29 Ala. 420 | Ala. | 1856
Under the pleadings and proof in this case, the complainant was properly denied a rescission of the contract. The vendor, by the terms of his bond for titles, was under no obligation to make title, until the purchase money was paid. The complainant, upon discovering that forty acres of the land purchased by her was public land, entered it before the purchase money was all due, and when but a small portion of it had been paid. She did not notify her vendor, or his agent, although the latter resided in her vicinity, of the defect of title, or call upon either to supply it. The cost and expenses of entering the land did not equal the amount of purchase money then and still due. The vendor had built on the forty-acre tract, before the sale to complainant, a dwelling-house which gave to the entire tract of land its chief value. The complainant has never offered to return the land, or to restore it to the defendant; but evidently seeks to rescind the contract and yet jfctain the forty acres of land, with the improvements, under the title derived from the government. The defendant, through his agent, when the complainant offered to rescind the contract,
The complainant, being in possession of the land, could'not have obtained a credit at law for the amount which it cost to procure the title from the government: and therefore her bill was maintainable for that purpose, and the chancellor properly granted her relief to that extent.
The defendant, by his agent, offered to the complainant alP':' the relief to which she is entitled in this case, and which she has procured. Notwithstanding this offer, she has instituted this suit. The suit was tptally unnecessary, and results, not from the defendant’s refusal to do what the law required him to do, but from the complainant’s refusal to accept at his hands a performance of the duty imposed on him by law. The chancellor therefore did not err in imposing upon her the entire costs of the suit. — Daniell’s Ch. PI. & Pr. 1532.
By consent, the defendant has assigned errors. The court by its decree required the defendant to make a deed to the complainant. This was clearly wrong. The purchase money has not been paid. The credits for the costs and expenses of entering the land will not discharge the debt for the purchase money. The bill does not even offer to pay the purchase money. The defendant’s obligation was, to make title when the purchase money should be paid. The defendant cannot be required to make title, without such payment. The bill is not for adpecific performance, and is not framed with a view to procure title. The decree of the court below must therefore be reversed in this respect.
There was no error in the omission of the chancellor to
A decree must be here rendered, allowing the complainant a credit upon the unpaid purchase money for the sum of oijo hundred and two and 16-100 dollars, the sum reported as due to her on account of the costs and expenses of entering the land ; and this credit must be allowed as of the 19th June, 1855, up to which time the register counted the interest; and the decree of the court below is affirmed on tha^jrect assignment §f errors, and reversed on the cross-assspment, as to so much of it as requires the defendant to make to the complainant a conveyance. The complainant must pay the costs of this appeal.