109 Misc. 258 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1919
This action is brought for specific performance on the part of the defendant of a certain agreement made on the 21st day of March, 1918, between the defendant and one T. Aaron Levy, whereby the defendant agreed to sell, and the second party to purchase, certain real property in the city of Syracuse for the sum of $36,500; $500 was to be paid at the time of signing the agreement, $6,000 on the delivery of a good and sufficient warranty deed and an official abstract of title, and the balance to be paid in equal annual payments of $1,000 each, beginning on May 1, 1919, to be secured by the bond of said second party (T. Aaron Levy), together with a purchase money mortgage on said property. The complaint alleges that, prior to the commencement of the action, the aforesaid T. Aaron Levy sold, assigned and transferred to the plaintiff for a valuable consideration, all his right, title and interest in and to the contract here
The. defendant’s claim, as presented by this demurrer, is, in substance, that the allegation in the complaint relative to the assignment of the contract in question shows that it does not impose any obligations or covenants or agreements on the part of the assignee to perform the obligations, covenants and agreements which his assignor made to the Kirk Brown Realty Company. The defendant’s counsel, as a part of his brief, furnished to this court a copy of the assignment executed by T. Aaron Levy on or about the 25th day of April, 1919, to the plaintiff, which assignment does not show the assumption by the plaintiff of any obligations. Strictly speaking, the only matters which I can consider upon this demurrer
The basis of the claim of the defendant and of the, cases which he cites, rests upon the apparent doctrine of Wadick v. Mace, 191 N. Y. 1; upon what is termed “ Mutuality of Remedy.” The learned judge, in the case referred to, stated in the opinion (p. 5): “ Both parties at the time when the contract is executed must have the right to resort to equity for its specific performance or it will not be specifically enforced. * * * The general rule being that an executory contract will not be specifically enforced unless the remedy is mutual.”
The action in this case was brought by the vendee against the executor of the vendor, and, as was stated by Mr. Justice Smith, in referring to this ease in his dissenting opinion in the case of Dittenfass v. Horsley, 177 App. Div. 149: “ There was an express surrender by one of the parties of the right of specific performance which the court held to work a surrender by implication of that same right in the other party, and in addition the description of the property was held to be so indefinite that the court would not be able to decree specific performance, even if it were willing to do so.” And Judge Bartlett, writing for the court in the prevailing opinion on page 6, uses the following language: 61 While I think that this contract lacks the mutuality of remedy which has been so often pro
The language of the courts in reference to mutuality in specific performance, which sometimes has been carelessly applied, was frequently based upon the language used in Lord Justice Fry’s Treatise on Specific Performance. This doctrine was somewhat criticized by the late Prof. James Barr Ames in an article published in volume 3, Columbia Law Review, page 9, and also in Ames’ Lectures on Legal History, page 370, in which Prof. Ames, while not disputing the general rule laid down by Lord Justice Fry, states eight separate exceptions, each of which is at variance with the general rule above referred to, and follows with a statement that: “A rule so overloaded with exceptions is fairly open to this severe criticism by Prof. Langdell: £ The rule as to mutuality of remedy is obscure in principle and in extent, artificial, and difficult to understand and to remember. ’ ” And continues: ££ If, however, we examine the actual cases in which a plaintiff failed to obtain specific performance
Applying these principles to the case at bar, we have an agreement of purchase and sale of real property; the vendor (the defendant) retains the legal title as security for the payment of the purchase money; in addition to this, he has the agreement of plaintiff’s assignor (T. Aaron Levy) to execute his bond; and of neither of the foregoing rights can he be deprived except by his own agreement; so that, after performance, the common-law remedy of damages would not be his (the defendant’s) sole security for the plaintiff’s performance of the contract. As stated by Prof. Ames, supra (p. 376): “ The reciprocity of remedy required is not the right of each party to the contract to maintain a, bill for specific performance against the other, but simply the right of one party to refuse to perform, unless performance by the other is given or assured.”
The case specially relied upon by the defendants (Dittenfass v. Horsley, 177 App. Div. 143; affd., 224 N. Y. 560) was “ a suit in equity for the specific performance of an agreement in writing made by the appellant, William Horsley, on the 8th of February, 1913. * * * He (p. 449) alleges that in the month of February, 1913, one Selznick, mentioned in the agree
‘ ‘ ‘ In witness whereof the parties hereto have hereunto set their hands and seals this eighth day of February, 1913, in' the presence of Witness E. H. Underhill.
“ ‘ William Horsley.’ ”
We have here an agreement which at most was an option given by Horsley to Selznick, which was assigned by the holder after the time for acceptance and performance had elapsed. As stated in the opinion, on page 146: “ Upon no theory was the agreement binding upon Selznick at the time of its execution, for he did not agree to perform. * * * and even had he signed it, it could not be construed as obligating him to perform.' * # * Assuming, however, that it was a valid option, the plaintiff fails to show that it was duly accepted by Selznick or that the latter duly tendered the cash payment of $10,000 and the notes and offered to agree with respect to the depository and to perform at the time specified in the writing therefor,”
The right of an assignee of a vendee of a contract to compel specific performance is recognized in the cases. Jones v. Lynds, (1838) 7 Paige, 301. In this case the learned chancellor states as follows: “In other words, the assignee of a contract takes it subject to all equities which existed between the parties thereto arising out of such contract. And the court will require him to perform all the stipulations which the assignor was bound to perform, in favor of the adverse party, to entitle him to a decree for specific performance. Seaman v. Van Rensselaer, 10 Barb. 81; Dodge v. Miller, 81 Hun, 102.
The statement of Hand, J., who wrote the opinion in the Seaman case, on page 86, is instructive: “ On a valid contract for the purchase of land, the vendor, in equity, is deemed to stand seized for the benefit of the purchaser, and has a lien upon it for the purchase money. And as against the assignee of the vendee, he
The cases cited by the defendant are distinguishable from the instant case, either in the facts or in the relief sought. In a general way, it may be stated that in those cases wherein the assignee of the vendee sought specific performance, either as plaintiff, or alleged and sought such relief by way of counterclaim, he was either unable to perform or had failed to tender performance of all the obligations which the vendee, his assignor immediate or remote, had obligated himself to perform.
It seems to me that the true doctrine in regard to mutuality in specific performance is that a defendant should not be compelled to specifically perform his promise unless equity is able to give the defendant, at the time of the decree or later, such performance on plaintiff’s part as defendant bargained for. See article of Prof. William Draper Lewis, entitled “ The Present Status of the Defense of Want of Mutuality in Specific Performance,” in the American Law Register, New Series, Vol. 42 (1903), page 591, which gives the following rule (p. 629): “ ‘A plaintiff can have specific performance in all cases where the contract is fair and reasonable in all its parts, where he is not himself in default, and where the obligations of the defendant which he seeks to enforce are capable of being enforced by the court, and that to this rulé' there are no exceptions, either on the ground of want of mutuality in the remedy or on the ground that the court cannot undo what it directs to be done. ’ ’ ’
The plaintiff, in his complaint, stated that he “is ready and willing, and hereby offers to pay the residue of the purchase money to the defendant, and to give
The demurrer overruled, with costs, but with leave to the defendant, within twenty days after service of the copy of the interlocutory judgment to be entered hereon, to withdraw said demurrer and answer the complaint.
Ordered accordingly.