37 Fla. 439 | Fla. | 1896
Several grounds were alleged and sought to be proven by the appellee, the Pensacola, Glulf, Land and Development Company, as sufficient to bar the relief sought by the complainant. Such of these grounds as it seems needful to notice may be briefly summarized as ■follows: (1) laches of complainant and those through whom he claimed in performing the contract, and in •seeking performance by the defendant; (2) that the Pensacola, Gf-ulf, Land and Development Company is •an innocent purchaser for value without notice of complainant’s equities; (3) that said defendant derived title through a married woman, and that specific performance could not be had against her, nor against her grantees.
The question of the possession of the complainant and of the Hargises and Bonifay, through whom he claimed, is one of primary importance in the disposition of this case. Whether or not they were in possession of the premises in controversy, and the nature .and extent of such possession, are issues that materially affect other questions in the case, and must be first determined. We will not attempt any statement or summary of the evidence upon this subject. It is not entirely free from conflict and contradiction. We state only the conclusion reached by us as to 'the facts •established by the weight and preponderance of the testimony, or the admissions contained in the pleadings. The testimony shows that E. C. Bonifay, at the time of his contract of purchase, paid a part of the purchase money, and with the full knowledge and consent of Dowd and Stallsworth, a very short time after moved upon the premises in question, and lived
Having stated our conclusions as to the possession of complainant and his predecessors, we will proceed to consider the objections above stated urged by the defendant in bar of the relief sought by the complainant. The first objection which the defendant Pensacola, Gulf, Land and Development Company claims precludes the granting of the relief sought is, that of delay in performing his contract and seeking his remedy. Upon this point it is contended that time was of the essence of the contract. Without setting forth the contract in full, it is sufficient to say that it contains no provision to that effect, and, therefore, time was not of its essence, and can not be so regarded in a court of equity. Chabot vs. Winter Park Co., 34 Fla. 258, 15 South. Rep. 756; Southern Life Insurance and Trust Co. vs. Cole, 4 Fla. 359. It is also undoubt
In this case we have found from the evidence that the predecessors of the complainant, and to whose equities he succeeded, weré in the possession of the premises, with .permission of the vendor and after payment of a part of the purchase money, under an assertion and exercise of right. In such a case the lapse of time does not bar the remedy. Upon this subject it is said by an eminent author: “In determining what amount of mere delay in bringing his suit will defeat the plaintiff’s claim to a specific performance; or, in other words, what lapse of time, after his right of action accrued, will render the demand stale —the rule prevails in equity as in law, that while the plaintiff is in possession under an assertion and exercise of right, the lapse of time does not prejudice his remedial right. If the vendee, therefore, takes' and retains possession of the premises with the vendor’s consent, his mere delay in bringing a suit, or even in paying the price, will not prevent him from compelling a conveyance upon a subsequent payment or tender of the amount due nor will his right to the relief be cut off until the vendor places a limit to the lapse of time by a demand of payment at or before a specified day, and by a notice that the agreement will be rescinded unless the demand is complied with, and the vendee’s default thereon. The defendant, in order to avail himself of the plaintiff’s delay as a defense, must have performed, or been ready and willing to
In this case the vendor or his grantees had never made any demand for payment on or before a specified day, and had never given any notice that the agreement would be rescinded unless the demand was complied with. Not only had the complainant’s predecessors been in possession, but they had made valuable improvements upon the land. In such a case where the delay lasted for thirty years, the court said: “Where the purchaser, under an executory contract, enters on, improves, and continues in the possession of the land, the lapse of time is no defense to his bill for specific execution.” Barbour vs. Whitlock, 4 Mon. 180. A similar case, where the delay was not so great, and where the point was likewise decided, is Mason vs. Wallace, 4 McLean, 77. Other cases holding similar views of the law are Waters vs. Travis, 9 Johns. 450, text 466; New Barbadoes Toll Bridge Co. vs. Vreeland, 4 N. J. Eq. 157; Miller vs. Bear, 3 Paige, 466; Bruce vs. Tilson, 25 N. Y. 194; Crofton vs. Ormsby, 2 Sch. & Lef. 583, text 603; Stretch vs. Schenck, 23 Ind. 77. Applying these principles of law to the facts of the case, the conclusion necessarily follows that the
.There is another reason why the defendant can not avail itself of complainant’s delay in the matter. As we have seen, time was not made of the essence of the contract. While the general rule obtains that a court of equity will specifically' enforce a contract for the sale of lands only in cases where the complainant shows himself prompt and eager to perform the contract on his part (Chabot vs. Winter Park Co., supra), yet under the facts of this case the defendant is not in a situation to avail itself of the defense of a want of promptness upon the part of the complainant. The defendant does not claim that it was at all times ready and willing, to perform the contract on his part. It claims to have known nothing about the contract whatever, it never offered to perform the same or expressed any willingness so to do, or took any steps whatever for that purpose, but, on the contrary, claimed the land absolutely discharged from any equitable title of complainant, and made its defense to the case chiefly upon that ground. “The defendant, in order to avail himself of the plaintiff’s delay as a defense, must have performed, or been ready and willing to perform, all the terms of the contract on his own part.” Pomeroy on Contracts, sec. 404 and note 2. Leaird vs. Smith, 44 N. Y. 618; VanCampen vs. Knight, 63 Barb. 205; 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., sec. 1408, and authorities cited in note 1.
