5 Ind. 409 | Ind. | 1854
Rudman filed his bill in chancery against Reed, setting up an agreement dated August 22, 1850, for the sale of certain real estate in Franklin county, whereby Reed agreed to convey to Rudman in fee, on or before the
The bill alleges a tender of the land-warrants at the proper time; and a demand upon Reed, and refusal by him to deliver the deed.
The bill further sets up, that before the making of the preceding contract, viz., on the 26th of August, 1845, Reed had mortgaged the land to one Hoagland to secure the payment of 1,025 dollars; that in 1851, Holland, as the executor of Hoagland, had foreclosed the mortgage for a balance of 551 dollars yet due thereon; that in March, 1851, Rudman took possession of the land, and in June, 1851, was compelled to pay to Holland the amount of the decree, to save the land from sale.
It is tacitly admitted that the land-warrants were never delivered to Reed, but were still in the possession of Rudman. Reeds land was also in his possession. Nor is there any tender of the land-warrants in Court. The prayer of the bill, in substance, is, that Rudman be allowed to retain the land-warrants at their value; that Reed be compelled to make a deed in pursuance of the contract, and be decreed to pay to Rudman the amount paid by him to Holland, deducting 280 dollars, the value of the land-warrants.
The answer of Reed expressly denies the tender of the land-warrants at, &c., assigned, &c. Reed sets up, also, that there were other considerations besides the land-warrants; that he was induced to sign the agreement by fraud — that Rudman fraudulently represented that he made the purchase for his nephew, and induced Reed to believe that he and Reed were to proceed to Iowa together to speculate in lands in partnership, particularly a certain tract of which Rudman pretended he was apprised, containing a valuable mill-seat, &c., and that Rudman having wholly failed, on
The decree of the Court was in accordance with the prayer of the bill.
After carefully examining the position assumed by the parties, and canvassing the evidence, we are wholly at a loss to know upon what ground this decree can be sustained.
The first deposition of Rudman is that of a witness unable to read or write, who testifies about papers and conversations of the parties which his whole evidence clearly shows he did not understand. The cross-examination further discredits him, by showing that he had been tampered with by Rudman.
The second deposition (Ulster’s) relates to a conversation which occured some days prior to the 15th of September. Rudman, it seems, offered Reed some papers which he called land-warrants, and requested Reed to make him a deed. Reed declined till the mortgage held by Holland was arranged.
It may be observed, on this evidence, that it makes nothing in favor of Rudman; for admitting the papers offered by Rudman to be land-warrants, the tender before the 15th of September availed nothing. Reed was not bound to make the deed before that date, nor was it material that he did not put his excuse on that ground. Clement v. Clement, 8 N. H. 210.
The deposition of Kilgore shows the tender of the land-warrants assigned in blank by a third person, made a month after the 15th of September, 1851, and Reed’s refusal, &c., because they were not tendered on that day. His evidence, in other respects, very strongly supports the fraud set up in the answer, in relation to the execution of the agreement.
His deposition details - several efforts at compromise made by the parties, all of which proved abortive.
jButton’s deposition shows the land to be worth 1,000 dollars, and the land-warrants to be worth from 290 to 330
The deposition of Far quitar sustains the fraud set up in the answer, detailing sundry admissions of Rudman in reference to the inducements held out to Reed to execute the contract.
A letter of Rudman to his wife after their separation, dated April 29th, 1851, seems to have been put in evidence by agreement.
This miscellaneous epistle, so remarkably in contrast with the chaste gravity of a chancery proceeding, contains the following admission, which, though neither true in detail, nor directly pertinent to the issue, yet being in by consent, is entitled to some consideration on the question of the rescission of the contract by the parties. It runs thus: “ I have given up the Reed farm. He gave me 100 dollars to let him off. I thought it better than to law about it, the way I am now situated.”
This is the substance of all the evidence in the cause; and whether it be regarded as an unconscionable contract, or as tinctured with fraud, it is such as Courts of Equity are reluctant to enforce. They leave the parties to their remedy at law. 6 J. C. R. 222.—2 Story’s Eq. 5.—11 Peters 229. We are of opinion that a specific performance should have been refused and the bill dismissed. Under the circumstances, Reed had nothing to tender or restore in order to place the parties in statu quo. Land, land-warrants, crops, and all, were already in the possession of Rudman. The manifestation of intention to rescind made to Kilgore, the agent and attorney of Rudman, adhered to as it was by the answer filed, was sufficient. The tender of land-warrants assigned, not by Rudman himself, but by a third person, in blank, and a month after the time stipulated, in connection with the hardship and fraud of the contract, put it in the porver of Reed to rescind. Masson v. Bovet, 1 Denio 69. His subsequent acts are abundant evidence of that intention.
Whether Rudman has any remedy on the penalty of the agreement; whether the payment on his part to Holland
Per Curiam. — The decree is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &e.