45 N.J. Eq. 508 | New York Court of Chancery | 1889
This is a suit by the vendors of land against the vendee, asking a decree requiring the vendee to specifically perform his contract of purchase. The bill alleges that the contract, which the complainants seek to-have enforced, is in writing. The following is the averment of the bill on that subject:
“ Your orators and the said Uriah S. Hollister, on or about the fifteenth day of September, 1888, entered into an agreement in writing respecting the sale and purchase of the said .land and premises, consisting of certain letters or correspondence, written and signed by the said Uriah S. Hollister and by Nicholas Tarrant, who was the agent of your orators for the sale of said lands and premises, and by your orators lawfully authorized to make sale of the said lands and premises to the said Hollister.”
The defendant denies that he entered into an agreement in writing with the complainants for the purchase of the land in question, but admits that he both telegraphed and wrote to Tar-rant, stating that he would take the complainants’ property for $4,500 and pay for it on the delivery of the deed. But he insists, that what he said to Tarrant in writing cannot be treated in law as constituting a contract between the complainants and himself, because, he says, that, when he sent the telegram to Tar-rant, and also when he wrote to him, he believed Tarrant to be his own agent, and communicated with him in that capacity, and not as the agent of the complainants, and that his communications to
The land, which is the subject of the suit, is situate in the town of Norwich, in the State of Connecticut. Mr. Tarrant resides in the town of Norwich, and the defendant’s communications to him were received by him there. The statute of frauds of Connecticut declares, that no suit in law or equity shall be brought or maintained upon any contract for the sale of lands, unless the contract upon which the action shall be brought, or some note or memorandum thereof] shall be made in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorized. Osborn v. Phelps, 19 Conn. 63, 70.
As to whether a letter written by a principal to h'is agent can be used by a third person as evidence of a written contract between, himself and the principal, I am aware that Lord Hardwicke is reported as saying, in Welford v. Beazeley, 3 Atk. 503: “There have been cases where a letter written to a man’s own- agent, and setting forth the terms of an agreement as concluded by him, has been deemed to be a signing within the statute, and agreeable to the provision of it.” But I have been unable to find a single case in which it has been so held. I find, on the contrary, that the supreme court of Iowa expressly held, in Steel v. Fife, 48 Iowa 99, that a letter written by a principal to his agent, stating the terms on which he would sell certain land, which terms the agent subsequently reported to a buyer, who accepted them, did not constitute a written contract with the buyer so' as to take the case out of the statute of frauds. The court said, that the delivery of the letter to the agent could have no other or greater effect than if the principal had written the letter and then retained it in his own possession. The decision in the case just cited obviously rests upon correct principle. Mt is indispensable to the making of a contract that there shall be communication between two minds — there must be a proposal by one and an acceptance by the other — two minds must meet and mutually assent — but where the written communication is exclus
The fact that the land which is the subject of the suit is beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and situate in another State, constitutes no reason why relief should be refused, if in other respects the complainants have made a case which entitles them to a decree, for the principle is firmly established, that it is not necessary to jurisdiction in such cases that the land, which is the subject of the suit, should be located within the territory over which the court, in which the suit is brought, may rightfully exercise its power. All that is necessary in such cases to enable the court to exert its power is, that it shall have jurisdiction of the parties, for in all suits in equity the primary decree is in personam and not in rem. Wood v. Warner, 2 McCart. 81, 84; Davis v. Headley, 7 C. E. Gr. 115, 120.
The proofs on the main question, namely, whether the defendant made the communications to Tarrant, on which the complainants rely, under a belief that Tarrant was his agent, and without knowledge that he was also acting as the agent of the complainants, do not make a strong and perfectly clear case either way, but leave the question whether or not those communications can safely and rightfully be held to be a contract in such serious doubt, that I think it is the duty of the court, under the principles which must control its judgment, to decline to make the decree the complainants ask, but leave them to their
The facts appearing in the evidence, bearing on the principal question, may be summarized as follows: Mr. Tarrant, is a real estate broker doing business at Norwich, Connecticut. He has been a real estate broker there for nearly twenty years, and as such seeks employment to negotiate the sale and purchase of land. In July, 1888, the complainants put the land in question in Mr. Tarrant’s hands to sell. They left a map or diagram of the land with him. The defendant, without previous acquaintance with Mr. Tarrant, called on him on the 31st of August, 1888. Mr. Tarrant says the defendant asked him if he had any property for sale fronting on the river and the railroad, and that he replied he had. The defendant, on the contrary, says that the question he put to Mr. Tarrant was, whether he knew of any property for sale, situated in the manner above described, and that Mr. Tarrant replied that he did. Two other tracts, belonging to other persons, were first shown to the defendant, and then the land in question. Mr. Tarrant says, when the land'of the complainants was shown, the defendant asked what
“I wired you to-day that I would take the Potter property at $4,500 cash, and enclose herewith $100 as guarantee of my good faith in the matter. This payment, of course, is subject to the title being approved, and you will please •ask some attorney there to make an abstract of the title of this property at once, including everything that in. his opinion should be included to satisfy my attorney here that the title is merchantable. As soon as I receive this, •and decide upon it, and find it all right, will instruct you to have the deed made to myself, and will arrange to pay the balance due on the purchase ■when the deed is transferred to me. * * *
“Of course, I understand that the price named covers all of the Potter property north of Thames Iron Works, 217 x260 feet more or less, on both • sides of railroad track.”
This letter is the written contract on which the complainants rest their right to relief. They contend that its first and concluding sentences state the terms of 'the contract with such fullness and certainty as enables the court to see just what they are, and as will enable the court to make a decree which will do full •and complete justice to both parties. This would be true, I think, if it appeared that the thing about which the parties were bargaining was land alone. That was not so, however, in this case. Although the complainants, by their bill, ask simply to have the contract, which they allege the defendant made with them, specifically performed so far as it embraces land, yet it ■clearly appears, by the evidence of Mr. Albert L. Potter, elicited by a question put to him by his own counsel (Mr. Greene), that the subject-matter of the contract consisted of something besides land. Mr. Potter swears distinctly that the things he told the defendant he would sell him for $4,500 were the land and the piling on it, and that the piling was worth about $500. The defendant’s letter to Tarrant says nothing about the piling. The piling, it will be observed, represented in value about one-ninth •of the purchase-money. It cannot be believed that the defendant meant to exclude the piling from his purchase, and to agree do pay $4,500 for the land without the piling. Mon of ordinary
After one of the complainants had given evidence, proving-that the written contract, on which the complainants’ bill is founded, does not in terms embrace all the property which the-complainants intended to sell and the defendant to buy, the-counsel of the complainants asked the court to overrule this-evidence, or otherwise to disregard it, on the ground that parol evidence can never be admitted to contradict or vary the terms of a written instrument. It is unnecessary to discuss in this case in what instances parol evidence is competent to defeat a claim made under a written instrument, for the question here is not as to the competency of evidence, but whether or not effect shall be given to an admission voluntarily made in open
The complainants must be left to their remedy at law. Their bill must be dismissed.
In Boyd v. Banta, Coxe 266, 272, it was said “ that if a party calls a witness and examines him as to a fact, which regularly would not operate against him if proved by the other party, unless proved by written testimony, yet as against the party who thus establishes it himself, from his own witness, it shall be conclusive.”-Rep.