18 N.Y.S. 638 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The action was for the specific performance of a contract to convey land, which was signed, on the part of the vendors, by the defendant Augusta B. Gould, for herself, and also in the names of the other two defendants, Augustus C. Bowen and Jennie M. Bowen, as their attorney in fact. The land was owned by Mrs. Gould and Augustus 0. Bowen, who were brother and sister, in undivided shares. Jennie M. Bowen was the wife of Augustus G., and had no interest in the land except her inchoate right of dower. The complaint was dismissed as to her on findings that Mrs. Gould had no authority to sign the contract for her, and that she had never ratified the act. The land consisted of a tract of nearly 50 acres in the city of Rochester, and the price agreed to be paid was the sum of $50,000. Mrs. Gould lived in Rochester, where the contract was signed, while her brother had for many years lived in California, and was there at the time of the negotiation and the signing of the contract. The learned court, at special term, decreed the specific performance of the contract as against him on findings both of authority in his sister, at the time, to sign for him, and of subsequent ratification of her act by him. We have found ourselves unable to reach the conclusion that either of these findings is fully sustained by the evidence. There is evidence of declarations of Mrs. Gould, made at different times, mostly previous to any negotiations for the sale to the plaintiff, to the effect that she had received authority by letter from her brother to sell his interest in the property with her own; but all this evidence, being objected to, was received only as against Mrs. Gould, and was, of course, inadmissible as against her brother. The finding of authority existing at the date of the contract, February 25, 1890, must rest upon expressions said to have been contained in a letter from Mr. Bowen to his sister written in October, 1889, and a letter inclosed therein addressed to one Beach, a real-estate agent, who it appears had written to Bowen in regard to a proposed purchase of the land. The letter to Mrs. Gould is not in evidence, and was not produced on notice to the defendants, Mrs. Gould testifying that she had not preserved it; but Beach testifies that she read it to him while he looked over her shoulder, and he undertakes to quote a passage from it, as follows: “You shall go on and negotiate the sale of the property, with a sufficient security, bonus paid down, and, when this is done under contract, 1 will come on east and join you in a conveyance. I think ypu ought to get $1,000 an acre, but you have my idea and instruction as to what to do. As you are on the ground, you know best, and do the best you can.” Beach testified that he was thereupon employed by Mrs. Gould to effect a sale of the land; that he did find a purchaser; and that he then had an action pending against Mrs. Gould for his commissions as her agent in the transaction. The letter to Beach is in evi
The objection by the plaintiff that there is no allegation nor finding of a revocation of the authority once given by Bowen to Mrs. Gould is not well taken. Issue was joined by the defendant Bowen, on the question of authority, by his denial that at the time of the execution of the contract Mrs. Gould had authority to sign it for him. That denial was supported by the uncontradicted evidence furnished by the letter of January 17, 1890, and the defendant excepted both to an affirmative finding of the existence of such authority at the time of the execution of the contract and to the refusal of the court to find that it did not then exist. The conclusion of law of the court at special term, to the effect that the defendant Bowen had ratified the act of Mrs. Gould in signing the contract in his name, is founded upon a finding of fact “that on February 26,1890, the defendant Gould sent to the defendant Augustus C. Bowen, at California, a copy of said contract, with full information concerning her execution of the same in his name as his agent; and on the 6th day of March, 1890, the defendant Bowen received the said communication from the defendant Gould, and then had full knowledge of the contents of the said contract, and of its execution by the defendant Gould, in his name, as his agent; and that with such knowledge said defendant took no steps to notify plaintiff of his dissent from the action of the defendant Gould in his behalf-, within a reasonable time thereafter.” A very searching examination of the
But, even if it were to be found upon this evidence that the copy of the-contract furnished by the attorney to Mrs. Gould, to keep, as lie testifies, was inclosed by her with the power of attorney to Mr. Bowen, and was received by him, it was a copy which bore the signature of Palmer alone, andfi did not inform the defendant that his name and that of his wife had been attached to the original. It is true that, in the heading of the document, it is. described as an agreement made and executed by Augusta B. Gould, and Augustus 0. Bowen and Jennie M. Bowen by said Augusta B. Gould, their attorney in fact, parties of the first part; but when the paper itself, by the absence of those signatures, indicates that it has not in fact been so executed, a. person unfamiliar with the form and effect of legal documents, and not informed of the fact otherwise than by the paper itself, might well be excused, for supposing that the contract—in blank, so far as the parties of the first. part were concerned—was only a proposed contract, sent to him for his approval and consent to its execution, and that the blank power of attorney
The case against Mrs. Gould is without embarrassment from any question of authority; the contract was signed by her for herself, and in ■her own name. It was in terms several as well as joint, and the demand and tender on the part of the plaintiff covered a several performance on the part of Mrs. Gould by a conveyance of her undivided share. The chief contention in behalf "of Mrs. Gould, is based upon two proposed findings of fact, both of which were refused by the court. One of these was to the effect that the attorney Barker—although with the knowledge of the •plaintiff employed and relied upon by Mrs. Gould to aid and advise her in the •transaction-—was in fact in the employ of the plaintiff) and was acting for him and in his interest in procuring the execution of the contract. The other proposed finding was to the effect that in was understood between Mrs. Gould and the attorney, thus acting for and in the interest" of the •plaintiff, that Mrs. Gould consented to execute the contract only upon the •condition that its provisions should receive the consent and concurrence of her brother, and that the contract should be without force or effect until such consent and concurrence were obtained. It was upon these proposed findings that the conclusion was urged upon us, as upon the court below, to the effect that the contract, was, as to her, unfair, harsh, and oppressive, and that its -specific enforcement would be inequitable. A very careful consideration of the testimony in the case fails to satisfy us that the court was in error in refusing to make the findings requested, or that its actual findings in this respect" were not supported by the evidence. The learned judge at special term had the advantage of personal observation of the parties and the witnesses testifying on these questions, and was' better able than we are to determine where the truth lay, amid the numerous contradictions of their testimony. We cannot disturb the findings of fact in respect to the manner and the circumstances of the execution of the contract by Mrs. Gould in her own behalf.
The proposition that the provision for the payment of liquidated damages, contained in the contract, precludes the interposition of equity to decree specific performance, and that the plaintiff is remitted to his action at law to recover his damages thus stipulated, cannot be maintained. The cases, generally, cited in support of it, are those in which it is held that, in an action for the collection of damages, equity will relieve against a forfeiture or penalty, as such, but will enforce the payment of stipulated damages; whereas the unquestionable rule, as between specific enforcement and award of damages for nonperformance, is that where, from the covenant itself and the surrounding circumstances, it is apparent that the primary intent was to have the covenant performed, equity will enforce it. Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Continental Ins. Co., 87 N. Y. 400, and the cases cited. • The disposition of the question does not at all depend upon any distinction between the terms “penalty” and “liquidated damages.” Whichever term is used-, the question is whether the provision is made as security for the performance of the contract or as a substitute for performance. If the latter, the party will be denied his remedy in equity, and confined to his recovery of damages; if the former, equity will decree specific performance notwithstanding such provision. Match Co. v. Roeber, 106 N. Y. 473, 13 N. E. Rep. 419; Gray v. Crosby, 18 Johns. 219. So in Long v. Bowring, 33 Beav. 585, damages were liquidated, but the master of the rolls said the real meaning of the ■clause was not to give the covenantor the optiori to perform or pay the dam