Gentry v. Rogers

40 Ala. 442
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 40 Ala. 442 (Gentry v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gentry v. Rogers, 40 Ala. 442 (Ala. 1867).

Opinion

JUDGE, J.

On the 29th of December, 1859, appellant sold to appellee a tract of land, for which the sum of thirty-two hundred dollars was to be paid; one thousand dollars on the 29th of December, 1860, and twenty-two hundred dollars on the 29th of December, 1862. Notes for the purchase-money were executed and delivered to the vendor, and a bond, conditioned to make a title to the land “ upon the payment of the notes,” was executed and delivered to the Vendee.

The complainant in the court below, the vendee, filed his bill for ■ a specific performance of the contract. The defendant failed to answer within the time prescribed, and a decree pro confesso was rendered against him, which he afterwards struggled, without success,' to have set aside. The register, under an order of reference, stated an account between the parties, in which the vendee was charged with the purchase-money, and interest thereon, amounting in the aggregate to $4,231.13 ; and the vendor was charged with the rents and profits, and interest thereon, from the date of the sale to the time of taking the account, and with the [444]*444further sum of $2,000, as net profits from the sale of timber cut on the premises, all amounting in the aggregate to $4,797.94. This left a balance due the complainant of $566.81. The report of the register was confirmed, and the chancellor decreed a specific performance, and that the balance ascertained to be due the complainant should be paid.

Before the order of reference was made, the defendant filed his written notice, that if any decree should be rendered in his favor for the purchase-money, or any part thereof, he would be unwilling to receive anything in payment but gold and silver; and, in consequence of this notice, the chancellor, in the order of reference, directed the register to ascertain “the annual value in specie, or its equivalent, of the rents and profits of the land ”, &c. But for the ascertainment of the value of the rents and profits on the basis of their value in specie, it is fair to presume a larger balance would have been found against the vendor. But as it is, the decree accomplishes the following result: In something more than six years, during four of which the late war was in progress, the rents and profits of the land, and proceeds of timber sold, estimated on a specie basis, pay the entire purchase-money, and five hundred and sixty-six dollars over, which the vendee recovers, together with the land, from the vendor. It is contended that such a result, under all the circumstances of the case, is inequitable; and that for this reason specific performance of the agreement between the parties should not be enforced.

It is true that, on a bill for specific performance, a court of equity reserves to itself a discretion of giving or refusing its aid, not arbitrarily or capriciously, but upon a sound and temperate consideration of the merits of each particular case, exercising its discretion in a judicial manner, according to existing rules. — Gould v. Womack, 2 Ala. 83; Blackwilder v. Loveless, 21 Ala. 371. And if, tinder all the circumstances of the case, it would be inequitable to enforce a performance, relief will not be granted, but the parties left to their legal remedy. - Ellis v. Burden, 1 Ala. 458; Casey v. Holmes et al., 10 Ala. 776; Blackwilder v. Loveless, supra; 2 Story’s Equity Jur. § 750. There would be much [445]*445greater force in the objection that the decree in the case before ns was inequitable, for the reason stated, if the legitimate rents and profits of the premises had accomplished the result arrived at. Instead of this, however, two thousand dollars of the aggregate charged against the vendor was for waste committed by him, which, it is averred in the bill, was for his own profit, and to the detriment of the estate. "We waive a more particular inquiry into the circumstances of the case, to ascertain if the decree, for the single reason above stated, was inequitable; preferring to rest our decision upon other grounds, which we will now proceed to consider.

2. By the agreement, the payment of the purchase-money in full by one party, and the execution of the stipulated conveyance by the other, were mutual and concurrent conditions, to be contemporaneously performed; and each of tjie contractors was bound to perform on his part at the time fixed. — Ledyard v. Manning, 1 Ala. 153; McKleroy v. Tulane, 34 Ala. 78. The vendee, howevei, never having been in possession under the contract, but the vendor having retained the possession, and had the use and enjoyment of the lands from ‘the date of the contract, when the time arrived for the payment of the purchase-money in full, the vendee was entitled to an account of the rents and profits, and to have his notes for the purchase-money credited therewith. — Davis v. Lassiter, 20 Ala. 561. The demand for such an accounting, and an offer, coupled with the ability, to pay any balance that might be found against him on the account, being stated, and the tender of a deed to be executed by the vendor conveying the title, were acts, the performance of which by the vendee was required by the contract, to make the obligation of the vendor perfect.— Wade v. Killough et al., 5 Stew. & Por. 450; Johnson and Wife v. Collins, 17 Ala. 318. It is contended that a compliance with these conditions on the part of the vendee was rendered unnecessary, not by the entire absence of a capacity on the part of the vendor to give a good title, (Johnson and Wife v. Collins, supra,) nor by his having been prevented from their performance by the vendor, (Bass & Carter v. Gilliland, 5 Ala. 761,) but by the acts of the [446]*446Vendor in violation of the contract, before the time haft arrived for their performance.

We must look to the allegations of the bill for the ascertainment of the acts of the defendant, thus relied on, inasmuch as the allegations relating to these acts, under the decree pro confesso, constitute the only evidence bearing upon this question. It is averred in the bill, that “soon after the purchase, complainant demanded possession of the land, which defendant had agreed to give him, but defendant refused to give it to him;” “that the defendant continually evaded a compliance, until the 25th December, 1860, when complainant tendered him payment of the first thousand dollars due, in gold; but that the defendant absolutely refused, and repudiated the contract, declaring he never would comply with it;” “that he is entitled to have his notes for the purchase-money credited by the proceeds of the sale of the timber and other trees, and the value of the wood sold and carried off, and also by the value of the rents and profits of the cleared land, and the houses and improvements, and if there be any excess after paying the notes, that he should have a decree for such excesscomplainant “offering to do and perform, however, whatever the court may direct, and to pay whatever the court may decide to be right.” It is further averred, “that ever since the day of sale, complainant has been ready and willing to comply with the terms and conditions on his part,” and “that nothing but the refusal of the defendant to comply with the contract on his part prevents a renewal of attempts to obtain title without suit, but after repeated and decided refusals he has deemed it unnecessary to do any thing further.”

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ala. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gentry-v-rogers-ala-1867.