55 N.Y. 7 | NY | 1873
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *9
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *10
When Thomson executed the mortgage which was foreclosed, he was married. The mortgage was not given for the purchase-money, nor did his wife join in executing it. Hence it did not affect her inchoate right of dower in the premises. Though she was made a party to the action of foreclosure, she was not barred of that right by the judgment therein. There is no allegation in the complaint that the mortgage was prior, or superior or hostile, to her right or interest. There is the general clause in the judgment that the defendants be foreclosed of all right in the premises. But her inchoate right of dower was not in issue, and there could be no valid adjudication adverse to it. Moreover, a foreclosure action is not the proper mode to litigate rights claimed in priority or hostility to the mortgage. A judgment passing upon them is erroneous. A person claiming dower by title paramount to the mortgage, cannot be brought into court in such a suit to contest the validity of her dower. (Lewis v. Smith,
The title made by the referee's sale in the action was subject then to this inchoate right of dower. And that was the sole objection to the title, made by the purchaser. It is ordinarily a good objection. Where there is an outstanding inchoate right of dower in the premises, unknown to the purchaser at the time of the sale, the court will not compel him to take a deed and complete his purchase. (Fitts v. Hoitt,
Then, the only ground upon which the purchaser now stands, in declining to complete his contract, is that so much time has elapsed since the sale, that he may not be compelled to take the premises, although the title be free from objection. Doubtless the later tendency of courts of equitable jurisdiction is to hold that time is material, and is in many cases of the essence of the contract. Inexcusable laches and delay will debar a party from the relief which, they being absent, he might have by a judgment for specific performance. This question has been much considered of late in this court. (Delavan v. Duncan,
It is stated in the text-books and in the cases, that if by reason of delay arising from an imperfection of title, the circumstances of the transaction and of the parties have materially changed, so that equal justice may not be done to both by adjudging specific performance, judgment therefor will not be given. (See Taylor v. Longworth, per STORY, J., 14 Peters, 172.) And it is intimated in one of the points of the appellant that, by reason of the defect of title, he has been unable to secure a loan upon the premises with *15 which to pay the purchase-money; that the property has greatly depreciated in value; that at the time of the sale he could have resold without loss, and that now the property is unsalable. There are no facts presented in this case which sustain the intimations of the appellant's point, and afford a basis upon which he may rest the application of this rule in his behalf. Nor is any authority cited that, without such facts shown, there will be a presumption that the circumstances have materially changed in the time elapsed, so that it will be of evil to the defendant to now hold him to his contract. It is said by BRONSON, J., inJackson v. Edwards (22 Wend., 498-510), to the effect that it needs not proof of a change of circumstances, to show that delay in perfecting the title must be injurious to the purchaser, but that the bare fact of delay, inasmuch as that it of necessity prevents a purchaser from dealing with the property as his own, excuses him from accepting the title when at last it is perfected. It is to be observed, however, that there was in that case proof put in, of a serious change in the circumstances subsequent to the sale. The remark of the learned judge wasobiter. Senator VERPLANCK, the only other member of the court who delivered an opinion, concurred in the result arrived at by BRONSON, J., as to the effect in that case of the material change of circumstances which had taken place. But he puts his conclusion upon the facts as shown by the proofs, and holds that from these, the court below was warranted in concluding that the delay had injuriously affected the purchasers. I am unable to find that the dictum of BRONSON, J., has ever been cited with approval; though in McKay v. Carrington (1 McLean, 50-60) it is said that it may be presumed that the embarrassment of the title, and the failure to obtain possession of the land for a number of years, essentially injured the interests of the purchaser by preventing a sale by him. If the dictum inJackson v. Edwards is to be adopted as a rule, it will be applicable to every case, where there has been any lapse of time occasioned by a remediable defect of title, and the purchaser resists *16 performance. And this would be to set aside a current of authority, that where the vendor comes in a reasonable time to enforce the contract, prepared to obviate the objections made to his title, he shall have relief. (1 Story Eq. Juris., § 777.)
It is well recognized as one of the grounds on which a court of equity adjudges a specific performance, that by lapse of time it has become impossible to strictly perform the contract, and so the party has lost his remedy at law. But if the very lapse which gives occasion for the court to interfere, may be used to prevent its action, without any proof that the lapse has been of detriment, this ground of interference is effectually done away with. Time, though not ordinarily of the essence of the contract, may become so if, by its effluxion, a change of value, or other material change of circumstances, has been produced. Certainly it should be made to appear that such effect has, in fact, followed. If the court, without facts shown, might speculate as to the effect of delay upon the interests of parties, it is quite as reasonable, at many periods of our history, to surmise that in the lapse of time circumstances have changed to the benefit of the purchaser, as otherwise. Some of the cases above cited (from 49 N.Y.) show this. The true rule must be that, if the delay of itself is unreasonable and unexcused, it is enough to relieve the unwilling party from the contract; and that delay, though not in itself unreasonable, if it has made way for an intermediate and material change of circumstances, detrimental to the interests of defendant if obliged to perform, will have the same effect; but that in the latter case it must so appear to the court from the facts shown in the case.
These views would lead to a simple affirmance of the order of the General Term, but for another consideration. The order of the Special Term directed that the purchaser pay his bid, with interest from the day of the sale. It gave no direction as to rents and profits, in the meantime, of the lands sold. It does not appear, either, who had, in the meantime, the possession of the lands, though it may be *17
inferred that the purchaser had not. The order of the General Term affirmed that of the Special Term, on condition that the plaintiff should, within thirty days thereafter, deliver to the purchaser the sheriff's deed of the premises, and a release by the wife of the mortgagor of her inchoate right of dower. We have assumed that this deed and this release have been ready for the purchaser, and would have been delivered to him within the specified time, had he been ready to receive them and pay the purchase-money. But it is not according to the rules governing such cases to compel the purchaser, who is out of possession, and is not under an especial contract, so stringent in its terms as of itself to lead to that result, to pay interest on the purchase-money, when the vendor has not been ready to make a good title. In such case, the purchaser is bound to pay interest, and to take the rents and profits of the lands in lieu thereof, only from the time when a good title is first shown. (Forteblow v.Shirley, cited in Binks v. Ld. Rokeby, 2 Swanst., 222;Paton v. Rogers, 6 Madd., 256; Jones v. Mudd, 4 Russ., 118.) Indeed, it is at the option of the purchaser whether to take the rents and profits and pay interest, or to relinquish the rents and profits and to be exempt from the payment of interest. (Diar v. Glover, 1 Hoffm., 71; and see Worrall v. Munn,
The order of the Special Term and that of the General Term are erroneous, then, so far as they direct the payment of interest by the purchaser from the date of the sale up to the time of the readiness to deliver the deed and release, provided for by the order of the General Term. And though the order of the General Term should be affirmed in its general scope, it should be modified in this particular to agree with the facts. As the exact state of the facts does not yet appear, the terms of the judgment of this court will have to be settled on the presentation of them by the parties.
Neither party should have costs against the other in this court.
All concur. Ordered accordingly. *18