Tompkins v. . Hyatt

28 N.Y. 347 | NY | 1863

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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *352 The plaintiff should have been compelled specifically to perform the contract between Joseph R. Hyatt and Seeley, the plaintiff's assignor, instead of being allowed to recover the payments made upon and in pursuance of the contract, as if the contract had been rescinded. The ground upon which the decision appealed from was made, relieving the purchaser and his assigns from the obligation to perform the contract, and allowing the plaintiff to recover such payments and the value of improvements made upon the premises by the purchaser, was the delay on the part of the heirs of the vendor to deliver a deed in fulfillment of the contract of their ancestor, for the period of nine years, the vendor having died a few days before the day fixed for the performance of the contract. The perfect answer to this position is, that the purchaser, in pursuance of a stipulation in the contract, entered into possession of the premises contracted to be sold to him, on the day when the contract was to have been performed, and retained such possession until after the trial of this action, a period of over ten years, during which time he paid the taxes and insurance upon the premises, and made permanent and valuable improvements thereon, to the amount of over $1150. And the plaintiff, as his assignee, paid the mortgage which the purchaser was to assume and pay as a part of the consideration of the purchase, and during that time neither the purchaser nor the plaintiff insisted upon a right to rescind the contract, either on the ground of any defect in the title to the premises or any delay in fulfilling the agreement. Aside from any influence which the order of the Supreme Court of the date of June 6, 1848, decreeing that the contract should be specifically performed, can have upon the case, the plaintiff was not in a position to abandon the contract, under the circumstances above alluded to, nor was *353 the court authorized to declare it rescinded, under the findings of fact. It may now be regarded as the established law of this state, that where the purchaser takes possession of the bargained premises under the agreement, he can not rescind the contract without surrendering the possession; and that less diligence in perfecting the title is required of the owner when the purchaser is in possession than when he is not. In More v. Smedburgh, (8 Paige, 606,) it was decided that the purchaser, in case he elected to rescind the contract, was bound to give up the possession of the property which he had taken possession of under the agreement; and that he was not at liberty, after occupying the premises for nine months without paying any thing for their use, to say to the vendor, "Our contract is at an end, but I shall continue to occupy the premises until I shall have no further use for them." The Chancellor says: "Here the answer insists upon a rescission of the contract before the complainant had cleared off the incumbrances and tendered the deed, and yet it is admitted in the same answer that the purchaser was in the occupation of the premises when the answer was put in." Again he says: "As a general rule, if a vendor receives payment of a part of the purchase money after the time of payment fixed by the agreement has expired, or if the vendee continues in possession under the agreement long after the time specified therein for giving the deed, a court of equity may consider a strict performance at the day is waived." In that case a specific performance was denied, and the decree was affirmed in the Court of Errors by an equal division of the court. (26 Wend. 328.) On that occasion BRONSON, J. said that no adjudged cases could be found in which a contract was refused to be enforced when the purchaser had entered into possession of the bargained premises, and remained in possession at the filing of the bill for specific performance. In the case of Stevenson v. Maxwell, (2 N Y Rep. 415,) it was said by GARDINER, J., "Upon general principles I am *354 inclined to think that whenever a vendee takes possession of premises as owner under a contract of sale of this description, he is bound to pay interest, whether the land is or is not productive, so long as his possession is undisturbed, and the vendor is not in default; and that the omission to execute a conveyance before demand, and an offer to pay the purchase money by the vendee, is not a default within the rule." I shall show, hereafter, that the tender of purchase money in this case and demand of a deed did not put the heirs of the vendor in fault, and that they were waived by the vendee. In the case of Vieleand others v. The Troy and Boston R.R. Co., (20 N.Y. Rep. 184,) the defendant was to take possession of land required for its track, and pay the damages to be determined by three appraisers, within ten days after notice of the appraisal, when the plaintiffs were to give a good and valid deed which should convey a title free from incumbrances. The award was made, and within thirteen days afterwards the plaintiffs tendered a deed, which was refused because the premises were incumbered. The incumbrances were satisfied within five days afterwards. Immediately after the award, the defendant's workmen commenced work upon the land, and the defendant continued in possession down to the time of the trial. COMSTOCK, J. said, "Some of the points which have been urged on the part of the defendants might be worthy of a serious consideration, if they had not taken possession of the land in question for the purposes of their road, and continued in occupation, so far as we know, to the present time. The defendants were not entitled to a nonsuit on the ground that an incumbrance existed against the land at the time a deed was tendered to them. The title, it is true, was to be clear of incumbrance, and if the defendants themselves acted upon the award by taking possession of the premises, it may be that they could resist a specific performance on the ground that the condition