Dixon v. Dixon

48 A. 152, 92 Md. 432, 1901 Md. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 48 A. 152 (Dixon v. Dixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixon v. Dixon, 48 A. 152, 92 Md. 432, 1901 Md. LEXIS 113 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

*436 McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The appeal in this case was taken from a decree passed by Circuit Court No. 2, of Baltimore City. The decree directs the specific performance of an alleged contract for the sale of land. The bill of complaint was filed by the appellees, who are the vendors. The defendants, who are the vendees and appellants, answered. To several paragraphs of this answer the appellees excepted. These exceptions were sustained and leave was given to answer further. Thereupon the appellants demurred to the bill upon the ground that the contract of sale set out therein was vague, indefinite and uncertain and not capable of being enforced. Testimony was taken and to much of it exceptions were filed by the appellants. Finally the demurrer was overruled, the exceptions to the testimony were disallowed and the decree appealed from was signed. It is apparent from this statement that it will be necessary at the outset to examine the averments of the bill and answer, because, from these averments the questions governing this controversy arise.

Upon turning to the bill it will be found that the third paragraph is the one which sets out the agreement. That paragraph is in these words : “Your orators further allege that they heretofore agreed to sell to the defendants, and the defendants did heretofore enter into a written agreement with the said William T. Dixon, dated the 30th day of March, 1899, and signed by them, by which agreement they did contract to purchase the said William T. Dixon’s one-half interest in the said property, known as No. 34 Hopkins Place and 33 South Liberty street, Baltimore, at forty-two thousand five hundred dollars. And your orator files herewith a true copy of the said agreement, marked “Exhibit Agreement,” the original of which was duly delivered to and is now in the possession of the said William T. Dixon.” The exhibit to which reference is made reads as follows: “Baltimore, Md., Mr. William T. Dixon. We will accept your offer to buy your half interest in the property known as 34 Hopkins Place and 33 S. Liberty street, Baltimore^ at $42,500, March 30th, 1899.” Signed Julia B. Dixon, Robert B. Dixon.

*437 This is the agreement relied on, and its sufficiency, certainty and mutuality are assailed by the demurrer. The paragraphs of the answer which were excepted to and were exscinded by the Court set forth, in substance, that the property in question had been owned by William T. Dixon and John B. Dixon as tenants in common ; that they had been co-partners in business ; that John B. Dixon died intestate, and upon his death his undivided interest in this property vested in his widow and son, the two appellants; that William T. Dixon, the surviving partner, undertook the settlement of the firm’s business ; that the father of William T. Dixon and John B. Dixon died leaving a considerable estate, to a portion of which John B. Dixon was entitled ; that the settlement of that estate devolved upon William T. Dixon ; that it was understood between the appellees and the appellants, and was in fact part of the terms of the agreement for the sale by the appellants of their undivided interest in the property in controversy to the appellees, that everything connected with and in anyway arising out of these different relations should be investigated and settled and that all things not heretofore accounted for in these matters should be adjusted before the appellants would be asked to pay the purchase ' price for the property, so that any funds to which they might be entitled from these sources could be used by them in paying for the property. The expurgation of this defense from the answer, and its consequent disallowace, is the second error of which the appellants complain. These two branches of the case present two distinct propositions ; and these propositions are, first, that the contract set up in the bill cannot be specifically enforced because it is too indefinite and vague and is lacking in mutuality ; secondly, that the facts recited in the answer, if true, show that it would be inequitable and unjust to enforce the contract by a decree of a Court of equity, and would justify that Court in remitting the parties complaining to a Court of law for redress. Of these in their order.

It is thoroughly well settled and perfectly understood that the granting of relief, by way of specific performance, is not a matter of light, but one which rests in the sound judicial as *438 contradistinguished from the arbitrary discretion of the Court. This discretion is one which is regulated by fixed and established rules. The relief will be afforded or denied as the circumstances of each case may warrant. Krafts. Egan, 78 Md. 36; Semmes v. Worthington, 38 Md. 298. Amongst these rules there is probably none more familiar than that which requires every agreement to be fair, reasonable, bona fide, certain in all its parts, mutual and founded on a good or valuable consideration in order that it may merit the interposition of a Court of equity. We have no occasion to deal with any of these elements save those of certainty and mutuality. Now, what is meant by certainty and mutuality as applied to contracts which are sought to be specifically enforced ? And how does the contract set up compare with the standard fixed by the adjudged cases ? The contract must be definite and certain in its terms and must be free not only from all ambiguity, but likewise free from all shade or color of ambiguity. Miller's Eq. Pro., sec. 683 and cases in notes 1 and 2. It must be so clearly proven as to satisfy the Court that it constitutes the actual agreement between the parties. Horner v. Woodland, 88 Md. 512. If this were not the rule Courts might “ enforce precisely what the parties never did intend or contemplate.” Waters v. Howard, 8 Gill, 277. There must be a description of the property sold and the terms upon which it has been sold must be stated. These terms include not only the price to be paid, but ordinarily the time the payment is to be made; though it has been held that a contract to give a mortgage was not defective by reason of no time being named for the payment of the mortgage debt, because in such a case a reasonable time in the discretion of the Court would be allowed. Triebert v. Burgess et al., 11 Md. 463—4. Where all of the terms do not appear, or where it is manifest from the nature of the contract that there are or may be other terms not disclosed, there would be no such certainty as this doctrine of equity demands. The bill alleges that there was a written agreement between the parties, and it refers to the exhibit already quoted as the “ said agreement.” When that paper is read, whilst it sufficiently describes *439 the property, Kraft and Winebrener v. Egan, 76 Md. 243, it reveals at once the fact that it is not an agreement, but simply an acceptance of an antecedent offer. When a contract is made by an offer and an acceptance both constitute the contract. Wills v. Carpenter, 75 Md. 84. Neither the one nor the other by itself will make the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 152, 92 Md. 432, 1901 Md. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-dixon-md-1901.