1 Abb. Pr. 300 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1865
No other objections to the enforcement of the specific performance of this contract are made, than the want of mutuality, and the failure on the pai;t of the plaintiff to perform offer to perform, within* the stipulated time. Sections 729, 736 of Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, vol. 2,^ are cited in support of the proposition as to want of mutuality, but I do not see that they are directly applicable. On the contrary, the same author, at section 736, a. states as follows,—“But it is not necessary to the specific performance of a written agreement that it should be signed by the party seeking to enforce it; if the agreement is certain, fair and just, in all its parts, and signed by the party sought to be charged, that is sufficient; the want of mutuality is no objection to its enforcements The following authorities are cited in support of this doctrine. Woodward v. Aspinwall, 3 Sandf. Ch., 292; In re Hunter, 1 Edw. Ch., 1; McCrea v. Purmort, 16 Wend., 460 ; Clason v. Bailey, 14 Johns., 484.
It is not objected that the contract relates to a class of property, in regard#to which it is not usual to, direct a specific performance, upon the ground that the party has an adequate remedy at law in damages. But if such objection had been taken, I think it ought not to have been sustained. 1. Because
The other objection to a specific performance, to wit: the omission to perform within the time to which the right of performance was extended by the stipulation or understanding, and conduct of the parties,—involves a question of fact. The judge at the special term before whom the cause was tried, has examined that question with care, has evidently given it much attention, and, notwithstanding the criticisms of the learned counsel for the appellant, was, I think, warranted in his conclusions upon a view of the testimony, which, on scrutinizing the witnesses, he was permitted to take.
I do not deem it necessary to review the facts, nor to restate the conclusions, which the testimony justifies. I am, myself, of opinion that upon the plaintiff’s version, of the conduct and understanding of the parties, the contract was fairly open for performance up to the 28th of February, and that the unequivocal refusal of the defendant to perform on that day, either rendered an absolute tender and offer to perform before suit brought unnecessary, or made the tender on the 16th of March as preliminary to the institution of a suit for specific performance in season, especially as the court below did not charge the defendant with costs.
I am, therefore, of opinion, if we are to put the same interpretation upon the character of the contract that the judge did at the trial of the cause, that the judgment should be affirmed with the costs of appeal.
This makes it unnecessary to examine the other question made in the case, to wit: whether the whole transaction was not in the like nature of a security for the loan of money.
If that question be open for examination here, and doubt in regard to the other aspect of the case made it expedient for the plaintiff to prevent it, I should be loth to enter upon the ex-
I am for affirming the judgment of the court below with costs.
Present-, Hogeboom, Miller and Ingalls, JJ,