Finley v. Aiken

1 Grant 83, 1855 Pa. LEXIS 250
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 5, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 Grant 83 (Finley v. Aiken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finley v. Aiken, 1 Grant 83, 1855 Pa. LEXIS 250 (Pa. 1855).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered

by Lowrie, J.

— The first question here is, may specific performance be decreed under our law of a contract for the sale of land, at the suit of the vendor against the vendée ?

The law which is supposed to give this remedy has existed for nearly twenty years, and the courts and the profession have, during all that time, received and acted upon it as being, without doubt, intended to give it. 1 W. & S. 554; 15 State R. 429; 21 Ib. 50; Brightly’s R. 135; 1 Parsons, 37, 422.

If we have been in error in this, then all such decrees made in the Common Pleas of Philadelphia, and in original cases in this court, were without authority; for in all those instances, unlike those in the District Court of Allegheny county, the jurisdiction depends upon the legitimacy of the form of the suit, and not upon its subject-matter.

[92]*92The legislature has not regarded this practice as erroneous; otherwise they would have corrected us, in passing the Act of 1845, P. L. 158, when they were providing for appeals in equity cases, including expressly decrees for specific performance of such contracts. Or they would have corrrected us in some of the numerous acts by which the remedy intended by the original law has been extended to many places to which it did not originally apply.

It is not at all a strange form of remedy, for it exists in the Orphans’ Court as a means of enforcing such contracts, and no other is allowed if one of the contractors be dead. 19 State R. 485. It is well known in England, and in most of the States of the Union, and is therefore among our most familiar ideas. And besides, in its substance, it is just like very many other actions, for it is intended to make persons perform the very thing they have contracted or are bound to do; and does not allow them to elect to violate their duties, and run the risk of the damages which the other party may recover.

We have attempted in some instances to reach the same object by modifications of our action of covenant, but the. result has constrained us often to acknowledge that the substitute is bungling and inadequate, and that the equity remedy is better, and ought to be encouraged. 10 State R. 273, 279, 280; 11 Id. 387; 12 Id. 56; 13 Id. 282.

Hence it seems to follow very naturally that some new legislation should be had on this subject; and it does not seem unreasonable to suppose that it would be influenced, if not guided, by the light shed upon the subject by the experience of other States, with whose practice the profession is familiar. To this practice the law does expressly refer, when it gives to our courts the jurisdiction and powers of a court of chancery; for no such court was in existence here. And it is as clearly referred to in all the specifications of power granted, for they all relate to matters of well-known chancery jurisdiction elsewhere, and many of them to matters which had long ago been imported into our law. It refers us, for the general form of practice, to that of the Supreme Court of the United States, which, like that of the State courts, in all its main features, is copied from the English courts. In form and substance, therefore, the statute refers us to the practice of our neighbors for a complete understanding of the scope and action of our own legislation; and certainly it is not wrong to learn from the experience of others in matters wherein we are ourselves without experience.

The clause which,is especially relevant here, affords “specific relief when a recovery in damages would be an inadequate remedy;” and it is not disputed that the action of covenant, which is the appropriate common law remedy in such cases, gives [93]*93only damages, and does not enforce performance. 11 S. & R. 244; Platt on Cov. 448, 513, 543, 546. When, therefore, we notice, in addition, that in the usual equity language, the term “specific relief” is a generic term, including “specific performance” as one of its species, we have nothing left to decide, except that a recovery in damages is not in equity regarded as an adequate remedy for a breach of contract for the sale of land.

Now nothing is better settled than that a recovery in damages is regarded as an inadequate remedy in cases where they are estimable only by conjecture, and not by any accurate standard, and this is one of the very grounds on which the remedy by injunction is based. 3 Railw. C. 106, 345; 4 Id. 186; 1 Sim. & S. 607; 3 Atk. 21; 6 Johns. Ch. 501; 16 Pick. 525; 3 Whart. 513. See also the late case of The Commonwealth v. The Pitts. & Conn. R. R. Co. And this consideration, enforced by the morality of the requisition that men shall perform their contracts if they can, and by the immorality of sanctioning their violation of them on their payment of damages, is one of the very grounds on which equity decrees specific performance, and it is a sufficient one. This reason applies to the duty of both vendor and vendee; for damages for a breach of contract for the sale of land can have no standard, except that which arises from a comparison between the real value of the land sold and the contract price, and everybody knows how conjectural and uncertain are all the estimates of the value of land by different persons; and how very uncertain, therefore, is the only standard on which a recovery in damages can be based.

It seems to us, therefore, that our practice heretofore has not been wrong; that specific performance is one of the forms of “specific relief” intended by the statute; that the test of inadequacy of damages reveals clearly its equitable character; and that, finding ourselves referred by the statute to the chaneery practice elsewhere for our guide, and seeing that everywhere else the equity remedy is allowed in such a case as this, we are not justified in excepting it out of our law. The objection is not so strong with us as elsewhere, that equity cases are tried without the aid of a jury; for all our courts have juries, and may order issues on disputed points of fact, and ought to do so if requested, whenever there is any reasonable ground of dispute.

On the merits of this cause, however, I am instructed to say, that a majority of the court is of opinion that there is such evidence of failure of title to a part of the land sold, and of misrepresentation in relation to its true boundaries, as ought to have prevented a decree of specific performance. We have some difficulty in agreeing on the reasons for this conclusion; and therefore, and because this cause may come before a jury in another form of action, we shall not offer to give any.

[94]*94Decree. — April 5, 1855. — This cause came on for hearing on an appeal from the decree of the District Court of Allegheny county, and was argued by counsel at September term, 1853, and re-argued at September term, 1854; and now, on mature consideration thereof, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the said decree of the District Court be reversed and set aside, and that the plaintiff’s bill be dismissed at his costs; and it is further ordered, that the receiver appointed by the said District Court, pendente lite, do account with the plaintiff, under the direction of the said court, for the rents and profits of the land in controversy, which have been or ought to have been received by him, by virtue' of his appointment, and. the cause is remanded to the said District Court, with directions to carry this decree into execution.

This opinion was adopted by Lewis, C.

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1 Grant 83, 1855 Pa. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-aiken-pa-1855.