The bill of complaint herein alleges in substance that in 1894, the complainant went into possession of and put improvements upon lands under a contract of lease for a period of seventy-one years for a stated quarterly rental in advance and the payment by the lessee of all taxes on the lands, “subject to eviction, and to abrogation of this agreement at will of lessor after thirty days default of either rent or taxes.” The lessor covenanted that “upon the faithful performance of the above
The positive refusal by the defendants to perform the agreement to convey was made in May, 1904, the complainant was put out of possession, perhaps illegally, in January, 1906, or soon thereafter, and this suit was not begun till November 26, 1909, after two transfers of the property had been made in 1908 and in 1909, with notice of the complainant’s equities.
If there is no adequate remedy at law and a contract to convey land is valid, definite, complete and capable of being mutually enforced with practical and just results, and the complainant is not in laches and is not estopped by judgment or by matters in pais, and there is no countervailing equity, the contract may be specifically enforced according to its valid purpose upon such equitable terms as the facts will warrant.
The specific performance of a contract for the sale of land is not a matter of right, but rests in the sound reasonable discretion of a court of equity. Chabot v. Winter Park Co., 34 Fla., 258, 15 South. Rep., 756, 43 Am. St. Rep., 192. Where a party is not reasonably diligent in asserting his claim for specific performance of a contract for the sale of lands, the delay may render it inequitable to enforce his- claim, though it is otherwise meritorious. See Hathcock v. Societe Anonyme La Floridienne, 54 Fla., 631, 45 South. Rep., 481, and cases cited.
This case is unlike that of Nobles v. L’Engle, 58 Fla., 480, 51 South. Rep., 405, where the delay in bringing the suit was about two and a half years and there had been no transfers of the property. Here the complainant was notified in May, 1904, when he tendered the purchase price, that a conveyance of the land as agreed would not be made. It does not appear that the complainant made any effort to have his contract enforced while he was in possession of the lands after the defendant refused to comply with his contract to convey. He was evicted about January, 1906, and did not bring this suit till November 26, 1909, after two transfers of the property with notice of complainant’s equities had been made. Apparently the complainant had equities for specific performance, but his laches in bringing suit renders it inequitable to give that relief now. See Knox v. Spratt, 23 Fla., 64,
The decree is affirmed.