The facts of this case, as we find them correctly stated in the brief filed by appellant, are as follows: In 1849, William Davis made and delivered to Edward Roberts a title bond for the land in controversy, covenanting for a deed whenever a patent issued. Shortly afterwards, Roberts sold the land by a verbal contract to Lovejoy, and Lovejoy paid a part of the purchase money. Afterwards, Roberts sued Lovejoy for the unpaid balance of the purchase money.
Lovejoy defended the action on the statute of frauds, and set up fraud and misrepresentation in the sale. At *611the trial of the cause, which was on the seventh of April, 1850, Roberts tendered to Lovejoy a conveyance in writing of the land, which Lovejoy accepted, but insisted upon reconvention under the plea of fraud and misrepresentation. The issue was found in his favor.
Lovejoy afterwards sold the land to Watts. The patent having issued on the twenty-fourth of March, 1857, Lovejoy brought suit against Davis, to whom the patent had issued, for the use of Watts. On the seventeenth of April, 1857, Roberts intervened and claimed a recision of his contract with Lovejoy. Pending the suit, Watts sold to Tucker, and Roberts resold one-half of the land to the same party.
Without noticing the errors assigned, or the able argument of counsel, we think it clear, from the statement of the case and from the facts, that Roberts has never made out a case entitling him to a recision of the contract, and that he should have been held to be estopped by his deed to Lovejoy from all future claim to the land.
If Roberts did misrepresent the quantity, quality, or value of the land to Lovejoy, the latter may have been entitled in equity to a rebate of the price paid or agreed to be paid; and a court of equity could have decreed accordingly, without necessarily rescinding the contract.
This case has been twice before this court, but certainly never upon a fair statement of the facts and issues in law.
The principles of law heretofore announced by the court, abstractly considered, may be correct, and yet not be applicable to the case as it stands before us.
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause remanded, to be proceeded in in accordance with this opinion.
*612Walker, J.We are again called on to review a former opinion.
The attorney for appellant, as the main ground relied on for a new hearing, insists that we have decided this case differently from the former decisions of the court.
We are certainly aware of this fact, and at the same time we do not differ from the former opinions in any matter of law whatever applicable to this case. But an Important fact is brought before us, and urged for our consideration, which certainly could not have been considered by our predecessors.
But the best and the wisest have erred. There is no error in the law of the opinion of Chief Justice Wheeler; but there is an entire silence, as we propose to show by quoting herein his entire opinion, upon a most material fact, which, if he had considered it, would most assuredly have led his mind to a different conclusion.
We give the opinion, and most cordially endorse it in its application to any case to which it can properly apply:
“Nothing can be more clearly settled than that a court of equity will not decree the specific performance of a contract in favor of a party who refuses performance in the whole or in part. The plaintiff had refused to pay a portion o£ the purchase money. It makes no difference that his refusal was sanctioned by the judgment of the justice; it was none the less a disaffirmance of the contract on his part, and released the other party from his obligation to perform.
“A party who seeks the specific performance of a contract must have performed, or must show a readiness to perform, the very contract in terms of which he seehs performance. He cannot disaffirm it in part, and *613at the same time hold the other party to the whole of his undertaking. The court will not aid him to have performance of the contract when he rejects any part of it. That would be to make for the parties a new contract, to which they had not given their assent.
“ Courts of equity do not modify or change the contracts of parties to suit their own sense of what would be equitable and just in the premises, but leave them to make their own contracts.
“It may be that the defendant would never have entered into the contract which the plaintiff now seeks to enforce against him; that is, a contract to convey his right to the land in question for a sum considerably less than that for which he stipulated as the consideration for the transfer. Whether he would or not the court cannot know, and cannot undertake to make for him a contract, which he has not made, without his consent. Courts never make contracts for parties ; they will only compel performance of the contract which the parties have actually made, and only in favor of the party who has performed, or is ready and willing to perform, his undertaking according to its terms, and who is without fault.
“To entitle the plaintiff to maintain his action, he must show himself entitled to a specific performance as against his immediate vendor. This he has failed to do; and the judgment therefore cannot be maintained.
“As the plaintiff has failed to make out his case upon the merits, it is unnecessary to revise the rulings of the court upon incidental questions.”
As the opinion of the court delivered by Judge Donley in this case (28 Texas, 641), is also invoked against us, and out of great respect to tir opinion, we also quote it entire. The opinion is as f .ows:—
“This cause was before this cour on appeal by *614Edward Roberts, now deceased, and was reversed on the third day of January, 1861. (25 Texas, Sup., 437.) It was there held that a court of equity will not decree a specific performance of a contract in favor of a party who refuses performance of his agreement in whole or in part.
