Wadick v. . MacE

83 N.E. 571, 191 N.Y. 1, 29 Bedell 1, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1031
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 21, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 83 N.E. 571 (Wadick v. . MacE) 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
Wadick v. . MacE, 83 N.E. 571, 191 N.Y. 1, 29 Bedell 1, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1031 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

This is a suit by the vendee in a contract for the sale of land to enforce the specific performance of that contract.

*3 The contract was made between Malinda Gr. Mace, party of the first part, and Arthur H. Wadiek, party of the second part; and the party of the first part thereby agreed to sell to the party of the second part “ All that certain tract of land, situate, lying and being in what was formerly the Town of Westchester, County of Westchester and State of New York, but now a part of 'the Twenty-fourth Ward, Borough of the Bronx, City, County and State of New York, and known as the most Southerly Twenty (20) acres of the Levi H. Mace Farm, nearest Brouxdale and running from the White Plains Road to Boston Road and bounded and described as follows: Northerly by the remaining portion of the said Levi H. Mace Farm; easterly by the Boston Road; Southerly by the Wolff Estate, and Westerly by the White Plains Road.”

The consideration is stated in the contract to be the sum of $115,000, $1,000 of which was paid upon the execution of the instrument. In reference to this payment the contract contained the following further provision: It is further understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto, that in the event of a breach of the within Contract by the party of the second part, and the said party of the. second part1 being unable to fulfill the terms and conditions of the within Contract, then this Contract shall be null and void, and the deposit of One Thousand ($1,000) Dollars paid upon the signing of the within Contract shall be retained by the party of the first part hereto, as and for liquidated damages and in full satisfaction thereof, and no suit or action whether for specific performance or damages shall be maintained by the party of the first part against the party of the second part.”

The complaint after alleging the execution of the agreement further alleged that it was expressly understood and agreed between the parties thereto that the said defendant would procure a survey to be made of the premises described in said agreement before the passing of title which survey was to definitely determine the north and south lines of the property described in the agreement .as the Levi H. Mace Farm.” The defendant seasonably tendered to the plaintiff a deed in which *4 the premises to be conveyed were described precisely as they are described in the contract. This the plaintiff declined to accept, insisting that it was not in accordance with the alleged agreement for a survey. The trial court refused to find that the defendant had undertaken to provide the plaintiff with any such survey, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendant on the ground that she had performed her whole duty in tendering to the plaintiff a deed in accordance with the terms of the contract. This judgment has been reversed by the Appellate Division on the law and the facts. The opinion of that court does not point out precisely what error is the basis of the reversal, but it was probably the refusal of the trial court to find that an oral agreement for a survey was made contemporaneously with the execution of the written contract. No doubt the trial court committed an error in this respect, for the uncontradicted testimony abundantly established such an agreement. This error, however, is of no consequence, if, as we think, the character, of the contract itself, now sought to be specifically enforced, was such that a court of equity, '-under established rules, will not thus enforce it.

In the various text boobs and innumerable cases which deal with the subject of specific performance no rule is more clearly or positively stated than the rule that a contract must be mutual in its remedy in order to warrant a decree for the specific performance thereof. “It must be in general,” says Professor Pomeroy, “ mutual in its obligation and in its remedy.” (4 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence [3d ed.], § 1405.) This statement has been quoted with approval again and again by the courts in this and many other states. The same learned author, in another work, declares that if a contract cannot be specifically enforced against one of the parties, then, and for that reason, he is not entitled to the remedy of a specific performance a,gainst 1ns adversary. (Pomeroy on Contracts, § 163.) In Palmer v. Gould (144 N. Y. 671) the court declared it to be a well-settled rule that the specific performance of a contract for the sale of lands will not be decreed *5 if the remedy be not mutual. The same doctrine was asserted b.y this court in Stokes v. Stokes (148 N. Y. 708); Mahaney v. Carr (175 N. Y. 454) and Ide v. Brown (178 N. Y. 26, 39). The necessity of mutuality in' order to justify a decree for specific performance is pointed out by the Supreme Court of the United States in Marble Company v. Ripley (10 Wall. 339, 359) where Mr. Justice Strong says: “It is a general principle that when, from personal incapacity, the nature of the contract, or any other cause, a contract is incapable of being enforced against one party, that party is equally incapable of enforcing it specifically against the other, though its execution in the latter way might in itself be free from the difficulty attending its execution in the former.” Both parties at the time when the contract is executed must have the right to resort to equity for its specific performance or it will not be specifically enforced (Norris v. Fox, 45 Fed. Rep. 406); the general rule being that an executory contract will not be specifically enforced unless the remedy is mutual. (Strang v. Richmond, etc., R. Co., 101 Fed. Rep. 511.) “The remedy must be mutual as well as the obligation, and where the contract is of such a nature that it cannot be specifically enforced as to one of the parties equity will not enforce it against the other.” (Cooper v. Pena, 21 Cal. 404.) If there be not a mutuality of remedy, no matter from what cause, specific performance will not be decreed. (Stanton v. Singleton, 126 Cal. 657, 663.)

The Appellate Division conceded that the general rule requiring mutuality of remedy applies to such a contract as that in the case at bar, but deemed it inapplicable here, because the vendor by the very terms of the contract itself had waived her right of action for a specific performance while there was no such waiver on the part of the vendee. I do not appreciate the force of the argument in this respect. It is rather to be assumed, I think, that the provision in the contract to the effect that no suit for specific performance shall be maintained by the vendor was inserted therein with a knowledge of the rule which requires a mutuality of remedy *6 as the basis of a suit to specifically enforce a contract; -and, therefore, that the vendor in relinquishing the right to this remedy herself assumed that her action in so doing necessarily involved its relinquishment on the part of the vendee.

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.E. 571, 191 N.Y. 1, 29 Bedell 1, 1908 N.Y. LEXIS 1031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadick-v-mace-ny-1908.