Watt v. Rogers

Daly, J.

The defect in the verification is one that might be cured by allowing the plaintiff to verify anew, if he were otherwise entitled to an injunction.

The ground of action relied upon in the present suit, could not have been set up in the actions brought against the plaintiff by Ogilvie and Curtis. The parties there were different. There the land was shown to have been unoccupied, and the legal title being in the plaintiffs, and the title drawing to it the possession, Watt, the plaintiff in this, and the defendant in those actions, was held to be a trespasser by entering upon it. This action is brought to compel a specific performance of the agreement made by Rogers to convey the land to Watt, and we held in those suits that the rights acquired by Watt under that agreement constituted no defence against the legal title which rested in the plaintiffs, under the conveyances made to them by Rogers.

Nor is there any objection to restraining the plaintiffs by an injunction in this action from proceeding to enforce the payment of their judgment, if the plaintiff has disclosed a case which entitles him to relief. He is not compelled to move in those actions for a stay of proceedings. The questions involved in them have been settled, and the legal rights of the parties as litigating them, determined by judgment. All that is necessary in respect to them to protect the rights of the plaintiff here, is to order all proceedings under them to be stayed, until this suit is determined, which order may as well be granted in the form of an injunction here, as in the shape of an order to stay proceedings, to be made upon a motion in those actions. The motion for the injunction here is upon notice to the other party. He has appeared, and can set up every thing in resisting the motion for the injunction that he could set up in opposition to a motion for a stay of proceedings. It is not only more convenient to consider the question upon the plaintiff’s complaint in this action, which discloses all the facts, instead of compelling him unnecessarily to make a long affidavit for the purpose of such a motion, but as he is compelled by the statute (2 R. S. 3 Ed. 251), if an injunction like this is granted, to give a bond to secure the amount of the judgment, or to deposit the amount in court, *266which he need not be obliged to do in getting a stay of proceedings upon the judgment unless the court should require it, the form of proceeding affords a great protection to the plaintiff in the judgment, and I think it very probable, that for that reason alone, the court, if asked to stay proceedings upon the judgment, would refuse it upon the ground that the party should apply for an injunction, and give the security required by the statute.

But the plaintiff has not shown by his complaint that he is entitled to the equitable relief asked. The contract, a specific performance of which is sought to be enforced, was entered into in 1842. A part of the consideration was acknowledged to have been received, and the plaintiff agreed to pay the residue, $3019 33, upon the 7th of March, 1845, upon the receipt of which the defendant Rogers agreed to convey the land. It does not appear by the complaint, that the defendant was ever called upon to perform, or that the plaintiff ever offered to pay, or tendered to him the $3019 33, but he rests his equity entirely upon the fact, that Rogers fioe years after the time that the plaintiff was bound to perform, that is on March 1st, 1850, sold and conveyed the property to the defendant Ogilvie, for what the plaintiff regards as an inadequate consideration. It seems that he suffered five years to elapse without doing any thing in performance of the contract, and he now comes into court with the averment that he is ready and willing to perform, and asks that the conveyance to Ogilvie may be declared void, and set aside, and that Rogers may be required to convey the land to him, the plaintiff, upon receiving the $3019 33 with interest, and all sums that Rogers may have paid for taxes or assessments ; or that the land, which is averred to be now worth $10,000, may be sold by order of the court, and after deducting from the proceeds of the sale the amount to which Rogers is entitled, that the residue may be paid to him, the plaintiff.

