Borel v. Mead

3 N.M. 84
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 N.M. 84 (Borel v. Mead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borel v. Mead, 3 N.M. 84 (N.M. 1884).

Opinions

Axtell, C. J.

This is a case of an option or what is sometimes called bonding a mine. The owners of the mine, defendants herein, desiring to sell their mine, entered into a written agreement, in form of a penal bond, with plaintiffs, that upon payment by them to defendants at a future day, of a stipulated sum of money, defendants would convey to plaintiffs their mine. This agreement is in writing, is certain and fair in all its parts, is capable of being performed, and is under defendants’thand and seal. Plaintiffs signed no agreement. Upon the day stipulated in said agreement, plaintiffs tendered the sum of money agreed upon and demanded the mine; defendants declined the money, and refused to comply with their agreement. Plaintiffs bring this suit in equity, and ask the court to enforce the contract. Defendants demur to plaintiffs’ bill for want of equity and set up as specific ground of demurrer that the bill does not show upon its face what the consideration was, if any, that defendants had or were to receive for entering into the contract to convey; also that there was no mutuality; that the contract.was unilateral; that defendants alone were bound. The court sustained the demurrer, and plaintiffs appealed.

To the first point, it is sufficient to say the contract being under seal, imports a consideration; to sustain the demurrer on the ground that there was not a valuable consideration was not only assuming the fact but also depriving the plaintiffs of an opportunity of proving a consideration. The contract being under seal, we must presume that there was a valuable consideration till the contrary is shown. The court, in sustaining the demurrer, prevented the plaintiffs from doing this.

As to the second point, the condition of mutuality is, in general, sufficiently satisfied if there be any consideration of the one side as well as the other. It is also held that a court of equity, in actions for the specific performance of optional contracts and covenants to lease and convey lands, will enforce the covenant, although the remedy is not mutual, provided it is shown to have been upon a fair ' consideration. So it is also held not to be 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 enforcement. The very nature of an option is unilateral; one party has property to sell, the other has only, perhaps, ability to make sales. The skill and ability of the one is the consideration which induces the other to bond the mine. If the agreement is fair in every respect, and neither party was deceived in making it, there can be no objection to enforcing it. There is certainly sufficient mutuality to support it, if we take the facts, as stated in the bill, to be true, and this the demurrer does. See 5 Wait’s Act. & Def. 788, and authorities there cited.

We are of opinion that the court below erred in sustaining the demurrer, and the case is remanded for further action in accordance with this opinion.

Bell, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the court below •sustaining a demurrer of the defendants to a bill in a suit for specific performance. The suit iá brought for the specific performance of what is claimed in the bill to be a contract to convey an interest in a -mining claim, situated in the Lake Yalley mining district, in the county of Grant, executed by one William Mead to the grantors of the plaintiffs. The instrument is one that is commonly called a mining bond. The defendants demurred to the bill, and set forth as grounds of their demurrer—First, that the said bill contains no matter of equity whereon this court can ground any decree, or give complainants, or either of them, any relief against defendants, or either nf said defendants; second, upon the facts stated in the said bill, the complainants have a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law for their alleged grievance, if any they have; third, the bond, memorandum in writing, contract, and agreements referred to in said bill, and upon which the said suit is professedly founded, is without consideration or mutuality between the parties thereto, and imposed no valid, binding, or equitable obligation on the -defendants which the court will enforce.

We shall not consider the first ground of demurrer separately, as it is disposed of by the reasoning applicable to the other two grounds, which we proceed to consider.

We do not think that the second ground or cause for demurrer is well founded. We do not think that the plaintiffs have a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law for their alleged grievance. In considering the question we are called upon to determine, if possible, what the real intent of the parties was at the time of the execution of the instrument in question. It seems entirely clear to us that at that, time the intent of the parties was that the plaintiffs’ assignor should be entitled, upon the payment of the sum of $3,300 within the time limited to the defendant Mead, to a good and sufficient conveyance of a one-third interest in the property referred to in the instrument. This intent is, we think, fairly to be inferred from an inspection of the instrument itself; and, in the absence of any proof of fraud, undue influence, or want of actual consideration, the instrument is-binding and valid, and can be enforced by a decree of a court of equity. That a court of equity has power to decree specific performance of such an instrument is well settled upon the best authority.

In the case of Ensign v. Kellogg, 4 Pick. 1, the court says, “we are satisfied that no subject is more proper for the power of a court of chancery in decreeing specific performance than a contract for the sale of real estate; for what is agreed to be done ought in conscience to be done, nor is the remedy at law for damages complete or adequate, for the thing contracted for is wanted,—and the value in money may often be unsatisfactory compensation.”

That case was one brought upon a bond in a penal sum conditioned for the conveyance of certain real estate upon the payment-of a stipulated price. In that ease, a part of the consideration was paid upon the making of the bond, and the remainder on the last day named in the condition, and in the case at bar the consideration for the mine was tendered within the time limited by the condition of the bond, and is to be regarded in law as paid when tendered. Upon this subject Judge Story says: “What these courts seek to be satisfied of, is that the transaction. in substance amounts to, and is intended to be, a binding agreement for a specific object, whatever may be the form or character of the instrument. Thus, if a bond with a-penalty is made upon condition to convey certain lands upon the-payment of a certain price, it will be deemed in equity an agreement to convey the land at all events, and not to be discharged by the payment of a penalty, although it has assumed the form of a condition only. Courts of equity, in all cases of this sort, look to the substance of the transaction and the primary object of the parties; and, where that requires a specific performance, they will treat the penalty as a mere security for its due performance and attainment.” 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 715; citing numerous authorities in support.

In the case of Dooley v.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.M. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borel-v-mead-nm-1884.