Stanton v. . Miller

58 N.Y. 192, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 488
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 22, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 58 N.Y. 192 (Stanton v. . Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanton v. . Miller, 58 N.Y. 192, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 488 (N.Y. 1874).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

There is an insuperable difficulty in the way of maintaining this action, regarding it as an action-for the specific performance of Mrs. Miller’s agreement of June 25, 1870, to convey or devise the house and lot in question, growing out of the want of certainty in respect to the persons to whom the conveyance or devise was to be made.

In consideration that Mr. Stanton would remove with .his' family to Rochester, and take care of and support Mrs. Miller during her life, she promised to assure to him and his family the house and lot (after her death), and to secure the title by placing a deed in escrow, or by will. If there was no specific provision in the contract on the subject, it would be inferred, I think, that the title to the house and lot was ultimately, to be vested in Mr. Stanton, the other party to the agreement. In a general sense such a disposition of the property would be for the benefit of the grantee or devisee and his family. But that this was not the intention of the parties is conclusively established by a clause in the contract whiclj declares that the title shall be given to such member or members of said Stanton’s family as Mrs. Miller may choose.” Construing this clause in connection with the other provisions of the contract, the agreement of Mrs. Miller was this: to give the house and lot by will, or by deed to take effect after her death, to - such person or persons, members- of the family of Mr. Stanton, as -she should thereafter select and determine, upon condition, however, that Mr. Stanton should have fully performed the contract on his part. The clause *200 referred to was not a reservation by Mrs. Miller of a power to change the appointment of the title from the course defined in the contract, but was intended to provide for a designation at a future time of the appointees, who by the contract were left wholly uncertain, except that it defined the class of persons from which they should be selected. Unless Mrs. Miller, prior to her death, by some irrevocable act, or by some act which if not irrevocable during her life was not in fact revoked by her, designated the particular members of the family of Mr. Stanton who should take the land under the contract, the court cannot enforce its specific performance. It is an elementary principle governing courts of equity in the exercise of this jurisdiction, that a contract will not be specifically enforced unless it is certain in its terms, or can be made certain by reference to such extrinsic facts as may, within the rules of law, be referred to, to ascertain its meaning. (Fonblanque’s Eq., bk. 1, chap. 3, § 7; Adams’ Eq., 184; Buxton v. lister, 3 Atk., 386; Lord Walpole v. Lord Oxford, 3 Ves., 420; Rose v. Cunynghame, 11 id., 555, note.) “Nothing” (said Lord Habdwicke in Buxton v. Lister) “ is more established in this court, than that any agreement of this kind, ought to be certain, fair and jiist in all its parts.” And Lord Eosslyn, in Lord Walpole v. Lord Oxford, said: “ I lay it down as a general proposition, to which I know no limitation, that all agreements, in order to be executed by this court, must be certain and defined; ” and although the uncertainty may be caused by an obstacle interposed by the defendant or by his default, the rule is not changed if the court, in order to enforce the contract, will be required to supply a new term to the agreement. (Wilkes v. Davis, 3 Mer., 507; Dailey v. Whitaker, 4 Drew, 134; Blundell v. Brettargh, 17 Ves., 232; Morgan v. Milman, 3 De G., M. & G., 24.) The plaintiff in such a case will be left to his remedy in an action for damages.

The plaintiffs are Mr. Stanton and his four daughters, and they, together with Mrs. Stanton, the wife of Mr. Stanton, comprised his family when the contract was made; The con *201 tract of Mrs. Miller would have been performed if she had conveyed or devised the land to Mrs. Stanton, who is not a party to the action, or to any one or more of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs cannot say that Mrs. Miller intended that they or any two of them should have the land, looking to the contract only; and if the court, in the absence of proof of a valid designation by Mrs. Miller of the persons who 'should take the title, shall decree it to them, it will be making a contract between the parties, and not executing one. That no irrevocable or valid appointment of the title was made by Mrs. Miller will be shown hereafter; and without considering the other objections' in the way of decreeing a specific performance, urged by the counsel for the defendants, I am of opinion, for the reasons stated, that the contract of June 23, 1870, cannot be specifically enforced.

The specific relief demanded in the complaint is two-fold : first, that the defendant Benedict, the depositary of the deed of June 29, 1870, be compelled to' deliver it to the plaintiffs; and, second, that the defendant Miller, the son and sole heir at law of Mrs. Miller, who is in possession of the house and lot, deliver the possession to them. The right to the delivery of the deed is claimed, on the ground that it was deposited by Mrs. Miller in the hands of Benedict, in escrow, pursuant to the contract of June 23,1870, to await the performance of the contract on the part of Mr. Stanton, and in case of performance to be delivered to him at the death of Mrs. Miller, and that Mr. Stanton performed his contract, or what is claimed to be equivalent thereto, tendered performance, and held himself in readiness to perform, at all times during Mrs. Miller’s life.

A deed delivered to a third person to be held until the performance of some condition, is a delivery in escrow. (2 Bl., 307.) Unlike the case of a delivery to the grantee, or his agent, no title passes until the condition is performed, nor, generally, until an actual delivery of the deed to the grantee after the happening of the event upon which the title is suspended. This is subject to exceptions, one of which is, that in case of the death of the grantor before condition per *202 formed, and it is afterward performed, the law from necessity will give effect to the first delivery, and make it the deed of the grantor from that time. (Perryman's Case, 3 Coke, 84.) This fiction is indulged to satisfy the law, which requires that a delivery, to make a deed effectual, must be the act of the grantor; and as his death would operate as a revocation of the authority of the depositary, the intention of the parties would be defeated if a second delivery was required to vest the title. (Jackson v. Rowland, 6 Wend., 666; Wheelwright v. Wheelwright, 2 Mass., 447.)

The making of a deed in escrow, presupposes. a contract, pursuant to which the deposit is made; it implies an arrangement between the grantor and the party who is to perform the condition; and when the one has agreed to convey when the condition is performed, and the other to perform the condition, and the deed has been placed in

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Bluebook (online)
58 N.Y. 192, 1874 N.Y. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanton-v-miller-ny-1874.