We next examine the question whether the defendant, the Pensacola, Gfulf, Land and Development Company, is an innocent purchaser for value without notice of the complainant’s equities. The evidence, we
It is admitted on both sides that the land involved ©nee belonged to one -C. Dowd. It is also admitted, and we think properly, that all persons deriving any interest in the land from or through said Dowd, after his contract to sell to Bonifay, and-with notice of such contract, are bound to perform the same to the same extent that Dowd would be bound, if he had still retained the legal title in himself. McRae vs. McMinn, 17 Fla. 876; Ward vs. Spivey, 18 Fla. 847; Pomeroy on Contracts; sec. 493; 2 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 688, and authorities' cited in note 4. The question, then, is material whether the defendant corporation, the Pensacola, Gulf, Land and Development Company, when it purchased the land from Mrs. Petterson, had notice of the contract of sale through which arose the equity of the complainant. The complainant claims that the corporation had notice, because the defendant J. C. Petterson had such notice while he was president of defendant. As, in our opinion, there was sufficient notice of complainant’s rights by reason of the actual occupation of the premises by himself and his predecessors in possession, it is useless to determine the effect upon the corporation of the knowledge and notice by J. C. Petterson, its president, of .such rights and equities. Whether the corporation was or was not bound by such notice to Petterson the result in this case would be the same.
In this case the rule was laid down that a subsequent purchaser, although without actual notice, will be considered a purchaser of the seller’s title subject to the equities of the tenant. It may be conceded that the facts of the case hardly required so broad an enunciation of the rule, as there was some actual notice of the possession. Therefore the court said: “The authorities go beyond the case at bar. We think the general Tule is, that where a person, other than the grantor, is
Under our recording acts possession has been held to be such constructive notice of ownership as to dispense with the necessity of recording the deed. Massey vs. Hubbard, 18 Fla. 688.
The defendant corporation claims that the relief prayed for by the complainant should have been denied because the property had advanced in value. No defense of this kind was made by the answer. The only reference to increase of value that appears in the-record is in the testimony of the defendant J. C. Petterson, which was taken after all the complainant’s witnesses had testified: The witness was asked tosíate “the value of the land in this suit when he first became acquainted with it, and its present value (at the time of asking the question), and if the same had increased in value. In reply the witness stated that-when he first became acquainted with the property it was worth $1.50 per acre, but at the time of testifying-that it was worth about $5,000. This question was objectionable for many reasons, and if objection had been made in the court below, it and the answer to ifr should have been excluded from consideration. In the first place, the time inquired about was too remote. The witness had stated that he had been acquainted with the property fourteen or fifteen years. The original contract of purchase was made about six years- and a half before the time of giving the testimony. Therefore he was asked to state the value of the property at a period seven or eight years anterior to the purchase by Bonifay from Dowd, and its value at the-time of testifying, which was about eight months-after the suit was brought. If the testimony as to increase of value was admissible at all, it should have-been limited to some time at or near the time of the
It is also contended by appellee, the Pensacola, Grulf, Land and Development Company, that the decree for specific performance should not pass against it, because it holds its title by a grant from a married woman, and the equity sought to be enforced had its origin and partly accrued before the legal title vested in such married woman. The cases of Lewis vs. Yale, 4 Fla. 418, and Goss vs. Furman, 21 Fla. 406, are cited to support the contention. It was decided in those cases, especially the last named, that a decree for specific performance could not be rendered against a married woman upon her executory contract for the sale of lands. This decision was but an application of the general principle that a married woman is disabled by reason of her coverture to enter into any contract that will bind her either in law or in equity so as to authorize a personal judgment against her. In this case the contract sought to be enforced was not made by a married woman. The only married woman defendant had parted with her title before suit was brought. She was a nominal party to the proceedings, and no relief is prayed against her. Her only connection with the case is, that the title to the property about which the suit was brought was once vested in her, and is held by her grantee. We do not think a vendee of real estate who purchases with notice of the equities of an occupying tenant can defeat specific performance of the contract of a former grantor because of the intervention of the title of a married woman between him and such grantor. Such a rule does not seem reasonable to us upon principle, and no
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed, with directions that a decree be entered granting the relief prayed for in the bill of complaint, upon the payment by the complainant to the defendant, the Pensacola, Gulf, Land and Development Company, of the amount of purchase money due upon the contract of purchase of E. C. Bonifay from C. Dowd and George Stalls-worth, with interest from October 18th, 1884, until January 24th, 1889, and all the costs which accrued in this cause in the Circuit Court up to said last named date. It is ordered that all other costs in the cause not directed to be paid by the complainant, be paid by the defendant; and that appellees pay the cost of this appeal. Wherever the word complainant is used in-this opinion it means the appellant, and the word defendant, without naming him, is used it means the appellee, the Pensacola, Gulf, Land and Development Company. - -