King v. Bardeau

6 Johns. Ch. 38, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 139, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 65
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 13, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 6 Johns. Ch. 38 (King v. Bardeau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Bardeau, 6 Johns. Ch. 38, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 139, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 65 (N.Y. 1822).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This sale was marked by good faith. It was unknown to the plaintiff, and to the master, at the sale, as well as to the purchaser, that the front building on lot 42, projected over upon lot 43. The observation that was made to the master, a few days before the [41]*41Sale, that the building in the rear of the lot encroached in a very small degree on the neighbouring ground, was too light and trivial a circumstance to affect the bonafides of the transaction. The purchaser was informed at the sale, and it was one of the terms of sale repeatedly read over, and publicly proclaimed, that the two lots would be sold together as one lot or parcel j and that they were free of all encumbrances, except the lease upon lot 42. The terms of that lease, and the disposition of the buildings at the expiration of it, under the covenants in the lease, were also explained. But the buildings were Stated to be on lot 42, and it turns out that they do project a little over upon lot 43, and this is the variation in the condition or quality of the lots, which, it is contended, ought to vacate the sale. As the purchaser purchased both the lots together for one consolidated price, and as one entire parcel of land, it would seem not to be very material to him if the buildings on one lot did encroach a few inches on the other. But he says he purchased with intention to build a house upon the vacant lot, twenty-two feet wide, leaving an alley of three feet to pass to the rear of his lot. The disappointment in the case, then, is, that he will be obliged to build his house two feet narrower, if he intends to have the alley of the width of three feet. He is not disappointed in the main object of his purchase. He has the lots of the dimensions described, and with a perfect title, but his house will be a little narrower, if he will not contract his alley, or will not wait until the lease expires, or will not compel the tenant to withdraw his buildings on to lot 42.

This is clearly not such a material defect in the subject, or variation from the terms of the description at the sale, as will permit the purchaser to abandon his contract. If we were to allow such very nice and critical objections to prevail, we should expose to great hazard the efficacy and value of public judicial sales. If the sale be fair, and the [42]*42title good, and the quantity of land exist, and the substance of the description be true, (and all those circumstances exist in this case,) it is as much as ought to be expected or required. Some care and vigilance must be exacted of the purchaser. In this case the purchaser lived near the lots, and they were open to his daily examination; and one of the witnesses says, he might have observed by the eye, without even the trouble of measurement, that the house on the front of lot 42 projected a little upon lot 43.

In Calcraft v. Roebuck, (1 Vesey, jr. 221.) a farm sold at auction was advertised as a freehold estate, consisting of about 186 acres, of which 45 acres were described to be a compact farm, and the rest a park. It turned out, that two acres in the centre of the park were not freehold property, but land held at will only. On a bill for a specific performance, Lord Thurlow observed, that where an estate was sold at auction, it was difficult to state specifically all the little particulars relative to the quantity, title, and situation of the estate, so as not to call for some allowance and consideration, when the bargain comes to be executed. He considered that the binding force of the contract, and the consideration of enforcing it, depended essentially upon the good faith with which it was made. In that case he gave the party some compensation for the failure of title as to the two acres, and referred it to a master to consider what, under all the circumstances, ought to be allowed as a deduction from the price, when the money ought to have been paid.

The English rule has been very strict in requiring the specific performance of these sales at auction, when the case was free from misrepresentation and fraud; and it casts upon the purchaser the duty of informing himself of matters within his means of information, in respect to the quality, condition, situation, and circumstances of the subject sold. Thus, in Oldfield v. Round, (5 Vesey, 508.) them [43]*43was a bill for a specific performance of an agreement to purchase a meadow sold at auction. The defendant objected, that the premises were described as a meadow consisting of 15 acres, without taking notice of a footpath across it. But, Lord Loughborough, while he admitted that the meadow was very much the worse for a road going through it, said he could not help the carelessness of the purchaser who does not choose to' inquire, and that the path in that case was not a latent defect. He, accordingly, decreed a specific performance, with costs. This case was, afterwards, shaken by Lord Manners, (Ellard v. Lord Llandaff, 1 Ball & Beatty, 241.) who said, it was not well received at the time, though he admitted, that the purchaser, in that case, if he had used ordinary caution, would have discovered the easement. In Dyer v. Hargrave, (10 Vesey, 505.) there was a bill also for a specific performance of a purchase at auction. The particular preceding the sale described the house as in good repair, and that the farm was all within a ring fence. The defendant objected, on the ground, that the description was not true. It was admitted, that there was a variation from the description, but a minute examination might have discovered the defect. The Master of the Rolls decreed a performance, and said it was much too late to contend,, that every variance from the description would enable a man to resist the performance. If he gets substantially that for which he bargains, he must take a compensation for a deficiency in the value.

This last case establishes, whát I apprehend to be the true doctrine on the subject; and many of the old cases, which required a performance when the subject was substantially different from what it was supposed to be, have been justly questioned. Lord Eldon, in Drewe v. Hanson, (6 Vesey, 678.) mentioned a number of hard cases in which performance had been enforced, though there was a very essential variance between the actual, and the supposed [44]*44circumstances of the subject, and when those circumstances were wanting, which were the strong inducement to the contract. The counsel, in 10 Vesey, 507., considered those cases as going to an excessive length upon the point of compensation; and Lord ErsMne, afterwards, declared? (Halsey v. Grant, 13 Vesey, 78., and Stapylton v. Scott, 13 Vesey, 426.) that he would not follow those decisions, nor decree specific performance, even under the allowance of compensation.

In the present case, there is no pretence that the substantial inducement to the purchase has failed by reason of the projection of the house. There is no analogy whatever between this case and that stated by Lord Eldon, of a contract for a house and wharf. The object of the purchase being to carry on business at the wharf, and though the title to the wharf had failed, the Court compelled the purchaser to take the house.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Johns. Ch. 38, 1822 N.Y. LEXIS 139, 1822 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-bardeau-nychanct-1822.