41 Md. 554 | Md. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill in this case was filed for the specific performance of a contract alleged to have been entered into by the complainant and Jacob Reese, his father.
The bill alleges that the complainant lent his father three thousand dollars, on or about the 20th of December, I860, and that in February or March, 1867, it was agreed by and between the complainant and his father, that the latter would sell to the former a certain parcel of land, which is described in Exhibit A., filed with the bill, for the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars. The bill further alleges that the sale was consummated by Jacob Reese, accepting that sum, being part of the amount lent him by the complainant, as full payment of the purchase money, and that said Jacob was thereafter, to be indebted to the complainant in the sum of five hundred dollars, the balance of the said loan of three thousand dollars; that said land was delivered into the possession of the complainant, and has since remained in his possession, and that Jacob Reese agreed to execute a deed for the same to complainant, hut neglected and failed to do so, and that on the first day of January, 1872, having become embarrassed and involved in his pecuniary affairs he conveyed by deed to John E. Smith, all his property and estate for the benefit of his creditors. The answer of Jacob Reese admits the allegations of the hill. The answer of John E. Smith denies all knowledge of the alleged agreement, and requires full proof of the allegations of the bill.
To this answer there was a general replication, Jacob Reese then died, and, by an agreement filed in the cause, his administrator and heirs at law were made parties. A commission was issued to take testimony, and after its return and a final hearing of the case, a decree was passed
It is contended by the appellant’s couzisel in his brief that the answer of Jacob Reese to the bill of complaint is competent evidence against the other defendants, and that the admissions therein made are-sufficient proof of the agreement of sale and its part performance. But the principle is very well settled that the answer of one defen
Looking then at the evidence in the case we find no proof whatever of the contract, or its terms, or that the complainant was ever in possession of this land under the contract which the hill alleges was made and partly executed . Several of the witnesses prove that the complainant was for some years cutting and hauling timber and wood from this land and in some instances selling it to Harman & Company, which firm was composed of Jacob Reese alone; but some of the witnesses, who prove these facts, further prove that he was thus cutting and hauling timber and wood from the same land before the date of the alleged contract of sale. It is further proved that, hut three days before the deed of trust to John E. Smith was executed, Jacob Reese was talking with Haines, in the presence of the complainant, respecting the sale of this land, and asked the complainant how much of the land had been cut over and what it was worth, and then agreed to sell it to Haines for forty dollars per acre, and the only remark the complainant made was, “4 thought that I was to have that.” If he was then the owner of the land under the contract alleged in the bill, it is to be presumed that ho would have asserted his title in plain terms, instead of using language which would rather indicate a wish or expectation that his father would give it to him, than the assertion of a title which could he enforced in a Court of Equity. An agreement to be specifically executed must be plain, just, reasonable, bona fide, mutual and certain in all its parts, and if it be wanting in any one of these essentials, it cannot be enforced, nor will this Court, enforce contracts depending upon parol evidence and part performance unless the existence of the contract, the terms and the acts of part performance are sustained by clear and satisfactory proof. Stoddert vs. Tuck, Exr. of Bowie
The decree appealed from will therefore be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.