delivered the opinion of the court.
After stating the facts as above reported^ he continued: It is not claimed, as it could not well be, that the writing. executed by plaintiffs on Dec. 8, 1881, invested Kavanaugh with authority to assent, on behalf of the appellees, to the terms contained in the agreement of December 23,1881. Authority to sell the lots for “ $10,000 net ” to the plaintiffs was not authority to impose upon them the burdensome conditions embodied in the last writing. Besides, it is clear from the evidence that Hennessey declined to enter upon' negotiations-for the lots unless Kavanaugh obtained from appellees some *442 ■writing conferring upon him as their agent larger powers than were, given by the writing of December 8,1881. The controlling question, therefore, as the court below properly said,- was whether the 'appellees invested Kavanaugh with authority to make sale of the property upon the terms set forth in the writing of December 23, 1881.
It may be conceded, for the purposes of the present case, that in executing that writing Kavanaugh did not exceed the authority giv¿n him by Wool worth, and that the latter gave Hennessey to understand that he assented to a sale on the terms contained in it' But the.husband.did not own the property, and his assent alone was insufficient to pass the title of .the wife. General Stats. Minn; 1878, c. 69, §§ 2, 4, p. 769. Under any, even the most liberal interpretation of the local statutes relating to the contracts of married, women for thé sale of their real property, the appellant could not have a specific performance of the agreement of December 23, 1881, unless it was satisfactorily shown that .Mrs. Woolworth, in some legal form, authorized its execution by Kavanaugh on her behalf. We are of opinion that a case is not made which would .justify a decree in plaintiff’s favor on the cross-bill. Specific performance is’ not of absolute right. It rests entirely in judicial discretion, exercised, it is true, according to the settled principles of equity, and not arbitrarily or capriciously, yet always with reference to the facts of the particular case.
Willard
v. Tayloe,
The decree of the GircvAt Gowrt is affirmed.