“Prom the evidence in this case, it appears that, more than seventeen years since, the plaintiff’s intestate, Edward Roberts, assigned to the defendant in error a bond on William Davis, for the land in controversy, which bond stipulates that Davis should make title to the land as soon as a patent should be obtained from the government. It appears that there remained of the consideration agreed to be given for this land by appellee, on the first of January, 1850, the sum of $84.35; that the said Edward Roberts endeavored to collect the money of the appellee by suit before a justice of the peace; that the appellee made a successful defense to the suit, and the said Edward Roberts was adjudged to pay the costs incurred in the cause; that since then and since the institution of this suit, Edward Roberts, acting, as he might lawfully do, on the fact that, in effect, the appellee had repudiated the contract in 1850, by refusing the consideration agreed to be given for the land, sold the one-half of the land, and by that sale has incurred a liability on his warranty of title to the purchaser, that will require nearly double the amount that is adjudged to appellant to pay. It is not carrying into effect the agreement with justice to both parties, to adjudge to appellant the amount that was due more than sixteen years before.
“ If the defendant in error must sustain an injury, it is properly chargeable to his own acts in refusing to abide by and perform his contract.”
We have given our unqualified approbation to these *615two opinions, to the full extent that any principle of law is therein enunciated. But there is a paragraph in the opinion of Chief Justice Wheeler which, if it stood alone, and was uninterpreted by the opinion of the same learned jurist in the case of Roeder v. Robson, 20 Texas, 765, we could not approve.
In that case the learned judge uses this language : “If the plaintiff chose to consider the contract rescinded by reason of default of the defendant in making prompt payment, he should not have brought suit on the note. That was to confirm the contract as being in full force, and to ask specific performance of it. * * If the receipt of purchase money after default will waive the default, the bringing of a suit for it, which has the same effect as a bill in equity for specific performance of the contract, should have, it would seem, the same effect, unless the defendant should then resist its payment without any good reason or equitable excuse. ”
But suppose there should be “good reason or equitable excuse;” and suppose that good reason and that equitable excuse are set up in a court of justice, and sustained by the judgment of that court, we think this must have some effect and bearing upon the rights of parties; and a court of equity, whilst it might enforce the contract in part, would modify it in accordance with the “good reason and equitable excuse.”
This was doubtless what Chief Justice Wheeler meant in the case at bar; but when he says “that the vendee must perform the contract as made,” this language is too broad, and without the qualification given in Roeder v. Robson it would not meet the sanction of the courts, nor the approval of text writers. But we know what Chief Justice Wheeler meant, and therefore we mean no criticism. The doctrine of Roeder v. Robson, *616and that which we mean to apply in this case, is broadly laid down by Chief Justice Hemphill, in Estes v. Browning, 11 Texas, 237. The Chief Justice says: “Where the vendee in an executory contract for the sale of lands fails to pay the purchase money according to the contract, and the vendor brings suit to recover the land, the vendee, if he can present any equitable considerations in excuse for his negligence, may offer to pay, and pray a conveyance.”
How, in the case at bar, when this question was tried in the justice’s court, the judgment of the court was virtually that Lovejoy had paid Roberts all that he was entitled to receive^ and that he was excused and exonerated from the payment of the $85.25 and interest, claimed in that suit by Roberts, by reason of the false and fraudulent representations of the latter, both as to the quality and quantity of the land sold.
Here, then, is the equitable excuse furnished by Love-joy, found in the judgment of the justice, and never appealed from. Lovejoy was then excused by this judgment from any further payment to Roberts, and had a right to a decree for the land in consideration of what he had paid. Is this not a material fact ? Should not this court have taken some notice of it on the former adjudications, and decided the law as applicable to it? Does it not bring-the case entirely within the rule of Estes v. Browning and Roeder v. Robson ? Roberts purchased the land from’fDavis, and took a bond for title, to be made whenever the patent issued; he sold the land to Lovejoy under a verbal contract, Lovejoy paying him more than half the purchase money, and agreeing to make a deferred payment of $85.25. Roberts sued Lovejoy for this deferred payment before a justice of the peace. Lovejoy set up the statute of frauds, and also plead, in excuse for the non-payment *617of the money, the fraudulent representations of Roberts as to the quantity and quality of the land; and now, on page 89 of the record, we find this very important fact in the statement of facts, and we extract from the record, to-wit: “That the claim there sued for by said Roberts was for the balance of the purchase money due on the land; that the assignment on the bond was tendered at the trial to obviate the effect of the first plea of Lovejoy, and that-said bond was delivered to said Love-joy, at the trial before said justice, as an absolute conveyance of the land. ’ ’ Now, where is there any allusion in either of the opinions hereinbefore delivered to these important facts as being at all material to the decision of the case ?
