Washington and Turner v. Ogden

66 U.S. 450, 17 L. Ed. 203, 1 Black 450, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 497
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 21, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 450 (Washington and Turner v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington and Turner v. Ogden, 66 U.S. 450, 17 L. Ed. 203, 1 Black 450, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 497 (1862).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER.

The very numerous exceptions to the sufficiency of the pleadings, and the-correctness of the instructions given by the court, all depend on the construction given to the covenants of the agreement, which.is the foundation of the suit. It is in the following words: .

“ Chicago, June 20, 1859.

“We will give M. D. Ogden, trustee Chicago Land Company, sixty-seven thousand and five hundred dollars for the property described in the John S. Wright' contract with the trustees of the Chicago Land Company, dated June 4, 1855, or thereabouts, and pay for the same as follows: thirty-five thousand in cash within the next sixty days, and the balance in one, two, and three years, in .equal instalments, with six per cent, inter-' est, payable annually. It is understood that it is all payable at the office of Ogden, Eleetwood & Co., in Chicago. In the event of our being deprived of the water front on block 35, Elston’s addition to Chicago by Robins, a difference in the purchase-money shall be made, corresponding to the value of the property lost. The said M. D. Ogden, trustee, &c., agrees to sell to Johri-A. "Washington and Wm. E. Turner, both of Virginia, the above described property for the said sum of sixty-seven thousand five hundred dollars, payable as above; and on the payment of the said thirty-five thousand dollars, cash, within the next sixty days, he will make a deed to said Washington and Turner for said property, and take a bond and mortgage on the same, for payment of the balance of thirty-two thousand five hundred dollars, to be paid as above stated. This agreement is to be dependent on the surrender and cancelment of said contract with said Wright.”

It is evident that the covenants of this contract are not independent. They are concurrent or reciprocal, constituting mutual conditions to be performed at the same time. The vendor is not bound to convey, unless the money due on the first in *456 stalmentbe paid; nor is the purchaser bound to pay unless the vendor can convey a good title, free of all incumbrance. The agreement shows that the vendor at that time was not able to give a satisfactory title, having a deed on i’ecord, by which he had covenanted to convey the same land to another. It is therefore made a condition precedent by this agreement, that this previous contract should be surrendered and cancelled. The declaration avers that the contract with Wright- was surrendered and cancelled on the 28th day of June, and that the plaintiff has beeu. ever ready and willing to receive the money at the time and place, and “to deliver to defendants a deed of the property.” ' But there is no averment in the narr. that the plaintiff had a good and sufficient title, free from all incumbrance, which he was ready and willing to convey. It is true, the words- of his covenant -are, “ that he will make a deed” to his vendees on receipt of the first instalment. But the meaning pf these words in the contract requires that the deed shall convey the land, and it is not. sufficient to aver his readiness • to perform, merely according to the letter of the contract. . The performance must always be averred according to the' intent of the parties. It is not sufficient to pursue the words, if the intent be not performed. The legal effect of a covenant to Bell is, that the land shall be conveyed by a deed from one who has a good title, or full power to convey a good title.

A sale, ex vi termini-, is a transfer of property from one man to another. It is a contract to pass rights of property for money. • This defect in the declaration cannot be cured by the verdict, under a presumption that the facts necessary to support it have been proved before the jury, because it appears by the record that no such proof was offered to aid the insufficient averments of the declaration.

It appears, also,- that the averment with regard to the surrender and cancelment of the contract with Wright, even if sufficiently pleaded, was wholly without proof to support it, and that the court instructed the jury that they might presume it without proof. It is clearly a condition precedent, without the literal performance of which the purchasers were not bound to pay their money. The vendor had, on the 4th of *457 June, 1855, covenanted to' sell this land to John S. Wright, on payment of certain instalments. • The vendors had reserved to themselves very stringent and unusual powers of declaring the contract forfeited in case of non-payment of the several instalments. John S. Wright, on the third of July, 1837, by his deed, conveyed all his right and title to the premises to Timothy and Walter Wright. This deed was. recorded 13th July, 1837.

T. & W. Wright, on the 3d day of December, 1857, conveyed to James Clapp, and the deed was recorded on the 12th of’ December, 1857. These deeds could not be surrendered or cancelled by parol. Both the original and the record'should have been cancelled and surrendered by act of the parties thereto under seal; if not by all,-yet certainly by'Clapp. This was not done. The plaintiffs in error had prepared their money. Their agent called on Ogden to obtain an abstract of the title, and a proper surrenderor release of the outstanding title, and. was instructed to prepare pi’oper bonds and a mortgage. Ogden promised to attend to having a proper surrender executed, but none was shown or tendered to the agent; on the contrary, Ogden handed him a mortgage and notes to be sent to the purchasers to be executed by them. They refused to sign instruments in that form, and returned them to their agent. He returned them to Ogden, stating, among other reasons, that they expected a proper release or surrender of the outstanding title, and that in the absence of such a release Ogd.en could not make a good title nor’ give possession. A second mortgage and bonds were then drawn and sent to the purchasers by. Ogden, which were also objected to, and another promise given, “thatth & release shbidd be attended to."

But no such deed of release or surrender was made, executed, or tendered to the purchasers within the sixty days. Clapp did not execute a-release till after the 1st of September, which was antedated as of the 15th of August. On this evidence, which was uncontradicted, it wás clearly the duty'of the court to have instructed the jury that the plaintiffs below 'had not made out a case which entitled them.to a verdict; on the contrary, th.e court instructed the jury as follows:

*458 “ 2d. By the terms of the John. S. W right contract, if default were made in the payment of the instalment due in 1859, it was competent for the Messrs. Ogden, at their option, to declare it forfeited and at an end as a contract for conveyance, and the land might be granted to another. No release or conveyance in writing by Wright or his assignee was absolutely necessary in such case, in order to put an end to the contract to convey. Strictly speaking, Wright, having parted with his interest in the land to Clapp, had no power over the contract; but if he, with the acquiescence and consent of Clapp, after default of payment, delivered the contract to Mr. Ogden, and it was the agreement and understanding of all parties in interest that the contract was at an end, then it might be regarded as substantially surrendered and cancelled.

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Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 450, 17 L. Ed. 203, 1 Black 450, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-and-turner-v-ogden-scotus-1862.