45 N.Y.S. 394 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The action is for the specific performance of a contract between the parties of date June 5, .1896, whereby the plaintiff agreed to sell and convey to the defendant, by full covenant warranty deed, certain premises in the city of Yonkers for the sum of $5,900, payable $100 on the execution of the contract, which was paid, $1,000 by the execution and .delivery to the plaintiff of a deed of'..certain described premises, $4,000 by a purchase-money' mortgage, and the balance, $800, on the execution and delivery of the deed,- to be done on the 1st day of July,. 1896.
The plaintiff alleges readiness and an offer to perform on his part and the refusal of the defendant to perform the contract. The conclu-' sion was warranted from the evidence that the plaintiff was ready and offered to deliver the deed, and that the defendant declined to accept it and pay as he had undertaken by the contract. There was no question
The evidence, as a whole, was not such as to fairly require the conclusion of the court that any fraud was practiced upon the defendant, that the consideration which the defendant undertook to pay wras in excess of the value of the property, that the contract was in any sense unconscionable, or that to require its performance . would be unjust or inequitable.
The contention that the parties had consented to treat the contract as ended and the defendant as relieved from its performance is not consistent with what took place subsequent to the time when it is claimed such an understanding was had. It is unnecessary to refer in detail to the evidence before the trial court on the subject. There is no occasion to disagree in the conclusion there reached in those respects.
It appeared upon the trial that the city of Yonkers had a lien upon the premises for an assessment of $300 for the removal of
The defendant could not-be required to take the title with an uncertain result of a litigation to follow" relating to the lien upon the premises. (Moore v. Williams, 115 N. Y. 586.)
There was no provision in the judgment for the discharge of the lien, nor any arrangement made by the parties to that effect, nor does there seem to have been any request at the trial for any determination in that respect. The defendant, relying upon his exception to the conclusion of the court, insists that the existence of the lien constitutes a defense. Although it was not available to defeat the action he was entitled to' some protecting provision in the judgment against it.
■The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the final award - of costs, unless the plaintiff stipulates to so modify the judgment as to have it provide for the discharge of such lien with the purchase money to be paid by. the defendant or otherwise, so as to relieve the premises from it at the time of the performance directed ; and in the event of such stipulation the judgment should be modified accordingly, and, as modified, affirmed, without costs of this appeal to either party.
All concurred.