2 Watts 148 | Pa. | 1834
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an action of ejectment brought in the district court of Lancaster county, by the defendant in error against
For want of a court of chancery in this state, the action of ejectment has been resorted to, and may doubtless be maintained by the vendee against the vendor, to enforce the specific performance of the article of agreement entered into between them, wherever a court of equity would sustain a bill for that purpose. Hawn v. Norris, 4 Binn. 77; Vincent v. Huff, 4 Serg. Rawle 301; Stein v. North, 3 Yeates 324; Griffeth v. Cochrane, 5 Binn. 105. The party, to entitle himself to a conveyance, must do every thing necessary to be done, in order to obtain a decree for a specific performance. Griffeth v. Cochrane, 5 Binn. 105; Marlin v. Willinck, 7 Serg. & Rawle 298. In such cases it has ever been the settled practice of the courts to proceed upon equity principles; Ebert v. Wood; 1 Binn. 217; and to prevent a failure of justice, chancery rules have been adopted. Dornow v. Kelly, 1 Dall. 144; Stansberry v. Marks, 4 Dall. 130; Murray v. Williamson, 3 Binn. 135; Pallond v. Shaffer, 1 Dall. 214; Jordon v. Cooper, 3 Serg. & Rawle 578. But having no court of chancery, this authority can only be exercised through the intervention of a jury. Minsker v. Morrison, 2 Yeates 346. Hence it follows that whatever would be proper for a' chancellor to hear upon investigation of those cases to which chancery rules are applicable, must be equally so for the jury, who are to ascertain the facts and apply the equitable principles under the direction of the court. Peebles v. Reading, 8 Serg. & Rawle 484; Kuhn v. Nixon, 15 Serg. & Rawle 118.
As the errors assigned in this case are either bills of exceptions to the opinion of his honour, the judge below, in rejecting evidence offered to be given to the jury by the plaintiffs in error; or to his opinion on certain points submitted by the parties respectively for his direction to the jury, as to the legal and equitable principles which ought to be applied by them upon their ascertainment of the facts, and in giving their verdict: it may be proper to inquire what are the rules and principles which have governed courts of equity in
It has been argued, in this case, by the counsel for the defendant in error, that it is as much of course in a court of equity to decree a specific performance, as it is to give damages at law; and that wherever the party is entitled to recover damages at law, he is en- [ titled to a specific performance in a court of equity.. For this no > direct authority has been adduced ; and I am not aware of any, unless possibly an inference that such had been the rule before Lord Somers’s time, might be drawn from what Sir Thomas Clarke, master of the rolls, is reported to have said in Dodsley v. Kinnersley, Amb. 406, when speaking of the former method of proceeding in chancery, by a patentee of a literary work to restrain the defendant from republishing it. He says, “ the old practice was like the case of agreements before Lord Somers’s time; the party was sent to law5 and if he recovered any Iking by way of damages, this court entertained the suit.” But even this implies that such was not the practice at that time. The court then, as well as long before and ever since, has certainly acted upon the principle of exercising its discretion in either lending or withholding its aid to enforce agreements, not arbitrarily or capriciously, but as the merits, of each particular case seemed to demand, upon a sound, discreet and temperate consideration of all the circumstances attending it. Goring v. Nash, 3 Atk. 188; Perkins v. Wright, 3 Har. & M’Hen. 326; Simmons v. Hill, 4 Har. & M’Hen. 258; St John v. Benedict, 6 Johns. Ch. Rep. 111; Seymour v. Delancy, Ibid. 222; S. C. 3 Cowen’s Rep. 445, 505; 4 Burr. 2539; 7 Ves. 35; Buckle v. Mitchell, 10 Ves. 111 ; Flint v. Brandon, 8 Ves. 165. And this appears to be in perfect accordance with the principles of natural justice and equity; for to say that because damages are recoverable at law, a court of equity must therefore decree a specific performance, may be to do great injustice and injury to the defendant in a case where a jury, at most, would only give nominal damages against him. See Pope v. Harris, Lofft 791. In cases of inadvertency and surprise, not amounting to fraud, the plaintiff will be left to his remedy at law’. Twinning v. Morrice, 2 Bro. 331; Mortlack v. Buller, 10 Ves. 308. So in a case where a man was entitled to a small estate under his father’s will, given on condition that if he sold it within twenty-five years, half the pur*-, chase money should go to his brother; he agreed in writing to sell it, and afterwards refused to carry it into execution, pretending that be was intoxicated at the time with liquor; upon a bill brought to compel it, Lord Hardwicke said that without the other circumstance, the hardship alone of losing half the purchase money, if- carried into execution, was sufficient to determine the discretion of the court not to interfere, but leave them to law. Fain v. Brown, cited in Hylton v. Biscoe, 2 Ves. 307. Hence it appears that a court of equity will refuse to decree a specific performance in cases where the agreement may be perfectly good and binding upon both parties, and the
In the case of Campbell v. Spencer, 2 Binn. 129, it was held by this court, that the plaintiff, in an action of ejectment brought by the vendee against the vendor of lands, stands in the situation of a person applying to a court of equity for a decree to compel a specific performance of the contract. And the court in that case sustained the verdict of the jury in favour of the defendant, upon the very ground of the circumstances being such as to induce a suspicion that the defendant, under the influence of drinking bitters, while making this
Chancery having unquestionable jurisdiction of fraud, will, where-ever -a contract is shown to have been obtained by means of it, or to be tainted by it, still go further, and as against the party guilty of of the fraud, will not only refuse to decree a specific performance of the contract, but at the instance of the innocent party will set it aside altogether. And although fraud assumes such a variety of forms that it may be next to impossible to reduce it to any regular classification, yet it must be acknowledged that the effort made to-
From the view which has been presented of the authorities, show-' ing the principles and reasons upon which courts of equity have refused to interpose their aid in decreeing specific performance of contracts, it is obvious that the circumstances from which they may be inferred are as multifarious as the transactions of human life, and that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to lay down any fixed rule by which to test the admissibility or inadmissibility of them in evidence. This would seem to depend upon their tendency to establish whatever has been deemed proper for the consideration of a court of equity in deciding whether- it will decree a specific performance of the contract or not. Lee, C. J., in the case of Jansen v. Chesterfield, 2 Ves. 151, observes, “it is difficult to form any general rule that can meet every case of this kind that may happen, but they must ifi general be governed by the circumstances in each case.”
