delivered the opinion of the Court.
After the chancellor decreed that a plaintiff was entitled to specific performance of an option to purchase real estate, the defendant appealed.
Two questions are presented: (1) Was the option contract fair and reasonable, in the sense that these terms are used in the law relating to specific performance, so as to justify the relief granted?; and (2) Did the availability of the right of eminent domain oust the jurisdiction of the equity court to grant specific performance?
In 1958, the defendant below, Mrs. Manning, acquired a
I
It will be unnecessary to state in great detail the law relating to specific performance. In
Brooks v. Towson Realty, Inc.,
Appellant attempts to bring her situation within the above stated principles by claiming: that the purchase price was in
The chancellor found the agreement was executed by Mrs. Manning without fraud, misrepresentation or other improper conduct on the part of the appellee or its agents, but that sometime after its execution, she came to the conclusion that she should have received more money, which was the real nub of her complaint. We agree.
The only testimony concerning the value of the property was the price paid for it by the appellant in 1958 (about $520 per acre); the statement of appellee’s negotiator, who was an appraiser of considerable experience, that in his opinion the price named in the option (about $900 per acre) was the fair market price of the property in 1960; and the testimony of a Mr. Benson, a real estate broker produced by the appellant, that he thought it was worth $2,500 per acre (presumably in 1962). The chancellor indicated that Mrs. Manning, possibly, had let her property go for something less than she could have obtained from the appellee had she demanded more. But he made no finding of an inadequacy of the price actually received by her, which is a far cry from an affirmative finding of an extreme or unconscionable inadequacy, necessary to refuse specific performance on the ground, of inadequacy alone. Clearly, the above evidence did not require a finding of such a pronounced and inordinate inadequacy as to shock the
Here, too, her evidence is lacking in many aspects; and the arguments advanced by her are not, in all instances, sound. Referring to the small landlocked parcel of ground title to which will remain in her, a plat showing the property to be conveyed and that to be retained was exhibited to, and signed by, the appellant at the time she signed the option. Of course, she had a right to deal with her property as she saw fit. In addition, the agreement permitted her to use, for agricultural purposes, the land conveyed to the appellee, which means that the little parcel will not, in fact, be landlocked. If it be necessary to answer the claim that appellee’s negotiator had no qualifications to determine the value of real estate, it may be simply done by merely stating that the evidence discloses that Mr. Hoffman had been employed by the appellee, for four years, in its Real Estate Department, and his duties there included the procuring of options on real estate needed by the appellee for the operation of its business. Also, he had had experience with previous employers “in that same general line,” and had “done appraisals for various individuals, attorneys, etc. * * *." The claim that appellant could not cope with appellee’s agent is answered by a simple reading of appellant’s testimony concerning the execution of the option. She makes no claim of mistake, misrepresentation, oppression, sharp practice or overreaching. Her entire testimony consumes but three pages in the record extract. In response to a question as to whether she remembered what Mr. Hoffman, appellee’s agent, told her when she signed the option, she replied: “Well, I don’t remember exactly what he told me, he asked me to sign it, and I said, well I guess I might as well, if I don’t then what? He said, well they could condemn it and take you to Court [which was an accurate statement], so I thought it was the right thing to do and I signed it.” She further stated that she knew the purchase price was named in the option. And we find nothing unusual in the provisions permitting the right of ingress and egress “using as far as practical existing roads,” and the trimming and removal of
II
This contention is a rather unusual one. If appellant’s version thereof is to be sustained, it requires a holding to the effect that the doors of courts of equity are closed to any contract-purchaser of real property, which has the power of eminent domain, and such contract-purchaser must resort to a condemnation proceeding to acquire title to the real estate involved. Such a ruling would defeat one of the fundamental and original reasons for equitable relief, especially that of specific performance, as we shall point out shortly.
Appellant’s theory is that the equity court lacked jurisdiction to grant specific performance, because the plaintiff had “another complete and adequate remedy at law, to-wit, the right of eminent domain.” Of course, as a general rule, equity does not grant relief where there is a complete and adequate remedy at law; hence, it may not be inappropriate to discuss, briefly, the origin of the principle, the reasons for its existence, and how, if at all, it applies in the case at bar.
The authorities seem in accord that equitable jurisdiction, as distinguished from jurisdiction at law, is based mainly upon an application of the maxim “Equity suffers no wrong to be without a remedy.”
1
At a very early date, a procedure was established in the common-law courts of England, whereby a small number of “forms of actions” were furnished as the exclusive means of seeking redress in those courts. Frequently, where a litigant was justly entitled to relief, the facts of his case failed to fall within one of these “forms of action,” and the case was consequently dismissed. The English common-
The maxim “Equity will not suffer a wrong to be without a remedy,” when considered literally, is very broad and general in scope and nature. However, as it is employed to define and regulate equitable jurisdiction as distinguished from jurisdiction at law, it has certain well-defined and important limitations as pointed out by Mr. Pomeroy in the second volume of his Equity Jurisprudence, in §§ 423, 424. He summarizes what is said in the two sections as follows:
“In order that the principle may apply, one of three facts must exist, viz., either. 1. The right itselfmust be one not recognized as existing by the law; or 2. The right existing at the law, the remedy must be one which the law cannot or does not administer at all; or 3. The right existing at the law, and the remedy being one which the law gives, the remedy as administered by the law must be inadequate, incomplete, or uncertain. Of these three alternatives, the first and second denote the exclusive jurisdiction of equity; the third, the concurrent jurisdiction.”
And he points out further that the principle does not apply where a party has destroyed, lost or waived his right to an equitable remedy by his own actions, or lack of action.
It will be seen from what has been said above that it was the underlying and fundamental purpose of equitable jurisdiction to grant relief when, and only when, the law courts could not, or would not, render a complete and adequate remedy for the wrong done.
This brings us to a consideration of the relief granted in this case by the court below, namely, specific performance. It has been said that bills to specifically enforce contracts for the sale of land are among the earliest recorded in the Court of Chancery in England.
3
And Lord Chancellor Hardwicke, in the famous case of
Penn v. Lord Baltimore,
1 Ves. Sr. 444, where Lord Baltimore lost an important and valuable tract of land included within the original boundaries of Maryland, declared that specific performance was the most useful of the various equitable remedies. But so much for the historical aspects of the remedy. Chief Judge Brune, in
Pollin v. Perkins,
Decree affirmed, with costs.
Notes
. Story, Equity Jurisprudence (14th Ed.) § 94; 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (5th Ed.) §§ 423, 424; Hanley v. Stulman,
. This is a “bob-tailed” outline of the origin and development of equitable jurisdiction. For a comprehensive treatise upon the subject, see Spence, Equitable Jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery. See also, Story, Equity Jurisprudence (14th Ed.) Ch. II; 3 Black. Comm. §§ 46 et seq.; 1 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (5th Ed.) §§ 1-42a.
. 1 Spence, op. cit., § 645.
