Forsyth v. Leslie

74 A.D. 517, 77 N.Y.S. 826

This text of 74 A.D. 517 (Forsyth v. Leslie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forsyth v. Leslie, 74 A.D. 517, 77 N.Y.S. 826 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Adams, P. J.:

Upon certain facts found by the learned trial justice the conclusions were reached that the descriptions of the premises embraced in the contract were so vague and uncertain as to render a convey- ■ anee thereof void and of no effect; that at the time specified in the contract for its performance, viz., January 31,1900, the plaintiff did not have a good marketable title to the premises, which, by the-, terms of the contract, he had agreed to convey; that he failed to furnish to the defendant the requisite tax and title searches of such property, and that he did not and could not make to the defendant a valid and sufficient tender of a deed of his premises, in accordance with the terms and requirements of the contract. Upon having reached these conclusions the court dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint and directed judgment in favor of the defendant for the sum of $135, expenses incurred by her, together with costs, and an additional allowance of $100.

We think the facts of this case, which, in the main, are undisputed, will not uphold these several conclusions, and that the judgment appealed from should, consequently, be reversed.

While it is doubtless true that the enforcement of the specific performance of a contract may be said to rest largely in the discre- . [521]*521tian of a court of equity, yet it is equally true that such discretion must he exercised not arbitrarily, but with due regard to established rules of equity, as well as to the circumstances of each particular case ; and if, notwithstanding all the objections raised by the defendant, it has been made to appear that the plaintiff had the legal title to the premises in question, and lias substantially fulfilled all the conditions which the. contract imposed upon him, or if it can be said that the defendant has waived the strict fulfillment of such conditions, a performance by her should be decreed. (Haberman v. Baker, 128 N. Y. 253.)

With this rule in mind the facts of the case can be considered in such manner as to enable us to more clearly appreciate to what extent, if any, they fail to sustain the conclusions reached by the learned trial court. And to that end let us first consider them so far as they bear upon the alleged ambiguity of the description of the various parcels of land referred to in the contract. It will be observed that in his written offer of exchange the plaintiff refers to his own premises as' “ 370 feet of land on the north side of Riley Street, 300 feet east of Humboldt Parkway,” and to those belonging to the defendant as two double houses on Carmine Place, and known as 15 and 25 Carmine Place in the city of Buffalo, Y. Y.” This description certainly admits of no doubt as to the city and street where the premises are located, and it would seem to indicate with tolerable certainty that, so far at least as the defendant’s premises are concerned, it covered all the land embraced in lots ISTos. 15 and 25 on Carmine place, the exact metes and bounds of which were easily ascertainable. The precise location of the plaintiff’s land is also made equally clear, for it is described as being 370 feet of land on the north side of Riley street, and 300 feet east of Humboldt parkway. This much is virtually conceded, but it is said that the description is defective and uncertain in that it does not state the depth of the lot, or any other data sufficient to enable it to be described by metes and bounds. But this omission, if it was in any wise misleading, as to which we entertain serious doubt, inasmuch as-no such objection was ever suggested by the defendant until she served her answer in the action, is one which could have been and was remedied by proof of extrinsic facts. (Waring v. Ayres, 40 N. Y, 357.)

[522]*522It appears without contradiction that, before executing the contract, the defendant’s husband, who acted as her agent in the matter, made a personal inspection of the premises in question, and was thereby afforded ample opportunity to ascertain - not only their exact location, but also their boundary lines. Moreover, he was furnished by Mr. Downer, the agent of both parties, with a diagram of the same which showed their frontage, depth and location in feet and inches. He was also repeatedly informed by Downer that the lands were lOlj- feet deep, and after receiving this information said to him, “ it is all right, you can go on and draw up your contracts.”

These facts, together with others of like character, none of which are disputed, seem to identify the plaintiff’s premises beyond any question; and as was said in Waring v. Ayres (supra) they were admissible “ in order to apply, not to alter or vary a written agreement.” We fail to see, therefore, with these facts in the case-how it can be successfully contended that there was. sufficient ambiguity in the descriptive clauses of the contract to justify .the defendant in refusing to perform upon that ground. . .

- The objection that the plaintiff was unable to furnish a marketable title to his premises, while resting upon a foundation of more apparent stability, will, we believe, be foun.d upon careful examination to be equally untenable.

By reference to the written contract it will be seen that the ■defendant was to take the plaintiff’s land subject to a mortgage of $3,300 upon 220 feet of the easterly portion thereof, which mortgage was to run to the Homestead Loan Association, and subject also to a second mortgage upon the same portion of $660, and to 'another mortgage of $2,840 upon the remaining 150 feet of the westerly portion of the premises. With the exception of these three mortgages the plaintiff was to deliver a title free and clear of all incumbrances whatsoever on or before January 31, 1900, the same to be authenticated by a tax and title search.

Pursuant to this agreement the plaintiff caused a search to be ■made of his title, and this search was delivered sometime in the latter part of December, 1899, to the defendant’s agent who immediately placed the same in the hands of his attorney.

It appeared by this search that the mortgage of $3,300 had been .given to the Homestead Savings and Loan Association on the ,16.th [523]*523day of December, 1899. It further appeared that there were two other mortgages in existence which were apparent liens upon the plaintiff’s premises, one of which was for $3,500 and the other for $1,400. As a matter of fact, however, at the time the search was delivered both of these mortgages had been paid in full and discharges thereof had been executed and were in the possession of the plaintiff, who, through inadvertence, had failed to have them recorded. Ho objection, however, was raised by the defendant to the title by reason of these mortgages until issue was joined in the action. Had there been it was within the plaintiff’s power to obviate the same by placing the. discharges upon record, as he in fact did sometime prior to the rendition of the judgment herein.

The search also showed that another mortgage of $449, which covered a portion of the plaintiff’s premises, had never been discharged of record. . This mortgage was executed by one Samuel Wilkinson on the 1st day of December, 1819. It was consequently more than eighty years old, and as there is no evidence whatever as to its terms, nor any proof of payment of either principal or interest thereon during the past fifty years, the presumption arises that the lien thereof had been extinguished, and consequently it does not constitute a valid objection to the plaintiff’s title. (Belmont v. O'Brien,

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12 N.Y. 394 (New York Court of Appeals, 1855)
Haberman v. . Baker
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50 N.E. 287 (New York Court of Appeals, 1898)
Ferry v. . Sampson
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58 A.D. 288 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)
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58 A.D. 464 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
74 A.D. 517, 77 N.Y.S. 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forsyth-v-leslie-nyappdiv-1902.