precedent was not strictly performed on the part of the plaintiffs. Such a question need not be examined. The incumbrance was satisfied *355 eight days after the deed was tendered, and although this was after the time when a clear title was to have been made according to the terms of the submission, yet the defendants, by their own conduct, lost the right of insisting upon such ground of defense. If they were not content with the title offered to them, they should have specified the objection, and given up the possession of the land." And a similar answer must be given to another objection prominently urged on the argument before us. "The defendants offered to show that the abitrators allowed to be proved, and took into consideration, one or more items not embraced in the submission, and which could not legally form any part of the sum to be paid to the plaintiffs as a compensation for their land. It appears that both parties attended and were heard before the arbitrators, and the fact is not found, nor is it pretended, that the defendants took and retained possession of the land in ignorance of the irregularities which they offered to prove. In such circumstances they can not reject the award, even if it could be otherwise impeached, for misconduct or excess of power. If they intended to deny the validity of the decision, they should have kept away from the premises, or proceeded in some other manner to acquire the title. They did neither of these things, and having taken and appropriated the land with no other right to it than such as they took under the submission and award, they are, on the plainest principles, estopped from interposing a defense of this nature." And GROVER, J. said, "The defendant having taken possession of the land, and continued such possession up to the trial of the cause, could not insist upon the failure of the plaintiff to tender a deed conveying to it an unincumbered title within the time limited by the agreement. Such failure constituted no defense to the agreement." In Gale v.Nixon, (6 Cowen, 445,) which was an action for the recovery of the purchase money, and the vendor had failed to deliver a deed within the time prescribed by the agreement, the vendor having taken possession pursuant to the terms of the agreement, *356 and retained it to the time of trial, it was held not to be material that the deed was not tendered on the day fixed by the contract. SUTHERLAND, J. said: "The defendants were in possession of the land. They do not offer to deliver up the possession and rescind the contract, but seek to retain the land and avoid paying the stipulated price. This they can not do. They must either avoid the contract in toto, or else perform." In Waters v. Travis, (9 John. 467,) twelve years had elapsed after the time fixed by the agreement for the delivery of a deed, during which time the purchaser had been in possession of the bargained premises. SPENCER, J., delivering the unanimous opinion of the Court of Errors, said: "The lapse of time in a case like the present, where no material inconvenience has been suffered by the appellant, can be urged only on the ground that the agreement has lain dormant, and that this is evidence of the abandonment of it by the parties. Here has been a continued possession on the part of the respondent from the period of the agreement to this time, not as tenant liable to rent, but as holding under the agreement. The continuance of the possession by the tacit consent of the appellant was a constant and continued affirmance on the part of the appellant, that the holding was under the agreement. This is irresistible evidence that the agreement was not abandoned by the parties, and their conduct was such as to leave no doubt that they both looked to the future performance of it. The fair and natural interpretation of the act of possession is, that it was because this agreement had been entered into and was expected by both parties to be performed." These authorities are sufficient to show that the delay, on the part of the vendor or his heirs, to deliver the deed for a period of ten years after the time fixed by the contract, furnished no ground for a rescinding of the contract by the vendee so long as he continued in the undisturbed possession of the premises under the contract; and that the vendee could not recover the purchase money paid, so long as he retained the possession. If the demand *357 of a deed, upon a tender of the purchase money, on the day the contract was to have been performed, put the heirs of the vendor in default, the subsequent taking possession of the premises by the vendee and occupation of them, amounts to a waiver of that default, as long as the vendee's possession continues. But the demand did not put the heirs of the vendor in fault. It was made of parties who were incapable in law, at the time, of complying with the demand. Two of the heirs of the vendor were then infants. They could not alien the lands. They could neither assent or dissent to the demand. The only legal course which the vendee could take to enforce the liability cast upon these infants by the contract of their ancestor and his death, was to apply to the court to compel them specifically to perform the contract. (2 R.S. 5th ed. 275, §§ 97 and 99.) The adult heirs were not put in default by the demand. Two of them were not present when the demand was made. Those who were present proposed to prepare a deed in a few weeks, and this was assented to by the vendee. All of the adult heirs subsequently offered to comply with the demand by tendering a deed in pursuance of the order of the court, bearing date the 6th of June, 1848, which was obtained upon the joint application of the adult heirs and the vendee. The deed, with the covenants of the adult heirs, was certainly unobjectionable, so far as related to the interest which had descended to them. But if these views are not correct, the taking and continuing in possession of the bargained premises after the demand was made, within the authorities referred to, was a waiver of any default by reason of the demand not being complied with.

