauds has no application. It is urged that the contract, though in writing, was not to be performed within one year from the making thereof, and was obnoxious to the statute for the reason that it failed to express the consideration moving to the party to be charged; but it is not considered that this objection needs elaborate treatment, for, should it be conceded that the agreement did not sufficiently disclose the fact that complainant Ford was to receive compensation at the stipulated rate for "handling" defendant's property — a conclusion we would be loath to make (Troy Co. v. Logan,
The bill seeks discovery and relief, but its equity depends upon the case it makes for discovery in aid of the relief sought. Objections may be epitomized in the proposition that complainant needs no discovery because his bill shows that he knows everything necessary to the establishment of the judgment he seeks against defendant Erswell. The bill avers, in substance, that complainant's efforts under his retainer have resulted in bringing Erswell and Pizitz into negotiation for the sale and *103
purchase of the respondent's property described in the bill; that a contract of sale has been consummated; and that the parties thereto, Erswell and Pizitz, are engaged in a concerted effort, by withholding the papers from the public records — which Pizitz might safely do, since he is in possession — and otherwise, to keep complainant in ignorance of the fact of the sale, its conditions, and the amount of the agreed purchase money. On the averments of the bill complainant is entitled to commissions on the agreed purchase money. Smith v. Sharpe,
There is a cross-appeal in which complainant assigns for error so much of the decree as sustained the demurrer of Pizitz. The presence of this defendant is somewhat vaguely — as it seems to us — justified in the brief on two grounds: (1) That this defendant, having fraudulently conspired with Erswell to cause a breach of the latter's contract with complainant, is himself answerable for the consequences of the breach; and (2) in the circumstances stated complainant has an equitable lien on any balance of the purchase price of the lots remaining in the hands of Pizitz, and, since it is averred that Erswell is about to leave the country and take up her residence in foreign parts, equity ought to intervene to preserve the rights of complainant.
1. As to the first proposition, we approve the following statement of the rule:
"An action cannot in general be maintained for inducing a third person to break his contract with the plaintiff; the consequence after all being only a broken contract for which the party to the contract may have his remedy by suing upon it." Sleeper v. Baker,
This question is well discussed also in Chambers v. Baldwin,
2. As to the the second main proposition stated above, we are unable to find any element of trust. Certainly no specific fund has been set apart by contract to be held, assigned, or transferred as security for the obligation incurred by the defendant Pizitz, and the same consideration requires the rejection of the notion of an equitable lien; there is no charge created upon any specific thing or fund in possession of Pizitz by means of which the personal obligation of defendant Erswell arising from her contracts with complainant may be enforced in equity, but only a mere general liability enforceable by pecuniary judgment in favor of complainant. Obviously, we may add, though we do not understand that there is any contention as to this, there is no common-law lien, "which is simply a right to retain possession of the chattel until some debt or demand due to the person thus retaining is satisfied; and possession is such an inseparable element that, if it be voluntarily surrendered by the creditor, the lien is at once extinguished." 3 Pom. Eq. Jur. (4th Ed.) §§ 1233, 1234.
We conclude that the decree rendered by the circuit court in equity is in all respects correct.
Affirmed on both appeals.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur. *104