And as regards the rule of evidence adopted by chancery in such cases, Lord Hardwicke, in Lewellen v. Mackworth, 2 Atk. 40, has laid it down, that “ there is no rule of evidence to be laid down in that court but a reasonable one; such as the nature of the thing that is to be proved will admit of.”
Now as to the evidence offered by the plaintiffs in error in this case, and rejected by the court below, it appears to me' that there was nothing in its nature which ought to have prevented its being received, because it was not only such evidence as the facts and cir
It is sufficient to say, that all the matters contained in the first, second, third, fourth, sixth, ninth and fourteenth bills of exception, and rejected by the court, ought to have been received in evidence, inasmuch as they all went to show the intemperate course of life and habits which John Henderson had led and fallen into—the effect of liquor upon him when taken in certain quantities, in destroying his senses and depriving him of his reason, down even to a few hours before tbe time of making the contract. That by these means he had been wasting his estate ; impairing his mind as well as his capacity for managing it and transacting his business;. creating wants for money that were pressing upon him to a degree perhaps' that he might think intolerable. All these things, as it appears to me, were proper to be submitted to the jury along with the other circumstances, that they might consider and determine whether, under the impaired and disordered state of his mind and of his affairs, he had not been induced or impelled to enter into a very improvident contract; and whether it was not such, if carried into specific execution, as would greatly deteriorate the value of the residue of the farm. . /
As to the matter contained in the seventh bill of exception, it was only asking a more full explanation from the witness of a thing which the plaintiff below had drawn from him by his cross-examination, to which he had not been examined at all in chief. This the plaintiffs in error had 0. right to claim upon common principles of justice, if it were a matter from which the defendant in error supposed he could derive any advantage before the jury; and, that his counsel thought he could, is shown to demonstration, by their requiring the court, in the fourth point which they submitted, to charge the jury that the purchase of the farm by Thomas G-. Henderson of John Henderson, was high evidence of an admission by the former that the latter was competent to make a contract at that time.
The deed' of conveyance from John Henderson to Thomas G. Henderson, which is the subject of the eleventh bill of exception, was clearly evidence to show the nature of the right or title under which Thomas G. Henderson, one of the plaintiffs in error claimed to hold the land in dispute. Whether it would have been sufficient, for that purpose, was a question which remained to be decided by tfie jury upon a full hearing of all the other evidence, under a proper direction from the court, as to the legal and equitable principles involved in the case.
The evidence offered in the twelfth bill of exception, which is the only remaining one to be noticed, was admissible to show that the witness had expressed upon a former occasion a sentiment seemingly less favourable to the competency of John Henderson to manage his business, than what he had then testified to. And if he had expressed himself as the question offered to be put to him by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error seemed to indicate, it was perfectly right to have an explanation of it, as it might affect his credit.
I come now to notice the exceptions taken to the answers of the judge, on the points submitted to him, both by the plaintiff and the defendants below. And it seems to me, that in answering the three first points of the plaintiff below, he lost sight of the distinction which has been shown to exist, and to have been recognized in courts of equity, between what is necessary to-be shown in order to avoid a contract, and what may be sufficient ground for refusing to decree a specific performance of it. We have seen, that notwithstanding it may be good and valid, and such as the party at law may be entitled to recover damages on for a breach of it, yet a court of equity has refused to decree a specific performance of it: as where the party from the pressure of his wants, or in a thoughtless moment, was induced to sell an estate which he held under a will that compelled him, if he sold it within twenty-five years, to pay one half of the price to his brother, although the price for which he agreed to sell was fully
The judge has also committed the same error in answering the
The answers of the judge to some other of the points submitted by the defendants below, have been complained of as erroneous ; but it is sufficient to say, that this does not appear with sufficient clearness and distinctness to be the case. Many of these points have a reference only to detached parts of the evidence and circumstances of the case, and the judge is required therefrom to charge the jury in their favour upon the whole case. Now this often is not dealing fairly with the court, and most generally is unnecessarily perplexing; and what is still worse, when done by counsel, it may be doing injustice to their clients, though not designedly; because it may be that the court cannot, on a partial view, or with a reference to some of the circumstances only of the case, charge the jury in favour of their clients, when under a full view, and with a reference to all the circumstances of it, it would be right to do so. Multiplying points to the court, and trying to split hairs, as is too often the case, seldom or never sheds light upon the cause, but most generally perplexes and bewilders the jury, and occasionally the court too ; and as I doubt much whether such a course be calculated to raise the character of the profession, I think gentlemen of the bar need not be very emulative to excel in it.
Judgment reversed, and a venire facias de novo awarded.