Boyce's Executors v. Grundy

28 U.S. 210, 7 L. Ed. 655, 3 Pet. 210, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by246 cases

This text of 28 U.S. 210 (Boyce's Executors v. Grundy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyce's Executors v. Grundy, 28 U.S. 210, 7 L. Ed. 655, 3 Pet. 210, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 535 (1830).

Opinion

Mr Justice Johnson delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from the decree of the circuit court of West, Tennessee, rendered in a case in which the appellee was complainant.

The bill was filed to obtain the rescisión of an agreement entered into on the 3d of July 1818, between James Boyce, the appellants’testator and devisor, and the complainant,'for the sale of a tract of land lying on the Homochito river, in the state of Mississippi.

The grounds set forth in the bill are, fraudulent misrepresentations.

1. As to the testator’s title to the land. 2. As to the locality of the land. 3. As to the liability of the land to inundation. 4. As to the general description of the character and quality of part of the land not examined by complainant.

We have weighed the allegations of fraud contained in the bill, and are well satisfied that they are material, and such as entitle the complainant to relief if substantiated.

We have also considered the evidence introduced by the, complainant, and compared it with the rebutting testimony *215 introduced by the appellants, and are of opinion that the testimony in support of complainant’s allegations is full to the purpose of sustaining his bill, and the credibility of his witnesses fully established, wherever it has been necessary; so that in those points in which it has been contradicted by the appellants’ witnesses, we cannot avoid giving credit to that of the complainant.

The decree below must therefore be sustained, unless the appellants can prevail upon some legal ground which,will except this case from the general rules on this subject. The' first and principal ground taken is, that the court of law was competent to give relief, and that this court should refuse relief, as well on the general principle as affirmed in the judiciary act, as because:

1. That the complainant was not prompt in insisting upon the fraud as soon as discovered; and

2. Because he did not avail himself of it in a plea to the action .at law.

This court has.been often called upon to consider the sixteenth section of the judiciary act of 1789, and as often, either expressly or by the course of its decisions, has held, that it is merely declaratory, making no alteration whatever in the rulés of equity on the subject of legal remedy. It is not enough that there is a remedy at law; it must be plain and adequate; or in other words, as practical and as efficient to, the ends of justice and its prompt administration, as the remedy in equity.

In Hie case before us, although the defence of fraud might have* been resorted to, and ought- to have been sustained in that particular suit, and I will add, would have greatly aided, the complainant in a bill to rescind, yet it was obviously not a» adequate remedy, because it was a partial one. The complainant would still haye been left to renew the contest upon a series of suits; and that probably after the death o.f witnesses.

That he was bound to be prompt in communicating the fraud when discovered, and consistent in his notice to the opposite party of the use he proposed to make of the discovery, cannot be questioned. But we cannot concede to the *216 appellants’ counsel, that the complainant was chargeable with delay or inconsistency in the particulars.

In his bill he alleges that the fraud did not come to his knowledge until 1321, and that he forthwith gave notice to James Boyce, that he might resume possession of the premises, and receive the rents and profits, for that he would not comply with the contract; which notice he repeated to the appellants after Boyce’s death.

It has been argued that the testimony establ’shes. an earlier notice, and even a contemporaneous notice of the facts which the complainant alleges were concealed or misrepresented.

The misrepresentations relied upon are of two classes : those which relate to the land, and those which relate to the title.

As to the title; the case furnishes no ground for imputing to. the complainant contemporaneous notice of the involved state it was in. The evidence of the fact of representation on this subject, rests chiefly on the deed- and the letters from Port Gibson. From these it clearly appears, that so far as relates to the two hundred acres purchased from Ellis, the complainant could not, even at the time of sale, have been put on inquiries respecting the title. For the deed expressly imports that the whole land sold was comprised within the grant to Davis. With regard to the land actually comprised within the grant to Davis, if the agreement to make a present sale of land, for which there was to be made present and successive payments to a large amount within four years, does -not imply a present title or a. present power to sell, it certainly amounts'to a representation, that at the end of four years the seller would be able to make a clear title.

But since, upon the discovery made at Port Gibson, the notice given by the complainant was not of an intention to rescind, but of a claim for a deduction pro jrata, and since .time is expressly given to the extent of four years to make title to. the whole tract; we will not affirm that, in the absence of any proof of positive loss from want of title in the interval, if the party had been able to make title when the bill was filed, and had so answered, and duly set out the title *217 tobe tendered, that it would have been a case for relief. But the defendants in their answer go into an exposition of the only title they can offer, and that is so involved and imperfect, that a court of equity would not even refer it. If then the appellants were now before this court, under a bill for a specific performance, it is clear that they must be turned out of court, being incompetent on their part to fulfil the contract. The rules of law relating to specific performance and those applied to the rescisión of contracts, although not identically the same, have a near affinity to each other.

Again, if the object of the complainant’s bill had been confined to obtaining an injunction until he could receive from defendant a good title to the land; can it be doubted that where the cause of action at law is a covenant in the same deed which stipulates for such a title, that he would be injoined until he made a title And if so, how long is this state of suspense to be tolerated The title was to be made in four years; this certainly amounts to a. representation that he would be able to make title at that time ; but twelve years have now elapsed, and still it is not pretended that a clear legal estate has been acquired.

In excuse for this, it is urged that the complainant committed the first fault; that had he been punctual in his payments, Boyce would have been able to procure to be executed to himself, a title that would - have enabled- him to comply with his agreement. But the state of his title is before us, and a mere tender of money was not sufficient to give him a legal estate. He must still have passed through the delays and casualties incident to a suit in equity, before he could have acquired such an estate as would have satisfied the just claims of the complainant. The case, however, furnishes a more conclusive answer to this argument.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 U.S. 210, 7 L. Ed. 655, 3 Pet. 210, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyces-executors-v-grundy-scotus-1830.