Waters v. Travis

9 Johns. 450
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedMay 15, 1812
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 9 Johns. 450 (Waters v. Travis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waters v. Travis, 9 Johns. 450 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1812).

Opinion

Spencer, J.

The first objection to the decree is, that it decrees a specific execution of part of an entire contract; that the respondent will get a conveyance for 234 acres, instead of 439, to which he was entitled, if any. The agreement of 1787 was executory; it did not vest any legal title in the respondent; but it gave him a right to coerce the appellant and Wisner, by resorting to a court of equity, to a specific execution; or he had the election to sue at law, in case they refused to convey the lands to him, for damages. It cannot be controverted, that a conveyance for a valuable consideration, made bona fide to a third person, without notice of the agreement, and before it had been carried into execution, by a deed, would have passed to a third person the legal title The appellant discloses, by his answer, that he [464]*464came to a partition with the other tenant in common, of the lot, an undivided part of which,, commensurate to his interest therein, he had covenanted to convey to the respondent. I have not understood the appellant’s counsel to urge this partition as an objection to a specific execution of the agreement; and had it foeen urged, it could not avail him. The respondent has a right to consider the appellant as acting for him in that partition. ’ The act itself did not vary the rights of the parties; it was reducing to a certainty what was before uncertain; it was merely locating the three fourths of a half of the lot; and if the respondent acquiesced in that arrangement, he had a right to do so. The idea cannot be tolerated, that a man shall, by his own act, prevent another with whom he has contracted from receiving the benefit of his contract, when the thing contracted for substantially resides ill the party contracting; but has merely undergone a modification. As it respects the appellant, therefore, it cannot be pretended that he is exonerated from a specific execution of his contract, because, he has ascertained and located the interest he had in the tract as a tenant in common. Had the respondent complained of this interference, the result, probably, would have been different; but he is contented with it. He elects to consider the appellant as his agent, in that transaction.

With respect to the three parcels of the lot conveyed away by the appellant before his answer came in, the same remarks are applicable. The appellant cannot take advantage of his own wrongful acts, to discharge himself of a vested right in the respondent. Whether these conveyances would have stood the test of an inquiry instituted by the respondent is immaterial. He acquiesces in them; and so far the appellant has, by his own act, disabled himself from performing his contract specifically. It is against all my notions of justice, to allow the appellant to excuse himself from performing so much of the contract as he can yet perform, because he has seen fit wrongfully to abridge himself of the power of performing the whole. And I again recur to the observation, that the converse of this proposition would not be just or true. The respondent might insist on having all the land or none, or he may elect to consider the acts of the appellant as his, and thus make valid what was wrongful.

The cases which have been cited, to show that a court of chancery will not decree a partial performance of articles, but will decree all or none, are not applicable to the case before us. As a general principle of equity, the proposition is incontestable; and [465]*465wherever it has been applied, as far as my researches go, it has been to a case, where the party called into equity to perform, has the ability of performing the whole, and where the other party was desirous of selecting a part of the subject matter, and taking it, unencumbered by another part. There is a settled distinction, when a vendor comes into a court of equity to compel the vendee to a performance; and when a vendee resorts to equity to compel a vendor to perform. In the first case, if the vendor is unable to make out a title as to part of the subject matter of the contract, which was the principal object of the purchaser, equity will not compel the vendee to perform the contract pro tanto. There are also other distinctions which it is unnecessary now to advert to. But where a vendee seeks a specific execution of an agreement, there is, says Mr. Sugden, (Sug. Law of Vend. 193.) much greater reason for affording the aid of the court at the suit of the purchaser, when he is desirous of taking the part to which a title can be made. And a purchaser (he observes) may in some cases insist upon having the part of an estate to which a title is produced, although the vendor could not compel him to purchase it. Thus in the case of The Attorney-General v. Gower, (1 Ves. 218.) tenants in common contracted for the sale of their estate, and one of them died, it was held, that the survivors could not compel the purchaser to take their shares, unless he could also obtain the shares of the deceased. But the converse of the proposition was denied; and it was held that the purchaser might compel the survivors to convey their shares, although the contract could not be executed against the heirs of the deceased. In another case, (10 Ves. jun. 315.) Lord Eldon held that if a man, having a partial interest in an estate, enters into a contract agreeing to sell it, as his own, he cannot afterwards say he has valuable interests, but not the entirety; and if the vendee chooses to take as much as he can have, he has a right to that, and an abatement. There are other cases to the same effect. (1 Ves. jun. 221. 2 Bro. Ch. Cas. 118. 326. and 1 Bro. Ch. Cas. 140.)

-In the present case the land was contracted to be sold at one dollar per acre; and it is not set up by the appellant that the land in the possession of the respondent, and which was decreed to him, is more valuable than the other parts, sold by the appellant; and I am, on the justice of the case, as well as on authority, of opinion, that the decree, in this respect, ought to be affirmed.

The next point made, was the delay on the part of the re. [466]*466spondent from 17Í57 to 1802. It was insisted that after such a lapse of time he had forfeited all right to a specific execution. Generally speaking, the obligation of an agreement binds the parties from the moment it is entered into; and place and time are circumstances affecting only the performance of the engagement; and do not import, in a court of equity, conditions by which the parties are to be considered as contracting on the ground of a strict compliance, but are mere circumstances admitting of compensation.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Johns. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-v-travis-nycterr-1812.