2 Barb. 270 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
The paper first subscribed by the plaintiffs and the defendant McGown Was intended as a minute or memorandum of a contract to be drawn and executed at a future period. It was however subsequently treated by the parties to it as a contract, and must now be considered as such. It contained an imperfect description of the land, had no date, and did not specify the time when the agreement was to be performed. It is Competent, however, for the parties to a contract to go into parol evidence more clearly to define its subject matter, provided such evidence is merely explanatory, and not contradictory. The defect in-description, in this case, was cured and additional evidence rendered unnecessary, by the admission in the answer of McGown that the lands intended to be conveyed were identical with those specified in the conveyance to the defendant Sandford. As no time was specified in the memorandum, for the conveyance of the property, the legal inference would be that it should be made in a reasonable time. The day settled by the parties was the 1st of the following month of May. It was competent for them to fix the time by parol, as the statute, (2 R. S. 69, § 8,) does not require that such particular should be in writing. The time was next extended by the parties to the 1st of November following, and subsequently to the 15th of that month. There was a mutuality which was a sufficient consideration for the agreement of each party for such extensions. It appears from the testimony of Mr. Adr-iance, Who was examined for the plaintiffs and was the only witness in the cause, that they were not ready to perform the agreement on their part, either on the 1st of May or
It has been contended that the transaction between the plaintiffs and McGown, on the 9th of December, was a waiver of the objection on his part arising from the non-performance of the contract by the plaintiffs on the 15th of November. I do not view it in that light. Mr. Adriance testifies that one reason
But the agreement made on the 9th of December was never consummated. The money was not paid on that day. True, McGown consented to waive the objection arising from such non-payment, if the money should be paid on the following day. But it was not then paid, and there is no principle which would justify this court in extending the waiver beyond the time fixed by the party himself. I repeat, that we cannot make a new agreement between the parties. Nor, if we could, should I feel disposed to do it, after such repeated delays, and for which no satisfactory excuse is offered.
By holding that the plaintiffs have forfeited their right to claim a conveyance of the lands in question by reason of the delay, I adopt no more stringent rule than was laid down by
The deed from Mrs. McGown is imperfectly described, nor is it stated whether the delivery of it to Mr. Adriance was absolute or conditional. If it conveyed the title of the land to the defendant McGown, as the plaintiffs contend, that could in no manner benefit them in this controversy. It assuredly vested no equitable estate in them ; as there was no valid and subsisting contract between them and McGown. If the original contract bad still been operative as between the parties to it, the plaintiffs could not have set up this unrecorded deed against, the other defendants if they were bona fide purchasers without, notice; as the conveyance to them was recorded. It is said that some of the subsequent purchasers had notice of the contract between McGown and the complainants before they acquired their title to the premises. True, one of them had been informed of the existence of such contract by Mr. Adriance, but subsequently, and before the purchase, he was told by the same person that it was broken off. It is contended that this intended purchaser should have made further inquiry, but I can see no reason for that. The source of information was the same in both instances. As much credit was justly due to one statement as to the other. Besides, as to some of the purchasers
The fact that the plaintiffs were ignorant of the want of power in McGown to convey the title when the bill was filed is not averred in the bill, nor does it any where appear; nor, if it
So much of the decree as directs a reference to a master tq ascertain and report the amount of damages sustained by the. plaintiffs, by reason of the refusal of the defendant McGown tq convey to them, must be reversed. And the bill must be dismissed, with costs, and the plaintiffs must pay the costs of both appeals.