Potter v. Hollister

45 N.J. Eq. 508
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 N.J. Eq. 508 (Potter v. Hollister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potter v. Hollister, 45 N.J. Eq. 508 (N.J. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

This is a suit by the vendors of land against the vendee, asking a decree requiring the vendee to specifically perform his contract of purchase. The bill alleges that the contract, which the complainants seek to-have enforced, is in writing. The following is the averment of the bill on that subject:

“ Your orators and the said Uriah S. Hollister, on or about the fifteenth day of September, 1888, entered into an agreement in writing respecting the sale and purchase of the said .land and premises, consisting of certain letters or correspondence, written and signed by the said Uriah S. Hollister and by Nicholas Tarrant, who was the agent of your orators for the sale of said lands and premises, and by your orators lawfully authorized to make sale of the said lands and premises to the said Hollister.”

[510]*510The case made by the bill is, that the defendant agreed, in writing, with the complainants to purchase of them the land described in the bill for $4,500, and to pay the whole of the purchase-money on the delivery of the deed. A deed has been proffered to the defendant, and demand made for the payment cf the purchase-money. He refused to accept the deed and to pay the purchase-money. These are the principal facts averred in the bill.

The defendant denies that he entered into an agreement in writing with the complainants for the purchase of the land in question, but admits that he both telegraphed and wrote to Tar-rant, stating that he would take the complainants’ property for $4,500 and pay for it on the delivery of the deed. But he insists, that what he said to Tarrant in writing cannot be treated in law as constituting a contract between the complainants and himself, because, he says, that, when he sent the telegram to Tar-rant, and also when he wrote to him, he believed Tarrant to be his own agent, and communicated with him in that capacity, and not as the agent of the complainants, and that his communications to [511]*511Tarrant must, consequently, be held to be in law,'as they were in fact, the instructions of a principal to his ágent, and not as constituting a contract with the complainants, nor as communications to them. The defendant’s insistment is, that the utmost effect which can be given to his communications to Tarrant is, to consider them as a delegation of power to Tarrant, authorizing him to enter into a contract on behalf of the defendant with the com^ plain ants for the purchase of the land.

The land, which is the subject of the suit, is situate in the town of Norwich, in the State of Connecticut. Mr. Tarrant resides in the town of Norwich, and the defendant’s communications to him were received by him there. The statute of frauds of Connecticut declares, that no suit in law or equity shall be brought or maintained upon any contract for the sale of lands, unless the contract upon which the action shall be brought, or some note or memorandum thereof] shall be made in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorized. Osborn v. Phelps, 19 Conn. 63, 70.

[512]*512The relation, in which Tarrant stood to the defendant, or in which the defendant believed Tarrant stood to him, when he sent to Tarrant the communications which the complainants make the basis of their suit, is, in my judgment, the pivotal point of the case, for while it is well settled that the complainant in an action for specific performance may prove the contract on which he relies, so as to take his case out of the statute of frauds, by letters, yet it would seem to be entirely clear, according to the fundamental principles on which relief in such cases is administered, that, to warrant the court in enforcing a contract thus made, it must be made clearly to appeal.’, that the party sought to be held has intentionally entered into a written contract with the party seeking to hold him, not that he has merely given his own agent authority to enter into a contract for him. His letters must be addressed or sent to the othen party or to the agent of the other party. He must have parted with them as evidence of the terms of the contract he agreed to. His letters, either when standing alone or when taken in connection with those of the other party, must contain all the material terms of the contract, and they [513]*513must make it manifest that both parties understood the terms of the contract alike in other words, that their minds met. When, however, it appears that the whole of the subject-matter about which the parties dealt is not embraced in the letters on which the complainant relies, and their contract, for that 'reason, is incomplete — their minds never having come together — there a court of equity can do nothing, for it is only in cases of completed contracts, which are fair in themselves and which have been fairly obtained, that equity can give relief by way of specific performance. Braeutigam v. Edwards, 11 Stew. Eq. 542. Equity will always decline to interfere when the evidence leaves the terms of the contract in uncertainty, or if it be reasonably doubtful whether the contract was finally closed. Brewer v. Wilson, 2 C. E. Gr. 180, 182; Brown v. Brown, 6 Stew. Eq. 650, 657.

As to whether a letter written by a principal to h'is agent can be used by a third person as evidence of a written contract between, himself and the principal, I am aware that Lord Hardwicke is reported as saying, in Welford v. Beazeley, 3 Atk. 503: “There have been cases where a letter written to a man’s own- agent, and setting forth the terms of an agreement as concluded by him, has been deemed to be a signing within the statute, and agreeable to the provision of it.” But I have been unable to find a single case in which it has been so held. I find, on the contrary, that the supreme court of Iowa expressly held, in Steel v. Fife, 48 Iowa 99, that a letter written by a principal to his agent, stating the terms on which he would sell certain land, which terms the agent subsequently reported to a buyer, who accepted them, did not constitute a written contract with the buyer so' as to take the case out of the statute of frauds. The court said, that the delivery of the letter to the agent could have no other or greater effect than if the principal had written the letter and then retained it in his own possession. The decision in the case just cited obviously rests upon correct principle. Mt is indispensable to the making of a contract that there shall be communication between two minds — there must be a proposal by one and an acceptance by the other — two minds must meet and mutually assent — but where the written communication is exclus[514]*514ively between the principal and his agent, and is simply intended by the principal as a delegation of power or instruction to his agent, and the principal gives his agent no authority to deliver his letter to the other party, it is impossible to say, without an abuse of language, that the letter is evidence of a contract made by the principal with the other part^,,^ My conclusion on this branch of the case is, that if it be true, that the defendant made to Tarrant the communication on which the complainants rely, under an honest belief that Tarrant was his agent, and without knowledge that he was also acting as the agent of the complainants, his communications cannot, as a matter of law, be held to be a contract with the complainants.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.J. Eq. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-v-hollister-njch-1889.