Swan Oil Co. v. Linder

51 S.E. 622, 123 Ga. 550, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 51 S.E. 622 (Swan Oil Co. v. Linder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swan Oil Co. v. Linder, 51 S.E. 622, 123 Ga. 550, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 540 (Ga. 1905).

Opinion

Evans, J.

(After stating the facts.) It is now well settled in this State that specific performance of a parol contract as to land will be decreed, “if it be so far executed by the party seeking relief, and at the instance or by the inducements of the other party, that if the contract be abandoned he can not be restored to his former position.” Civil Code, § 4037. Relief will likewise be afforded where “ there has been such part performance of the contract as would render it a fraud of the party refusing to comply, if the court did not compel a performance.” Civil Code, § 2694 (3). But it does not follow that a promise made without consideration is enforceable in a court of equity merely because the person to whom it is made has, relying upon its fulfilment, acted to his prejudice. Where there is a contract which would be binding on both parties if it did not rest wholly in parol, the interposition’ of a court of equity, after the contract has been partly performed on one side, is justified, to prevent positive fraud being perpetrated by the party who then repudiates the contract and refuses to himself perform. And we have ■cases in which a gift has been enforced, where the donee has •actually 'entered on land in reliance on a parol promise to deed it to him and has, at the donor’s instance, made valuable improvements thereon; for in such a case the donor would profit by his fraudulent conduct to the' extent of the value of the improvements made, were he permitted to break his promise. Porter v. Allen, 54 Ga. 624; Jones v. Clark, 59 Ga. 136; Hughes v. Hughes, 72 Ga. 173; Howell v. Ellsberry, 79 Ga. 475. What was the character of the alleged agreement by Linder in the present case? According to the most favorable view of the plaintiff’s allegations, it was, a promise to give the plaintiff a valuable right of way; there is no pretense that there was any ■consideration for this promise; what induced Linder to make it were such incidental benefits as he believed might flow to him by the plaintiff being placed in a position where its interests would dictate that- it should make shipments over the road which he controlled. It is to be observed that the plaintiff was not bound to apply for a charter, or to erect an oil-mill, or, in the event it should be incorporated and should elect to build its [554]*554plant and lay a spur-track to the main line, to ship any freight, save at’its option, over the line of railway which Linder had leased and was operating. Imagine the absurdity of his predicating a suit for damages upon the failure of the plaintiff to erect its plant and to furnish shipments to his road, had the plaintiff, after it was incorporated, abandoned its project, or, after erecting its mill, elected not to build a spur-track or to furnish any shipments of freight to him. The so-called “agreement ” between the parties was entirely unilateral. Morrow v. Southern Express Co., 101 Ga. 810; Huggins v. Cement Co., 121 Ga. 311; Swindell v. National Bank, 121 Ga. 714. Were Linder compelled to perform his promise by executing to the plaintiff a lease to the coveted right of way, how would the parties then stand? At its option the plaintiff company could go on and build its plant or abandon the enterprise; and after it erected the mill, the company would be under no obligation to furnish shipments to Linder or have shipments to it made over his line, inasmuch as the company has never undertaken to bind itself to pay or to do anything whatever in consideration of his executing a lease to a right of way for its spur-track. The courts can not, of course, make a contract for the parties; and the question is, can the agreement of Linder be enforced against him because he has encouraged the plaintiff to expend money upon the faith of his complying with his naked promise to make to it a valuable gift necessary to the complete enjoyment of its property. He has not profited by the expenditure of any of this money; he will not profit therefrom or from the carrying out of the plaintiff’s commercial enterprise, save at its pleasure and in a measure it shall determine for itself; he can not force it to perform. Harrison v. Lumber Co., 119 Ga. 6. The case is not one like that of McCaw Manufacturing Co. v. Felder, 115 Ga. 408, where one party makes a continuous proposal to do something for another, or to sell or furnish him something, if he, in return, will do or bind himself to do something for the former. In such a case, if the proposal be accepted before it has been withdrawn, mutuality is not lacking, and both parties become bound to perform their respective obligations. If the one who makes the proposal does not withdraw it before the other, with his express or implied assent and appro[555]*555bation, enters upon a performance of the obligations which it-was proposed he should undertake, and expends money in so-doing, the want of mutuality in the first instance because he did not bind himself to perform will not excuse the other from living up to the terms of his proposal. Fontaine v. Baxley 90 Ga. 416.

Our code, however, expressly declares that specific performance “ will not be decreed of a voluntary agreement or merely gratuitous promise” in any case except one, viz., where possession of lands has been given under such an agreement, upon a meritorious, consideration, and valuable improvements have been made upon the faith thereof. Civil Code, § 4039. Nor has the letter of this, section been broadened by construction to meet cases which might well have been included in the exception. Thompson v. Ray, 92 Ga. 285, where during the life of the donor materials with which improvements were made after his death were purchased with his knowledge. In Peacock v. Deweese, 73 Ga. 570, the court declined to give its aid to the plaintiff, because the agreement he relied on was unilateral, he not having bound himself to do anything, save at his option, for the benefit of the defendant. To break a promise wholly without consideration does not constitute legal fraud, and the mere fact that the person to whom the promise is made is thereby induced to act as he would not otherwise have done will not of itself alone afford ground for equitable interference- or redress. Where the aggrieved party’s complaint is that he expected to get something for nothing, and» so expecting, expended money for his own benefit, not that of the promisor, which he otherwise would not have done, his loss of expectations and money is to be attributed to his own folly rather than to fraud on the part of the promisor, who never legally bound himself to perform, as his disappointed promisee was bound to know. Especially where, as in the present case, the alleged promise was not only gratuitous but was in parol, the statute of frauds should not be emasculated. Our Civil Code, § 4039, does not take such a case out of the statute, but declares that the promise, being wholly without consideration, can not be specifically enforced, without qualifying this declaration in any way, or providing that money expended by the promisee on the faith of the proiliise will render it obligatory upon the promisor. The [556]*556plaintiff has done nothing, nor does it propose to do anything, in pursuance of any contract with the defendant. The ease stated is even less meritorious than that of Simonton v. Ins. Co., 51 Ga.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 S.E. 622, 123 Ga. 550, 1905 Ga. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swan-oil-co-v-linder-ga-1905.