Seymour v. Delancy

3 Cow. 445
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 3 Cow. 445 (Seymour v. Delancy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seymour v. Delancy, 3 Cow. 445 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1824).

Opinion

Statement of case'

Savaqe, Ch. J.

On the 14th day of January, 1820, Wib Ham Seymour and Thomas Ellison entered into an agreement under seal, by which; Ellison agreed to convey to Seymour two farms in the towns of Montgomery and Wall kill, in the county of Orange, containing by estimation 799 acres of land; and Seymour agreed to convey to Ellison an equal undivided third part of certain lots in the village of Newburgh lithe conveyances to be executed bn or before the 1 si of June then next. It was further agreed that the parties might respectively take possession of the premises so to be conveyed to them. The parties did take possession accordingly ; and, on the 3d of August, 1820, Ellison died without the conveyances being executed. The bill was filed against the respondents, as the heirs of Thomas Ellison, to compel the performance of the above contract. It was resisted in the Court of Chancery on three grounds :■

Points.

]. Inadequacy of price'.

2. Debility of Ellison’s mind produced by habitual intoxication.

3. The inability of the appellant to fulfill on his part.

The Chancellor dismissed the bill on all these grounds,

and expressed an opinion that inadequacy of price may, of itself, and without fraud or other ingredient, be sufficient to authorize the Court to refuse its aid in enforcing the performance of a contract for the sale of land ; though it might not be sufficient to set aside the contract.

To be decided-

These are the principal points in the case, on which the defence rests. The testimony is very voluminous, and f shall not now enter into a detailed statement of it. The weight of evidence, in my judgment, establishes the differenee jn value, between the farms and the lots, at $5000 and [505]*505upwards; and that Ellison Was, in the month of January, 1820, and before and after, of intemperate Mbits; Some of the witribsses represented him as incapable of doing business ; arid Others thought him capable, except when intoxicated. It also appears, that, both in January ánd June, 1820, , , , , , . , , ,, the village lots werb encumbered by a mortgage to the amount of $5000, rind so continued till shortly before filing the bill.

Ellison -was oí intemperate -habits,

It is asserted by elementary writers that the power of bn- ■ J , forcing agreements specifically will not be exercised but to subserve the cause of justice; and that whenever the bargain is a hard one, bordering on Oppression; where there has not been perfect fairness ; where any facts have been concealed which should have been disclosed; or where any unfáir advantage has been taken ; in those cases Equity will not decree ri specific performance, but leave the party to his remedy rit law. (Reeve’s Dom. Rel. 386; Newland on Contr. 223-4.)

Elementary writers to the 1st point,

The cases in which a Court of Equity decrees specific , performance of contracts, are those where damages recov.ered at law would not answer the intention of (he parties in making the contract. (2 Sch. & Lef. 347.)

When equity decrees specifiC perform* atice-

In my judgment, his honor the Chancellor is correct in saying that it is not a matter of course, in all cases, to decree specific performance of contracts; (Cas. Temp. Talb. 236. 12 Ves. 331. 1 Ves. Jun. 566.) It requires the exerúse of p sound discretion upon a view of all the circumstances. That discretion must, indeed, not be arbitrary and capricious. It must be regulated upon grounds that wilt make it judicial. (7 Ves. 35.) If the contract has been en- . ..... tered into by a competent party, rind is, m its nature ana circumstances, unobjectionable, it is as much a matter of course to decree specific performance, as it is to give damages at law. (9 Ves. 608.)

This is nota course; but of dlSg®" when contract ^ m“ad®t b? party, and is bfe^it^iT^s much of course decree perfbrmance, as t0 Sjve^dama-.

The appellant’s counsel maintain that inadequacy of price, alone, is no ground for refusing to enforce a specific performance, unless it amounts to evidence of fraud. The case of Thompson v. Harcourt, (2 Br. P. C. 415, A. D. 1722) is claimed as an authority by both parties, Ag_ I un- ' [506]*506derstand it, it supports the proposition advanced by the ap# pellant’s counsel. The case was substantially this, so far as it is applicable here : During the inlatuatiou which prevailed on the subject of the South Sea scheme, and on the 18th June, 1720, Thompson agreed with Harcourt, that he would, on the next opening of the books of the company, transfer to him £lQ00 South Sea stock, and Harcourt agreed ■ to pay Thompson £9,200 for it; which is 920 per cent. The books wefe opened on the blh October. Thompson represented to Harcourt, that he had the £l000 ready to transfer, (though, in fact, he bad but £-290.) And Harcourt not being prepared to pay the £9200, another agreement was entered into, by which the time was extended to the next transfer day after Christmas, upon certain terms. That day was the 1st May, 1721, and Thompson not having the stock, procured it of another, to be returned on certain conditions. On that day the stock was tendered to Harcourt, but refused by him, and then re-transferred to the person from whom it had been procured for the purpose of the tender. Thompson then prosecuted at law upon the contract; and Harcourt filed his bill to be relieved against it. In the mean time the bubble had burst; and it was enacted by parliament that all contracts for the sale and purchase of the stock, unperformed on the 29£ft September, 1721, where the seller had not the stock on the day of the contract, or within six days after, should be void as to so much as the seller was not possessed of. Thompson then filed a cross bill, praying a specific -performance. Both causes were heard at the same time, and the Court decreed that Harcourt should pay Thompson 920 per cent, for the £290 stock which he actually held of his own. This decree was on the bill for relief ; and the cross bill, which was for specific performance, was dismissed without costs. Thompson appealed because he was not allowed the 920 per cent, on the whole £ 1000 ; but the appeal was dismissed, and the decree affirmed. The only reason why the 920 per cent, was not allowed, on the whole, must have been because he was the owner of ■stock to £290 only. The decree proceeded upon the act of parliament. So far as the Court acted on the contract, they [507]*507resist be understood as decreeing a specific performance. In ftiat case there was no pretence of fraud or circumvention. it reeined to rest on inadequacy only ; and that arising from subsequent circumstances; the stock being worth 920 per pent, at the time of the contract. There were other facts and points in the case to which I have not referred, as they have no bearing on the present question,

In Barnardislon v. Lingwood, (2 Atk. 133) Barnardislon,

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3 Cow. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-v-delancy-nysupct-1824.