I am also of the opinion that the order of the 6th of June, 1848, should be regarded as a bar to the plaintiff's action. It is an adjudication in relation to the subject of this action made in a proceeding to which the vendee was a party. As was held by this court in the case of Hyatt v. Seeley, (1 Kern. 52,) it was a final order which disposed of every question before the court and absolutely concluded the *358 parties, unless they appealed. It adjudged that the contract ought to be carried into effect, and that it should be specifically performed. It decreed that nine of the eleven heirs of the vendor should execute and deliver a conveyance of all their interest in the bargained premises, and that upon receiving that deed the vendee should pay the sum of $3000, and assume the payment of the Whitney mortgage and interest; provided that either of the parties to the proceeding might apply to the court for its aid to carry that order into effect. Assuming that the conveyance, directed by the order to be given, would not convey a perfect title to the bargained premises to the vendee, still the order was valid so far as it adjudged that a specific performance should be decreed, and as to the direction that some of the heirs of the vendor should convey, and as to its final provision authorizing either of the parties to the proceeding to apply to the court for its aid to carry the order into effect. That provision was sufficient to enable the vendee to obtain the interest in the premises of the two remaining heirs of the vendor. The omission of their names was doubtless a clerical error, which would have been corrected upon motion. The defendants rely upon this order in their answer as being still in force, and it is found by the court to have been made. It has never been appealed from. The decision of the court, in relation to the subsequent proceedings taken to enforce the order of the 6th of June, 1848, do not affect that order. The parties should have proceeded upon and under that order to effect the specific performance of the agreement. The rights of all parties could have been protected by such proceedings.

The court erred, in the case under consideration, in disregarding the order of the 6th of June and adjudging in direct opposition to it, that the agreement should be rescinded and that the plaintiff should recover the purchase money paid upon it and the money paid on the Whitney mortgage, which the order adjudged that the vendee should assume and pay.

The plaintiff alleges in his complaint that at the time he *359 made the purchase the premises were supplied with water, by conducting the same from a spring on the lands of an adjoining owner. That the vendee believed Hyatt had a legal right to the water of the spring and to conduct it as it was then conducted; that this privilege was of great value to the premises, but that after Hyatt's death he had discovered that Hyatt had only a verbal license thus to use the water, which could at any time be revoked, and he asks damages to the amount of $500 for failure of title to the water. The defendants denied the allegation that the water privilege was of great value to the premises, and no evidence was given on that point, nor is there any finding in relation to it. From the facts appearing in the case and the allegations in the pleadings, neither the plaintiff nor Seeley were entitled to any relief on the ground of want of title in Hyatt to the water, and the pipes by which it was conducted. For aught that appears in the complaint, Seeley knew of the defect of title before he took possession of the premises under the agreement. It is alleged that he made the discovery of Hyatt's want of title after the death of Hyatt, which occurred a week before the time for fulfilling the contract and the day Seeley took possession. Seeley did not testify where he acquired his knowledge of this defect of title. He made the same omission in his affidavit to obtain a rehearing of the order, which was finally reversed by this court. The inference is fair, from these circumstances, that he had such knowledge on the day the contract was to have been fulfilled; and if so, he waived all claim to relief on that ground, by taking possession of the premises. He also waived it by assenting to the order of the 6th of June, and by his omission to appeal from that order. It may be that the court, at an earlier day, would have relieved the vendee upon satisfactory evidence that he was mistaken in the effect of that order, and that the loss or danger of loss of the water privilege materially affected the value of the premises. But after so long a delay, during which time the vendee occupied *360 the premises, and for aught that appears enjoyed the undisturbed use of the water as it was accustomed to run since 1838, a period of over twenty years, the vendee and the plaintiff should be held to have waived any right to damages on account of the defect of title to the water.

The judgment in this case should be reversed, the parties should be restored to the condition which they occupied when this action was commenced, and the plaintiff should be directed to take proceedings under the order of the 6th of June, 1848, to perfect his title to the premises.

WRIGHT, DAVIES and BALCOM, JJ. concurred.

SELDEN and EMOTT, JJ. were for affirming the judgment. MARVIN, J. was in doubt.

Judgment reversed.