72 N.J. Eq. 218 | New York Court of Chancery | 1906
It is sought to support the bill filed in this cause under an “Act to compel the determination of claims to real estate in certain causes and to quiet the title to the same” (3 Gen. Stat. p. 3486), and the effort is challenged by a demurrer. The stating part of the bill of complaint is not confined to those matters required in a bill of this character; on the contrary, it recites an agreement between the parties for the sale and purchase of real estate, and charges that the defendant has neglected to comply with his written agreement in that behalf, beyond the payment of $2,500, made by him when the contract was executed, on account of the purchase price, which was $20,000. The gravamen of the complainant is that the defendant McGregor, by recording the agreement in the register’s office in the county wherein the lands are situate, has cast a cloud over complainant’s title, to dispel which this bill was filed.
Numerous reasons were specified by the -demurrant, but we are met at the threshold with the question whether the subject-matter of this bill of complaint falls within the class of cases for which the statute intended to provide a remedy.
The encumbrance or cloud upon this title, set out in the bill of complaint, was one created in part by the act of the complainant, and manifestly the issue to be tried is whether the defendant has so conducted himself as to deprive him of the right to have his contract with the complainant specifically performed, or the consequent loss by forfeiture of the large payment made by him on account of the purchase price, if such relief were denied him. If the complainant does not desire specific performance, but rather a rescission of his contract, he has a right to come into this court, and, upon presenting an equitable case, ask to have the contract rescinded and given up to be canceled of record, in the same manner as if the encumbrance was a mortgage without consideration, or fraudulently obtained, and registered in the proper office. An ample equi
In the case now under consideration- the complainant may proceed to enforce the specific performance of his contract, or he may return the money he has received, and ask that the contract be rescinded and given up to he canceled.
Under the view which I entertain, and have here expressed, this demurrer should be sustained, and a consideration and determination of the other causes of demurrer will serve no useful purpose.
The case of Austen H. McGregor v. Hilman O. Carriere et al., in which the same question arose and which was argued by counsel at the same time, is controlled by the determination of this cause, and the demurrer in that case will also be sustained, with costs in each case.