Goucher v. Martin

9 Watts 106
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 9 Watts 106 (Goucher v. Martin) 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
Goucher v. Martin, 9 Watts 106 (Pa. 1839).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Rogers, J.

It is a general rule, that no estate or interest in land shall pass but by deed, or some instrument in writing, signed by the parties; and it is immaterial whether the interest be legal or equitable, as an equitable interest is an interest in land which comes within the words and spirit of the statute of frauds. And what is this but a resale of the premises by Goueher to Martin by parol, unaccompanied by any act which, according to th.e decisions of the court, takes it out of the operation of the statute. Martin sold the property to Goueher by an article of agreement dated the 25th of June 1835, in which, in consideration of the payment of 2340 dollars, to be paid in the manner therein stipulated, he agrees to give Goueher peaceable possession on the 1st of April next thereafter, and a deed of conveyance for the premises after the consideration has been fully paid. Goueher took possession and paid at least two of the instalments. Martin was the owner of the legal and [108]*108Goucher of the equitable title, with the right to demand a conveyance of the legal title, upon payment of the purchase-money, when due. The case is, therefore, clearly within the operation of the act, and no contract by parol will pass the interest Goucher has acquired in the land. It appears that Goucher and Radcliff were in treaty for the sale of the land, but not being able to agree, Martin asked Goucher whether he was willing to let him have the farm on the same terms; to which Goucher having assented, the witness considered the place as belonging to Martin. A few days afterwards, viz the 18th of December, Martin inquired of Radcliff what he was to give for the property, and upon his replying that he was to give 20 dollars an acre, he declared he would have nothing further to do with it; that he would give no such price for it; that all he wanted was his money; that Radcliff might deal with Goucher for it, and that the 1000 dollars judgment on the docket must be paid in specie, and the balance he would take in any kind of current paper, paid between then and the 1st of April. He said they should meet on the 23d of December, and the parties, having met according to appointment, Goucher and Radcliff attempted to make a bargain for the property; but upon Martin declaring that all the money which Goucher owed him must be paid on the 25th, in such paper as would pass at the Brownsville Bank at par, all further negotiation was broken off by Radcliff, who declared he would have nothing further to do with the purchase. This appears in the testimony of Radcliff, who was the plaintiff’s witness, and shows that, although there was a parol contract for the purchase of the land, yet that the contract was rescinded by Martin; that this was acquiesced in by Goucher, and that all parties, at the subsequent meeting, acted on the idea that it was rescinded. . The declaration of Goucher to other witnesses, that he believed he had sold to Martin, is properly referable to the parol contract as proved by Radcliff, and afterwards rescinded. Throwing out of view this part of the testimony, it is difficult to perceive the semblance of proof of any subsisting contract of sale between Goucher and Martin. If any such contract was made, it must have been after the period to which I have referred, viz. sometime about the 27th of December 1837. On that day Martin and Goucher were together, went to Union Town together, and on the same day Martin entered satisfaction on the judgment against Goucher, he remaining at the door of the prothonotary’s office, holding the horses of himself and Martin, and Martin taking a memorandum of the amount of the debt and interest due on the judgment and costs. Now, although all this is evidence, as being part of the res gesta, and especially connected with the fact, that a few days before Goucher had no funds with which to pay the judgment, yet we are still left to conjecture, to a remote, uncertain and doubtful inference, that the satisfaction was connected with an agreement for sale of the land; and as to the terms of the agreement, the amount of the purchase-money [109]*109to be paid, the time when the possession was to be delivered, there is no proof or semblance of proof whatever. But to take a case out of the statute, upon the ground of a parol contract, it is indispensable that the contract should be established by clear and unequivocal proof, and that it should be definite and clear in all its terms. If the terms are uncertain or ambiguous, or are not proved by clear and satisfactory proof, a specific performance will not be decreed. A court of equity will not, nor should a jury in this state be permitted to act upon conjecture, or uncertain and inconclusive inferences. The very object of the statute is to prevent the divesture of a title to real estate, equitable or legal, by the introduction of loose and indeterminate proof of a contract which the law requires should be made in the most solemn form. It is impossible to say what was the precise contract, if any, or what was the nature and extent of its limitations, its terms and conditions. Now is there any necessity that we should relax the strict proof ordinarily required, because of such a part performance of the contract as would render it against equity, not to decree a specific performance? Payment of part or of the whole of the purchase-money is not such a part performance of a contract as takes the case out of the statute. Nor can the entry of satisfaction on a judgment, even if done in part payment for a tract of land, have any greater effect. The remedy for the party injured is to have the entry of satisfaction vacated by an application to the court of common pleas of the proper county. The remedy is just as efficient as thp party has who has paid part or the whole of his purchase-money. In either case he may be injured by the refusal of the party in good faith to perform his contract, but this consideration will not induce the court to interfere with the statute. In the one case the money may be repaid, and in that way a full indemnity given, and in the other the ' entry of satisfaction may be stricken out, and then the parties are .just as they were before the contract. It does not put the party, in either case, necessarily in such a situation as that it is a fraud upon him, unless the agreement be performed. In Haslett v. Haslett, 6 Watts 464, it is held, that an exclusive possession is an indispensable ingredient in a case for a specific performance of a parol contract for the sale of lands. He must prove that he has taken possession in consequence, and in pursuance, of the contract. In order to make the acts such as a court of equity will decree part perform- ' anee of a contract within the statute, it is essential that it should clearly appear to be done, solely with the view to the contract being performed. For, if they be acts which might have been done with other views, they will not take the case out of the statute. 1 Johns. Chan. Rep. 149, 283; 1 Fonb. Eq. 8, note. The mere possession of the land contracted for, will not be deemed a part performance, if it be obtained wrongfully by the party, or if it ' be wholly independent of the contract. Thus, if a vendee enter into the possession not under the contract, but in violation of it as [110]*110a trespasser, the case is not taken out of the statute. And is not the plaintiff placed in this category? For it is difficult to believe that the timber which was cut by order of Martin was a taking of possession, in pursuance of the alleged contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Watts 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goucher-v-martin-pa-1839.