Lewis v. Yale

4 Fla. 418
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 4 Fla. 418 (Lewis v. Yale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Yale, 4 Fla. 418 (Fla. 1852).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Justice,

delivered tbe opinion of the Court.

It appears from the facts in this case that the appellant, Mary, wife of the other appellant, was, at the time of their intermarriage, seized in fee, as the residuary divisee of her father, Samuel Betts, of an interest or share of a tract of land in East Florida, known as the “ Alachua Arredondo Grant,” as tenant in common with divers other persons — that a suit in equity for the partition of the respective interests of the several owners, was instituted.by some of the tenants against the others, among the latter of whom, were the present appellants — that the appellants employed' the respondent, who is a solicitor and counsellor, to represent them and defend their interests in the said litigation —and out of this employment, the present suit has arisen.

The respondent, who was complainant in the Court below, alleges in his bill in detail the foregoing facts, and that after a decree for partition had been passed in the partition suit, ascertaining the respective interests of the tenants, and among others that of the appellants as 62,000 acres, out of the , aggregate of the whole, amounting to 250,000 acres, or thereabouts, the appellants, by John H. Lewis, entered into' a contract with him for his remuneration, which contract-is in writing, and is exhibited with the bill. It is in the following terms : “ In consideration “ of services rendered as counsel, in behalf of myself and “ wife, in the partition of the Alachua Grant, by Gregory “ Yale, Esq., I bind myself to have conveyed to him by “ deed of release, with special warranty, one thousand “ acres of land, the same to be of average quality to the “ total amount of sixty-two thousand acres decreed to Ma- “ M. Lewis, at the Superior Court of St. Augustine, sitting “ this month. Witness my hand and seal, the 4th July, “ 1845. JOHN H. LEWIS, [Seal.]”

[420]*420Although the consideration of the promise and the covenant to convey the land, seems, by the terms employed, to have been a past or executed consideration, yet both parties admit, and the proofs in the cause show it was not considered as such by either party, but was intended to and did include such future services of the respondent as were incident to and should be requisite and necessary to be performedjn and about the execution of the decree, and the confirmation thereof by the Court. Subsequently, however, to the decree aforesaid, which in point of fact was not carried into full execution, the report of Commissioners under said decree being excepted to, further litigation ensued, in an application by some of theparties for a re-hearing, and to set aside the decree on the ground of surprise, and subsequent discoveries of matters affecting their rights, and also in the filing of a supplemental bill or bill of review.

The bill further alleges that the respondent attended to this additional litigation as solicitor and counsel for the appellants, and made divers necessary journies and attendances at distant places'and Courts, and which were and ought to be considered as distinct substantive services, for which he should have been allowed additional compensation. He further alleges that on opplication by letter, to the appellant, John H. Lewis, the said appellants agreed, by letter of the 12th of April, 1847, enclosing copy of a Tetter to the Hon. ¥m. Law, of the 7th of April, 1847, so to modify the contract of July 4th, 1845, as to give to the said respondent the “right of location” of the said tract of land, which he seems to consider in his said bill of complaint as equivalent to the right of selection, by claiming to be entitled to “a selection or right of location of one thousand “ acres under said modified contract,” omitting the qualicatión of its average quality.

[421]*421The bill further alleges the submission by the tenants or claimants of the land, of the question of their respective interests to the arbitrament of the Hon. Isaac H. Bronson, the award of the arbitrator by which the interest or share of the appellants was ascertained and fixed at 24,000 acres of land — the confirmation of the award, and such other proceedings as finally led to a sale of the whole tract, for the purposes of a partition, and the purchase by the appellants of 11,774 acres.

The bill further alleges a refusal by the appellants to convey one thousand acres of land, to be selected by the said respondent, out of the land in their possession, and prays a decree for the specific performance by the conveyance of one thousand acres of land selected by the respondent, as provided in the modified contract, or compensatory damages in lieu thereof.

The appellants answer the bill in a joint answer, and to which reference will hereafter be made. It will be sufficient here to state that the contract, as it is understood to be insisted upon in the bill, is denied, although a contract is admitted, which they allege they have at all times been willing to perform, have offered to perform, and are still willing so to do.

In the examination of the questions presented by this record, it will be important primarily to consider and ascertain who are properly the parties to this contract, and what has been agreed upon by them.-

The respondent in his bill alleges that the contract was made by both the appellants, Mrs. Lewis assenting and acting through her husband. Is this allegation correct? The covenant of July 4th, .1845, is signed by John H. Lewis alone, and by its terms it professes to be entered into by him alone, and to be binding on himself, and not on any other person,' although from the expression that he [422]*422“ binds himself to have conveyed” the land mentioned, he must be understood as contracting for the conveyance of •property, in which he did not assert a perfect title in himself.

It is true that the consideration expressed is for services rendered to both Lewis and Wife in the partition suit, and the tract of land to be conveyed is to be carved out of the lands decreed in the suit as the property of the wife : yet there is not one word which evinces an intention to bind her, or to make her a party to the covenant.

It is impossible to give any other interpretation to this instrument than that it is a personal contract of John H. Lewis. So also, the correspondence by which the contract is claimed to be modified and enlarged, is between the appellant, John H. Lewis, and the respondent. John H. Lewis in this speaks of himself alone : what he thinks, what he is not willing to grant, and what he does concede. The counsel for respondent has argued with much earnest'ness the admissions of the joint and several answer of the appellants, and especially the answer which they jointly make to the ninth interrogatory as conclusive upon the point. That interrogatory requires the disclosure, whether the said appellants did not enter into a contract with the respondent, as in the said bill is set forth, and whether or not, the “ copy of the obligation of July 4th, 1845, by “ the said Lewis and Wife, through the said'John H. Lew- “ is,” is not a true copy, &c. ? And the answer is, they “admit they entered into a contract with the complainant “ for his services, that they* have no copy or duplicate of “ said contract, and ask that the complainant verify his allegation,” &c., but admit they believe the copy exhibition to be a true copy. This admission of Mrs. Lewis, so totally at variance with the exhibits and proof of the respondent, the written contract and the letters in evidence [423]

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4 Fla. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-yale-fla-1852.