Champion v. Brown

6 Johns. Ch. 398, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 180, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 7
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 23, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 6 Johns. Ch. 398 (Champion v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champion v. Brown, 6 Johns. Ch. 398, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 180, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 7 (N.Y. 1822).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

(1.) The first and leading question is, whether the bill can be sustained by Champion and Storrs, as vendors, against the defendants, claiming by purchase under the vendee.

The title in law never passed out of the vendors, though in equity, by virtue of the agreement to sell, the estate was in the vendee, and was in him transmissible by descent, and devisable by will.

[401]*401The covenant, on the part of the defendants, was in the alternative; it was, that they would take and cancel the contract that Paddock had made with the vendors, by the first day of August thereafter, or, in case of the refusal of C, and S. to give up and cancel it, they would indemnify and save harmless the administrators of P. from all damages and costs to arise by reason of his covenants. The bill does not state, distinctly and affirmatively, any specific breach of these covenants on the part of the defendants. It may be inferred from the bill, that C. and S. refused to give up tlieir contract with P., because the bill is silent on the subject of demand, and consent or refusal, and claims a specific performance of that contract. There is no breach assigned as to this part of the alternative, and it is not averred, that the administrators have sustained any damage from the breach of the covenants of their intestate. There has been no demand made upon them, or suit brought against them for non-payment of the instalments. Such a suit would have been useless, if another averment in the bill be true, which is, that there are no assets, real or personal, by which they could be enabled to perform the covenants of Paddock,

The defendants purchased the contract from the administrators of P. after non-payment of the first instalment, and before the second instalment became due, and they took possession of the land, and have exercised various acts of ownership over it, and made great havoc of the timber, but have made no payments on the first contract., or taken it up. The prayer of the bill is, that they be decreed to perform Paddock's contract, according to their covenant with his administrators. But, strictly, and in terms, they have not broken their covenants with the administrators; and the only ground upon which, as it appears to me, that the bill can be sustained on the part of the plaintiffs, C, and S., is, that the defendants took the land, subject to the lien that the vendors had upon it under the contract with [402]*402Paddock. It is not to be supposed that C. and S. can sustain the bill on the personal covenants from P. to them. There was no privity or communication between L. and and the defendants. The latter are under no personal engagement to the vendors, and if they are liable to C. and iS., it is only in respect to the estate in their possession.

I do not perceive the authority under which the administrators assigned the contract of P., and it may be doubted whether the defendants were entitled to fulfil the original contract, and could compel a deed from C. and S., without the valid assent of the heirs of P., to whom the benefit of his contract belonged. In equity, the land contracted for descended to them as real estate, and they were entitled to call upon the administrators to dis- , , charge the contract out of the proceeds oí the personal estate, (if a'ny there were,) so as to enable the heirs to demand and receive a deed. But, admitting the contract to have been duly assigned, the vendors could not have compelled the. defendants to have paid the money. In this sense, they could not have exacted from them a specific performance of the contract of P. But I think they were entitled, by virtue of their lien, to call upon the defendants, as assignees of the contract of the vendee, to pay up the purchase money,, or surrender up the land, or to have it sold for the benefit of the vendors, and perhaps to account for the intermediate rents and profits, and the waste committed. The remedy, by the vendor, against the assignee, may be said to be in rem rather than in personam. This is the case when the suit is by the vendee against a purchaser from the vendor.

Where there is a contract for the purit*descends,"¿n, equity, to the beirs of the vendee; and on^the^dmi1nistrators to discharge the contract out of the personal estate, so as to enable the "heirs to demand a conveyance from Ihe vendor.

The administrators of ¡the vendee cannot assign a contract for land, or compel its performance, without the assent of the heirs.

The vendor has, by virtue of his lien on the land, a right to call on the assignee of the vendee, who. has taken possession of the land, un- $ der the con- ' tract, to pay the purchase [403]*403money, or surrender up the possession of the land, or to have it sold for the benefit of the vendor* If a person who has con^ tracted to sell land, refuses to perform his contract, and sells the land to a third person, for a valuable consideration, such purchaser, if he have notice of the equitable title of the vendee, under the contract, may be compelled to convey the land to him.

[402]*402It is well settled, that if A. enters into .a contract to sell land to B., and afterwards refuses to perform his contract, and sells- the land to C., for a valuable consideration, B. may, by bill, compel the purchaser to convey to him, provided he be chargeable with notice, at the time of his purchase, of S.’s equitable title under the agreement. (Lord [403]*403Macclesfield, in Atcherly v. Vernon, 10 Mod. 518. Winged v. Lofebury, 2 Eq. Cas. Ab. 32. pl. 43. Taylor v. Stibbert, 2 Ves. jun. 437. Daniels v. Davison, 16 Ves. 249. 17 Ves. 433. S. C.) The rule that affects the purchaser is just as plain as that which would entitle the vendee to a specific performance against the vendor. If he be a purchaser, with notice, he is liable to the same equity j stands in his place, and is bound to do that, which the person he represents would be bound to do by the decree. The purchaser from the vendor takes the estate subject to the charge, and so, I apprehend, does a purchaser from the vendee, and he is equally responsible in respect to the estate. The vendor cannot make him personally liable for the purchase money, but the estate is liable, and if he be a purchaser with notice, it is the same thing whether the estate had or had not been actually conveyed by the vendor.

It was said, in Green v. Smith, (1 Atk. 572.) and had been so held long before, in Davie v. Beardsham, (1 Ch. Cas. 39.) that from the time of a contract for the sale of land, the vendor, as to the land, is considered a trustee for the purchaser, and the vendee, as to the money, a trustee for the vendor. A biíí will lie by the vendor for the purchase money, or for the balance that may remain due, because the vendor has a lien upon the land for the purchase money. In Mackreth v. Symmons, (15 Ves. 329.) Lord Eldon held, that the vendor’s lien for the purchase money unpaid, existed subject to certain exceptions, not o.nly against the vendee, but against purchasers with notice, claiming under the vendee.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Johns. Ch. 398, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 180, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champion-v-brown-nychanct-1822.