For the non-performance of a contract, parties have a remedy by an action for damages, and cannot claim in equity a specific performance as a matter of absolute right, but whether it will be decreed or not, is matter resting in the sound discretion of the court in view of all the circumstances. *267Such a decree will not be made except in cases where it would be strictly equitable to make it, and the court will give no aid to a party who, being under obligations like the plaintiff here, to perform within a given time, suffers a long period of time to elapse doing nothing on his part, unless he furnishes to the court a reasonable and satisfactory excuse for his delay. “ Due diligence” says Lord Manners in Moore v. Blake, (1 Ball & B., 69), “ is necessary to call this court into activity, and where it does not exist, a court of equity will not lend its assistance. It always discountenances laches and neglect.” To the same effect is the observation of Lord Alvanley in Milward v. the Earl of Thanet, (5 Ves. 720, note b.), “ that a party cannot call upon a court of equity for a specific performance unless he has shown himself ready, desirous, prompt and eager.” The case of the plaintiff does not differ, except in the payment of a part of the consideration, from Ballard v. Walker (3 Johns, Cas. 60). There the defendant agreed to convey to the plaintiff a lot of land upon a delivery by the plaintiff of a bond and mortgage, properly executed, for the payment of the consideration in two equal instalments, payable in five and six years from the date of the agreement. In about a year after, the defendant conveyed the property to another person, and four years from the date of the agreement, the plaintiff sent to the defendant to*say that though not ready then to perform, he would furnish good security to pay the money by the time it was payable. The defendant, however, refused to perform, on the ground that he had sold the land. A year after, the formal tender of the bond and mortgage was made, but the defendant refused to perform the agreement. In this state of facts, the plaintiff brought his action, but the court gave judgment for the defendant. This seems to have been an action at law, but the principle upon which the law was determined was fully recognized and enforced in equity in Hatch v. Cobb (4 Johns. Ch., 559). See also Watson v. Reid (1 Russ, & M., 236 . Halford v. Boore, (5 Ves. 719, Story Ey. Jur., § 776.)

The court will not refuse its aid because the plaintiff has failed to comply with the contract on his part strictly and literally, and there are many cases in which it has given relief *268and compelled a specific performance, where the plaintiff could have maintained no action at law by reason of his failure to comply strictly with the terms of the contract. “ Courts of Equity,” says, Story, J. (Eq. Juris. § 776), have regard to time as far as its respects the good faith and diligence of the parties. But if circumstances of a reasonable nature have disabled the party from a strict compliance, or if he comes recenti faeto to ask for a specific performance, the suit is treated with indulgence and generally with favor.” “ But then” he remarks, it should be clear, using the language of Lord Alvanley, that he has shown himself ready, desirous, prompt and eager to perform the contract.” The only excuse to be gleaned from the complaint in this case for the plaintiff’s neglect and delay, is the fact that a suit was pending and is still pending between him and his brother, James Watt, in respect to the release of a lien of a mortgage, originally given by him to his brother, upon the land. The plaintiff’s brother filed a bill to have the mortgage foreclosed and the release declared invalid about a year after the plaintiff sold and conveyed this land to the defendant Platt Rogers, with a covenant of warrantee, and it is alleged in the complaint that Rogers became dissatisfied with his purchase in consequence of this suit, and, though protected against the alleged incumbrance by the plaintiff’s covenant of warrantee, that he entered into the agreement for the sale of the land to the plaintiff, the specific performance of which the plaintiff now seeks to enforce. But I do not see that the pendency of this suit should be deemed sufficient to excuse the plaintiff’s delay. Rogers bought the land originally from the plaintiff with a covenant of warrantee against this alleged incumbrance, and he was not bound to wait for the performance of the contract on the part of the plaintiff, until that suit was determined. As it was, it appears that he waited five years before he sold the property to Ogilvie. It is true that he was a party to that suit, and that if the plaintiff in it should succeed in establishing the validity of the lien, that his title to the land would be affected to the extent of the mortgage. But the plaintiff here was responsible to him upon the covenant of warrantee, and the very object of his entering into the agreement, as admitted by the complaint, was to dispose of the *269land to the plaintiff, and thus rid himself of any responsibility or of any questions that might grow out of that suit; — to withdraw himself from the whole matter, leaving it to the two brothers to carry on that litigation. That suit it seems has been going on for fifteen years, and it would be preposterous to say under an agreement like this in which the time for performance on the part of the plaintiff is distinctly specified, that he could be excused from performing until that controversy was settled. The defendant, it is true, has received a part of the consideration, but it does not appear that he has refused to refund it, or that since he treated the contract as rescinded, which he did by selling the land to Ogilvie, that he has been unwilling to give it back again to the plaintiff. For these reasons, I think the plaintiff has not shown a case entitling him to an injunction, and the temporary injunction granted in the first instance is dissolved.