Keffer & Wife v. Grayson

76 Va. 517, 1882 Va. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 20, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 76 Va. 517 (Keffer & Wife v. Grayson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keffer & Wife v. Grayson, 76 Va. 517, 1882 Va. LEXIS 56 (Va. 1882).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[519]*519Tlie bill alleges that Dr. Keffer, one of the appellants, surrendered the possession of the tract of land held by him under the lease of the 29th September, 1871, in order that the appellee might carry out his expressed intention of dividing the tract among his three daughters, one of whom is the female appellant, the wife of Dr. Keffer. With this understanding the agreement of the 1st September, 1874, was entered into, by which the appellee undertook to convey the land in controversy to the female appellant. Had the truth of these allegations been established by the evidence, there is no doubt, I imagine, but that a court of equity would decree a specific performance. They are, however, positively and plainly denied in the answer, and the only testimony adduced to sustain them is that of Dr. Keffer himself. The agreement of the 1st of September, 1874, states, or professes to state, the consideration upon which the promise to convey is founded. Ho reference is there made to the surrender of the land held under the lease, nor is it intimated that Dr. Keffer, in making such surrender, was influenced by the promise of the appellee to make the settlement upon his daughter.

To decree a specific performance against the positive denial of the answer upon the unsupported testimony of the opposing party, would be to run counter the plainest rules of equity jurisprudence.

In order, then, to ascertain the real consideration of the promise to convey, we must look to the written agreement. It is there stated to be the natural love and affection which the appellee bears the appellant, Dr. and Mrs. Keffer, and the undertaking of Dr. Keffer to pay the appellee, on or before the 1st of January, 1877, a past rent of $108, the rents to accrue for 1875 and 1876, and all his other liabilities to the appellee. Upon the fulfillment of these terms and conditions the appellee stipulated that he would make the conveyance to his daughter.

[520]*520It will be seen that this agreement imposed no obligation upon Dr. Keffer.

It was left optionary with him whether he would or would not make the payments. If he made them, his wife was entitled to the conveyance. If he did not, he would continue in possession as lessee at an agreed rent until the 1st January, 1877. The contract was one, therefore, by which only the appellee was bound. But if it be conceded that Dr. Keffer was also bound, still the contract created no additional liabilities, imposed no new obligations upon him. On his part it was simply an undertaking to pay certain rents, for which he was or would be responsible as lessee, and also to pay certain other debts he owed the appellee.

A debt barred by limitation or by a discharge in bankruptcy, may be revived by a new promise, and the new promise may constitute a valid consideration. But a promise to pay a debt for which the promisor is already legally bound is a mere nudum pactum, and adds nothing to the force of the previous obligation. No man can make his own wrong in withholding what he justly owes the foundation of a demand against his creditor. It is, therefore, clear that a promise to pay a subsisting indebtedness, or even its actual payment, is not a consideration upon which a court of equity can decree the specific execution of an agreement for the conveyance of real estate. It is impossible to say there is a valuable consideration where the debtor does no more than the law compels him to do, and the creditor receives no more than he is entitled to receive.

If, therefore, Dr. Keffer had discharged all his indebtedness to the appellee by the 1st of January, 1877, such discharge would not of itself have given him any claim to call for a conveyance. He did not, however, as is conceded, comply with his contract in this particular. He did not make the payments on or before the 1st January, 1877. A [521]*521reference to the agreement of the 1st September, 1874, will further show that it did not operate as a transfer of any title, legal or equitable, to- Mrs. Keffer. It was not a sale of an interest in the premises, but a mere agreement to convey, upon the performance of certain acts by one of the parties, on or before a particular day. Until the performance of these acts Dr. Keffer occupied the position of a tenant paying rent, and not of purchaser or owner of the premises. This compliance with his contract at the appointed time was therefore a condition precedent to the transfer or vesting in him or his wife any interest or estate under the contract.

The authorities draw a distinction between a contract of purchase under which a right has passed and the purchaser-has taken possession and made valuable improvements, and a contract under which no title or interest is acquired by the purchaser until the doing of some act by him stipulated to be done.

In the first case a right has vested which will not be defeated by the failure to do the act at the appointed day if compensation can be made in damages. In the other case the performance of the act is a condition precedent to the vesting of any estate and time becomes the essence of the contract. Wells v. Smith, 31 Am. Decisions, p. 274.

If, said Lord Cranworth, in Brooke v. Garroll, 3 K. and Jones, 608, the contract be that on the payment of |>1,000,. at or before a specified day, a certain act shall be done on my part. I am at a loss to see why I can possibly be called on to do the act if the money be not paid at the day, or why I should be compelled to perform not my contract,, but another contract into which I have not entered.

In Kerr v. Purdy, 51 New York, 629, the bill alleged -that-the defendant leased certain premises to the complainant-for the term of five years, with a clause giving the lessee-the privilege of purchasing at any time within the first-[522]*522three years by paying all the arrears of rent and the sum of |10,000.

The plaintiff was in arrears for the rent, and did not páy the purchase money before the time expired, although he had made arrangements to do so.

The court held that the right of the plaintiff to a specific execution depended on payment within three years, and ceased when they elapsed without the fulfillment of the condition. Leading Cases in Equity, vol. 2, part 2, p. 1136; Pomeroy on Contracts, §§472, 411, 374. The general rule is, therefore, that in unilateral contracts time is regarded as the essence of the agreement, to be modified or varied, however, by peculiar circumstances which account for the delay and show that notwithstanding the failure to perform, the party in default is still entitled to relief.

It would seem to be very clear that this is not a case constituting an exception to the general rule.

Here the father, in consideration of the love and affection he bears his daughter and her husband, proposes to settle an estate upon the former, subject, however, to the express condition that the husband shall, on or before an appointed day, pay all his indebtedness to the father, and also the accruing rents for the use of the property in the meantime—the condition not being complied with, the obligation to convey is at an end upon the plainest principles of equity and justice. It has been said, however, that the subsequent receipt of the money operated as a waiver of the condition. I do not think so. .

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76 Va. 517, 1882 Va. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keffer-wife-v-grayson-va-1882.