8 Gill 337 | Md. | 1849
delivered the opinion of this court.
That an oral contract for the sale and purchase of the lands, mentioned in the proceedings in this cause, existed prior to the 1st day of June, 1.845, and that it never has been abandoned or rescinded by the concurrence of both parties, we regard as
Assuming, then, that the complainant held all the title which Richard Owings would possess, had he lived till the present day, and continued in the uninterrupted possession and enjoyment of the Guilford Mills and the adjoining lands, has the plaintiff such a title as the defendants are bound to accept under the contract in this case, is (he first question which presents
But the deed from Odie did not transfer the one hundred and twenty-seven acres of land adjoining the Guilford Mills to Richard Owings only, but to Richard Owings and Isaac Paul, as joint tenants in fee; and Paul, by right of survivor-ship, became, at law, the sole owner in fee of the land covered by the deed from Odie, and, at law, so continued, notwithstanding the unregistered contracts which had, from time to time, been entered into between him and Richard Owings. It is apparent, therefore, that James Owings, apart from the title claimed by him from long continued possession and the statute of limitations, has, at law, in the adjoining lands, no title. Under the contract with James Owings, the defendants, upon performance on their part, had a right to demand, and were not bound to accept any thing short of an unincumbered legal estate in fee. If authorities be requisite for such a proposition, they may be found in 2 Sug. Vend., 139, where it is said, “if the contract is general, it amounts to an undertaking for the conveyance of a legal estate; and if the seller have no more than an equitable one, the contract is not binding upon the purchaser at law, nor, as we have seen, in equity, if the seller cannot procure the legal title:” and in the opinion of Chief Justice Marshall, in Garnett,&c., vs. Mason, et al., 1 Call, 368, who says: “Both on principle and authority, I think it very clear, that a specific performance will not be decreed on the application of the vendor, unless his ability to make such
In behalf of the plaintiff it is alleged, that the possession held by him and those under whom he claims, since the contract, in April 1818, between Richard Owings and Isaac Paul, vests in the plaintiff a clear and unquestionable legal title, which the defendants are bound to accept. In 1 Hopkins Ch. R., 436, Seymour vs. De Lancey, et al., on a bill filed for the specific performance of a contract for the sale of land, it was held, that a “title by adverse possession for twenty-five years would be sufficient, if established, to preclude all other questions.” In 2 Sug. Vend., 125, we find it stated, that “in a case where a close called the ‘Oroyle,’ had always been known by that name, and had been possessed by the seller and his ancestors as part of the estate sold, but no mention was made of it in the deeds by name, and all the other lands were particularly described, the court considered the evidence of title to be merely that of long possession, and held that the purchaser was not bound to accept the title.” And the case of Barnwall vs. Harris, 1 Taunt., 430, sustains the principle, that a purchaser is not bound to accept a title, dependent for its establishment on oral testimony, resting in tiie peculiar knowledge of a single witness. Without attempting to recon
The facts upon which the appellant asserts the sufficiency of his legal title, are the following paper, and the evidence of the subscribing witnesses thereto, and the evidence of subsequent continuous possession. The paper is in the following terms:
“ April 20th, 1818.
I this day have agreed to take/ $5,000 for my right and interest for Guilford Mills, which is now bound by a judgment held by Mr. Richard Owings, and under execution for the same, and all the equitable right, title and interest I have in the land adjoining, which shall be clear of dower.
Isaac Paul.”
“ Samuel Brown, Jr., Basil Owings.”
This paper of itself, if capable of perpetual preservation, cannot be regarded, either at law or in equity, as transferring any title to the property mentioned therein to Richard Owings or any body else; it is nothing more than the written declaration of Isaac Paul, that he had on that day agreed to fake for it the sum of money he named. But that Richard Owings, or any other person, was in treaty for its purchase, or had agreed to become its purchaser, is a fact of which the paper, per se, furnishes no evidence. The paper alone, as a contract, has no operation, and its character, as such, is only shewn by the testimony of the two subscribing witnesses, who proved that it was intended as an agreement of sale between Isaac Paul and Richard Owings; and that the $5,000 were to be credited on judgments of Richard Owings against Isaac Paul,
It has been insisted by the defendants, that they cannot be required to receive (he title proffered them by the plaintiff, because there is a suit now pending against him in the court of chancery, (commenced since the bill now before us was filed,) by one Zachariah Poultoti, for the recovery of the property, the subject of controversy in this case, in which he alleged, that on the 9th of May, 1818, he purchased the same of Richard Owings, and gave his eleven promissory notes, each for the sum of $1,000, was immediately put into possession thereof by Richard Owings, who gave a bond of conveyance therefor; and that he continued in the full possession and enjoyment of his purchase until the jrear 1830, when he was wrongfully dispossessed, by a fraudulent combination between (he plaintiff and Richard lglehart, the sheriff of Anne Arundel county, they pretending that there had been a sale of the property to the plaintiff, under one or more writs of fieri facias, upon judgments against Poulton, at the suit of Samuel and James Owings, executors of Richard Owings. The answer of James Owings swore away all the equity of the bill, and the answer is abundantly sustained by the testimony before us. In addition to the exhibition of the sheriff’s deed, the judgments and executions under which the property was sold, the oral testimony most satisfactorily shews, that the property was sold by the sheriff, at a bona fide, public and fair sale, at which Poulton was present, made no objection to it, and soon after, voluntarily, gave full possession to James Owings, which he and Arose claiming under him, have ever since uninterruptedly held. The question thence arises, is the pendency of this suit, under such circumstances, a sufficient ground for the refusal of a court of equity to compel the defendants to execute their contract? Wc do not so regard it. If it were so, it would estab
The purchase made by James Owings of the sheriff of Anne Arundel county, who sold Zachariah Poulton's interest in the Guilford Mills and the adjoining lands, under two writs of fieri facias, issued on judgments obtained against him by the executors of Richard Owings, being the ordy title which the plaintiff professes to possess, or to be able to give to the defendants, we are necessarily led to the inquiry as to the nature and character of that title. The executors having issued executions against Zachariah Poulton, the only power thereby communicated to the sheriff, or which he could exercise under them, in reference to the property in question, was to seize and sell the interest and estate of Poulton therein. What was that interest? An equitable title derived from Richard Owings, under a bond of conveyance, and payment of part of the
But the defendants could not be compelled specifically ter perform the contract on another ground. The contract not having been reduced to writing, and the statute of frauds being relied on in the answer, as a bar to the relief sought by the bill, it was the incumbent duty of the plaintiff, before he could obtain a decree for specific execution, to prove the act of part performance charged in the bill, it being the only means by which the bar of the statute could be evaded. This act of part performance, viz.: the entering by the defendants into possession, under the contract of the premises purchased, the plaintiff having wholly failed to prove, even if his title were free from all exceptions, to a decree for a specific execution, of the contract, he has not shown himself entitled.
The only remaining reason assigned for the reversal of the decree of the chancellor, is, that it did not award to the plaintiff the rent to which, by the proof, he has shown himself to be entitled. In not decreeing such an allowance the chancellor did not err, because the subsidiary contract, which warranted the allowance, was not averred in the bilL It is true, as con
cause remanded
under act of 1832.