Bogan v. Daughdrill

51 Ala. 312
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 51 Ala. 312 (Bogan v. Daughdrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bogan v. Daughdrill, 51 Ala. 312 (Ala. 1874).

Opinion

BRICKELL, J.

The object of the bill is the specific performance of contracts of purchase of real estate, made by the complainant with the defendants. From the pleadings and proofs it appears, that the defendants, Bogan and Webb, jointly owned a tract of land, on which was located a steam saw-mill, and other fixtures, and that they separately made a sale of their respective interests to the complainant. The contract with Bogan was reduced to writing, in the form of a bond for title, by which he covenanted to convey to the complainant on the payment of the purchase-money. The contract with Webb was by parol.

1. When a contract respecting real estate is in writing, is certain, fair in all its parts, founded on an adequate consideration, and capable .of execution, a specific performance in a court of equity is as much a matter of right, as damages for its breach in a court of law. 2 Story’s Equity, § 751; Willard’s Equity, 262; Rogers v. Sanders, 16 Maine, 97.

2. The answer of Bogan admits the sale to complainant, and its terms, as alleged in the bill. It also admits the execution of the bond for title, but denies that he thereby covenanted to convey any other or greater interest in the lands than he had, which was an undivided half interest. The bond for title has been lost, and the allegations of the bill, as to the extent of its covenants, are loose and vague — whether it was a covenant by Bogan to convey the entire title, or only an undivided half interest. No demurrer to the bill, because of its vagueness in this respect, was interposed. The proof is not more definite than the allegations of the bill. Is the uncertainty of the bill and evidence in this respect an obstacle to the specific performance of the contract ? A correspondence between the pleadings and proofs is more rigidly exacted in cases of specific performance, than in perhaps any other class of cases of which a court of equity has jurisdiction. The contract of which performance is sought must be clearly alleged and proved; and its terms must be so specific and distinct, as to leave no reasonable doubt of their meaning. The jurisdiction to enforce specific performance is cautiously and carefully exercised, and the court must clearly see that it is enforcing the contract the parties [315]*315made, of which, the pleadings must give distinct information, and not a contract which it may make for them in the solution of vague, uncertain, doubtful, or conflicting testimony. Avery v. Echols, 18 Ala. 353; Goodwin v. Lyon, 4 Port. 297. These two cases are illustrative of the rule. In the first, there was a parol contract for the sale of land, specific performance of which was sought. The purchase-money was partially unpaid, and the proof left it uncertain whether it was payable in four or five annual instalments. Because of the uncertainty of the proof in this respect a specific performance was refused. But the court say, if the purchase-money had been fully paid, the necessity of alleging and proving the time when it was payable would, perhaps, have been superseded. In the other case, performance of a parol contract for the sale of lands was also sought. The proofs were uncertain and contradictory as to its terms, both as to amount and time of payment of the purchase-money, which was unpaid in part, though the vendee had taken possession.

The manifest difference between those cases and this is, that in each of them a material element of the contract, an element which the court must have compelled to be performed, was left in doubt. In neither of them, could the court properly render a decree, which did not compel the payment of the purchase-money. No computation of this could be made, unless the time of payment was definitely ascertained. In this case, whether the bond for title bound the defendant Bogan to convey a perfect title, an entire title to the lands, or bound him only to a conveyance of his undivided interest, it is incapable of specific performance in a court of equity, except to the extent of his interest. It would furnish a ground for damages at law, that he could not convey to the extent of his covenant; or, in a proper case, would, in a court of equity, furnish a ground for the rescission of the contract of purchase. When specific performance is sought, the party seeking it is entitled only to a conveyance of such interest as the vendor has, and can rightfully convey. Fry on Specific Performance, §§ 299, 300. The legal effect of the bond for title, so far as it can enter into the decree sought in this case, is the same, whether it covenanted to convey the entire title, or only the title of the covenantor. It can here have no other operation, than to entitle the covenantee to a specific performance, to the extent of the covenantor’s interest. Therefore, a discrepancy in the pleadings and proofs, as to whether it contained a covenant for the entire title, or only for the title of the vendor, is not material. It cannot affect the decree, or the rights of the parties in this suit. Drury v. Conner, 6 Harris & Johns. 488; 3 Parsons on Contracts, 354.

[316]*3163. The part of the purchase-money not paid at the time of the sale, agreed to be paid to Bogan, was payable in Confederate treasury-notes. It was not paid at the close of the war, either wholly or partially. The parties were disputing as to the amount which was unpaid, and as to the extent of the purchaser’s liability. They submitted their dispute to arbitration, and the arbitrators awarded the purchaser should pay Bogan a specific sum, and that he should convey one hundred and sixty acres of the land, including the parcel on which the mill and fixtures had been located. It is insisted that the award is void, because it directs a conveyance of the land, and this is a matter not embraced in the submission. An award must conform to the submission. That is the limit of the authority conferred on the arbitrators, and in so far as it is exceeded, the award is void. But, when an award covers the matters submitted, and embraces others not submitted, as a general rule it is valid as to the matters submitted, and void only as to the matters not submitted. It is void only for the excess of authority. Caldwell on Arbitration, 276. Conceding to the defendant Bogan the invalidity of the award, so far as it directs a conveyance of the land, its validity, so far as it determined and declared the amount of the purchase-money, is not affected. With the award, to that extent, the complainant offered to comply, but his offer was rejected.

As to Bogan, then, we think a contract fair in all its parts, certain, founded on an adequate consideration, and capable of performance, is established, entitling the complainant as against him to a specific performance.

4. It is said the bill avers a contract for the sale of more than four hundred acres, while the chancellor renders a decree enforcing it as to eighty acres only; that if the proofs entitled the complainant to a decree for eighty acres only, their there was a discrepancy between the pleading and proof, as to the subject-matter of the sale, which is fatal to the decree. It is a general rule, at law and in equity, that a plaintiff may be permitted to recover a part only of what he claims — that he shall not be turned out of court, when the proofs fix his right of recovery, but lessen its measure from that averred in his pleading. In the case of Graham v. Gates (6 Har. & Johns.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Ala. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bogan-v-daughdrill-ala-1874.