Repetto v. Baylor

48 A. 774, 61 N.J. Eq. 501, 16 Dickinson 501, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 105
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 3, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 A. 774 (Repetto v. Baylor) 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
Repetto v. Baylor, 48 A. 774, 61 N.J. Eq. 501, 16 Dickinson 501, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 105 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Urey, Y. C.

The original bill of complaint in this cause was filed specifically to enforce a contract, made by the defendant, Mary C. [502]*502Baylor, trustee, &c., by which she agreed to convey to Antonio Repetto a large number of lots of land “situate, &c., in Atlantic county.”

The complainant Augustine Repetto is the assignee of Antonio Repetto, the proposed vendee named in the contract. The defendant is the vendor.

The bill was demurred to, and the demurrer was sustained— first, because, as the allegations of the bill were framed, the contract under which relief was sought did not designate the lands with sufficient certainty to satisfy the statute of frauds; second, because the bill alleged that Augustine Repetto, the complainant, selected certain lots, while the contract limited the choice to Antonio Repetto, the contracting vendee.

When the demurrer was sustained, the complainant amended his bill, stating the lands to be conveyed with certainty, and annexing a copy of the contract and map designating them. The defendant now moves to dismiss the amended bill, upon notice and reasons given under rule 213.

The effect of notice to strike out under that rule is the same as a demurrer to the bill for the causes noticed, the purpose of the rule being to provide a quick method of presenting a criticism of a pleading and determining its justice.

The first cause set up in criticism of the bill is that it states only a breach of an executory contract, and seeks its specific performance without showing that either party has done any act in whole or partial performance of it. Where the contract is sufficiently expressed, in writing, to satisfy the statute of frauds, and is of such a character that performance by both parties , can be substantially directed of all its terms, this court will not refuse to enforce it because, at the stage when court’s aid is invited, there has not been a partial performance by one party or the other. There are many cases within the letter of the statute of frauds in which there has been a partial performance by the party seeking relief in this court, and they are entertained here, because to refuse relief would promote, rather than defeat, the success of a fraud. There is, however, a well-defined equitable jurisdiction for enforcing the specific performance of contracts, irrespective of their partial performance. The [503]*503principle is elementary, and is recognized in all treatises upon equity jurisdiction. Pom. Pq. Jur. §§ 105, 108, 867, 868.

The second objection to the bill of complaint is that the contract for the sale of the lands on which the suit is based does not define with sufficient certainty the lands agreed to be conveyed.

The contract (copy of which is annexed to the amended bill) shows that the defendant agreed to convey to Antonio Repetto all these one hundred and thirty-eight lots, &c., situate, &c.,

“the same to be chosen and designated by the said Repetto, and said .lots to remain as now marked upon map made by Morris Hillman, and on file, &c., a copy whereof is now in possession of the said Repetto, and marked as aforesaid, provided the said Mary G. Baylor has not heretofore conveyed the same to other persons. Should the title to any of the said lots be in any other persons as above provided then said Repetto shall have the right to designate other lots in the same blocks, to take the place of such lots not owned by the said Mary 0. Baylor. That the map in the possession of the said Repetto shall for the purpose of description of the said lots be considered and is hereby made a part hereof.” ,

i The bill alleges that at the time of making the contract, Antonio Repetto, by Mrs. Baylor’s direction, marked on the map the one hundred and thirty-eight lots referred to in the contract; that subsequent investigation disclosed the fact that Mrs. Baylor had, prior to the daté of the contract, conveyed several of the selected lots, and that Antonio Repetto thereupon chose other lots from the same blocks to make up the deficiency, and Mrs. Baylor was notified of the new selection.

On this motion the facts alleged in the bill of complaint must be taken to be true. It therefore appears that’the one hundred and thirty-eight lots, which were originally the subject-matter of the contract, were, by the parties at the time of its making, selected, agreed upon and indicated on a map, a copy of which was in possession of Antonio Repetto, one of the contractors, which copy it was agreed should, for the purposes of description of the selected lots, be deemed to be a part of the contract. This was a sufficiently definite selection and designation of the lots agreed to be conveyed. The mere form in which the selection ■was expressed, whether by written out mention in the body of [504]*504the contract, or by marking on a map specified in the written contract to be a part of it, is of little significance. It is also insisted that there was no final agreement of the minds of the parties on the particular lots which should pass by the contract, because there was a right of future selection reserved only to-Antonio Repetto, 'in case it should be found that Mrs. Baylor had sold any of the one hundred and thirty-eight lots originally chosen. Uncertainty of description of the subject-matter of the contract of sale is held to be avoided where the contract itself gives the right of choice to either party. Fry Spec. Perf. § 329. Id cerium est quod certum reddi poiesi applies with regard to the description of the subject-matter. Ilid. 328. Indeed, the argument here made in criticism of the contract was advanced and overthrown in Jenkins v. Green, 27 Beav. 437, where the contract was to demise a farm containing four hundred and thirty-seven acres, “except thirty-seven acres thereof;” there being neither specification of which thirty-seven acres Were to be excepted, nor mention of which party should make the selection, Sir John Romilly, master of the rolls, held the contract to be enforceable specifically; that where the matter was presented before the lease was executed, the selection should be made by the lessor; if after the lease was made, then the right of selecting would rest in the lessee. In the contract and map exhibited in the amended bill it appears that certain ascertained lots were originally selected by both parties, and that there was an agreement of both that in case any of them had been previously sold, one party should choose an equal number from those indicated in the same blocks to take their places. Here was an exact designation of a number of lots, and an agreement whereby in case any selected could not be conveyed for want of title, one party only should choose enough other lots from defined limits to fill the number. The minds of the parties had come to a final agreement upon the subject-matter of the sale, the vendor agreeing, in a named contingency, that the vendee should select what a part of it should be. Nothing remained to be clone between them as negotiating contractors. It was always in the power of either to enforce the contract—the vendor by requiring payment of the price, the vendee by selecting the [505]*505number of lots necessary to supply the deficiency and requiring conveyance.

The third objection is that the lots selected in the place of those previously sold were not identified in the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 774, 61 N.J. Eq. 501, 16 Dickinson 501, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/repetto-v-baylor-njch-1901.