We have not said, nor do we now say, that these facts were not before the court in No. 1955, and there was little necessity for bringing again to our notice this record. Were these facts sufficiently material to merit the notice of the court 1 In our judgment, they are just so material as to govern the decision of the case. Roberts, no doubt under the advice of the same able counsel who have represented him, living and dead, for nearly a quarter of century, tendered to Lovejoy, “as an absolute conveyance of the land,” as shown by the statement of facts, his bond from Davis for title; and Love-joy, no doubt acting under the advice of equally able counsel, accepted the conveyance, thus affirming and executing the contract, or making a new one.
But the case was yet on trial, and was heard and tried upon Lovejoy’s plea, setting up that Roberts had defrauded him in the sale of the land, and that he was entitled to a rebatement of the entire $85 sued for. And upon the trial, the justice found for Lovejoy, and from this judgment Roberts has never appealed. What, then, was the condition of the parties % Simply this, in *618our judgment: Roberts conveyed all the interest he had in the land to Lovejoy, by the assignment of the title bond from Davis as an absolute conveyance to Lovejoy, and Lovejoy accepted the conveyance; a,nd thus both parties affirmed and validated the contract, subject to the judgment of the court upon Lovejoy’s equitable defense to the payment of the unpaid purchase money. At least, this was the effect, in law, of their acts. What right, then, has Roberts, or his heirs, to the land in controversy % He had no legal title, and he assigned all his equities to Lovejoy. ■ None whatever, that we can see ; nor has he any right to complain that he did not receive the full amount of the purchase money agreed on, if, by fraudulent representations touching the quantity and quality of the land, he had made a contract inequitable in itself.
As to the facts proven before the justice, we know nothing. The judgment may have been right or wrong; if wrong, he should appeal from it, and relieve himself from the charge of fraud. In the opinion of the court, delivered by Judge Donley, the fact is recognized that Lovejoy did make a successful defense to Roberts’s action before the justice ; and the learned judge says, “that since then, and since the institution of this suit, Roberts, acting as he might lawfully do on the fact that, in effect, Lovejoy had repudiated the contract by refusing the consideration agreed to be given for the land, had sold one-half of the land, and by that sale has incurred a liability on his warranty of title to the purchaser that will require nearly double the amount that is adjudged to appellant to pay. It is not carrying into effect the agreement, with justice to both parties, to adjudge to appellant the amount that was due more than sixteen years ago. If the defendant in error must sustain an injury, it is properly chargeable to *619Ms own acts in refusing to aMde by and perform Ms contract.”
How, let us examine this reasoning for one moment, and see whether it has a proper application to this case. What acts of Lovejoy are to condemn him in a court of equity by this parity of reasoning % He paid more than one-half the purchase money, and when sued for the remainder he set up in a court of justice, as a defense to the demand, that he had been cheated and defrauded in the sale ; and the court sustained his plea, and the judgment of the court has never been appealed from, nor impeached, to this day. On the other hand, what right had Roberts to sell any portion of the land to Tucker ? He never had the legal title; and by an absolute assignment of his equities to Love-joy, in open court, he left in himself no right or title whatever. And now, is his subsequent conveyance to Tucker by warrantee deed, when he had no title, and knew he had no title, an act in itself that is to raise an equity, or thus to be considered by a learned and able court; and because, forsooth, his liability to Tucker would be greater than the amount coming to him from Lovejoy, he must have the land back, in order to save Mm his liability to Tucker on the covenants of his deed % If this be law or equity, then A may sell Ms land to-day and deed it to B for $1000, to be paid at the expiration of six months; but before the six months have transpired A discovers that C will give him $2000 for the land, whereupon, without any title whatever, he sells the land to C for the $2000, and warrants the title. The parties come into a court of equity and ask that these facts may be adjudicated. Will any court, having its eyes open, say that the contract between A and B must be set aside, for the reason that A has incurred to 0 a liability which the thousand dollars B *620-owes will not discharge ? We, with all deference, decline to adopt any such doctrine ; nor do we believe, as is contended in the able brief of appellant’s counsel, that our predecessors would have adopted it, if due regard had been paid to all the facts in this case.
It is not necessary that we should dispute with those learned men any proposition of law which could have fairly grown out of this case.
For the reasons we have herein given, we affirm our former opinion.
Reveesed AHD EEMAKDED.