The opinion of the court was delivered by
Kennedy, J.The third error, which is the last, I shall notice first; because, if it be not tenable, the others would seem, in that case, to be immaterial.
The question presented by the third bill of exceptions, which is the ground of the third error assigned, is, was the paper referred to in the deposition oh Eugene Augustus Freeauff, and proven by him to be in his handwriting, material, as. evidence, to the issue.
Part of the land, consisting of several lots or parcels, which the defendant agreed to sell to the plaintiffs, had been purchased, as it appears from the evidence, by this defendant of the Rev. Lewis David Von Schweinitz, then of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, who held it, among other lands, In trust for the society styled “ The Unitas Fratrum” of that place; and though paid for by the defendant, when he agreed to sell it to the plaintiffs, had not been conveyed by deed to him, so as to invest him with the legal title. According to the testimony of Eugene A. Freeauff, he was an assistant to the Rev. Mr. Von Schweinitz, when the defendant bought this land, and as the defendant alleges, gave to him the paper in question, indicating the number of acres in the several parcels of land which he had purchased of the Rev. Lewis D. Von Schweinitz. And notwithstanding Eugene A. Freeauff, the witness, has no recollection.whatever of his making the writing on-the paper, nor of the time, and the occasion or purpose for which it was made, nor to whom it was given, yet he knows it to have been made by himself, because it is of his handwriting; and he further states, that he recollects to have seen the defendant in the office of' the Rev., Lewis D. Von S.chweinitz, paying money to the latter, and that he probably made the writing on the paper from the books of the Rev. Lewis D. Von *414Schweinitz, but does not recollect any thing at all of the particular circumstances. It also appears that the defendant, áfter he contracted to sell the land to the plaintiffs, obtained a deed of conveyance for that part of it, which he had previously purchased of the Rev. Lewis D. Yon Schweinitz, dated the 14th of March, 1832, describing it as consisting of three lots or parcels, the same number that is mentioned on the paper; the first as .containing 5 acres and 61 perches; the second, 13 acres and 11 perches, and the third 10 acres and 18 perches. Now by comparing the parcels of land conveyed by this deed, it not only appears that the number of parcels thereby conveyed, corresponds with the number mentioned in the paper in question, but that the sum of the first and second parcels conveyed by the deed, makes the same quantity with the parcel last mentioned in the paper, which is 28 acres and 72 perches, and that the last parcel mentioned in the deed, is the same in quantity with the second mentioned in the paper. It would therefore, rather seem as if there had been some connexion between the making of this paper, and the purchase of the land by the defendant, of the Rev. Lewis D. Yon Schweinitz. The only circumstance which appears to militate against this, is, that none of the parcels of land conveyed by the deed, is described as containing 15 acres, 124 perches, as mentioned in the first parcel on the paper. But this descrepaney may readily have arisen from the mistake of the witness, in making out the memorandum on the paper. This papér then, seeing the defendant had no agreement in writing, that we know or have heard of, specifying the number of acres of land purchased by him of the society, or their trustee, may be presumed therefore to have been obtained by him, for the purpose of showing not only the number of parcels of land so purchased, but the number of acres also in each parcel. And if procured by him for this purpose, the only fair conclusion is, that he was misled by it, in regard to what he said of the number of acres contained in the land, which he agreed to sell to the plaintiffs. For had the statement made on the paper been accurate in this respect, it would have given the defendant fifteen acres, one hundred and twenty perches more than he got by the deed, which added to the eighty four acres and forty-five perches, admitted by the plaintiffs in their declaration to have been held and owned by him, would' have made in the whole one hundred acres and nine perches, the quantity which he alleged, and seemed to think that he had. These conclusions seem to be so very striking and natural, that it has been said, in order to avoid them, that it does not appear from the evidence when the defendant first obtained this paper, whether before or after he agreed to sell to the plaintiffs, and that it may be, that he procured it afterwards with a view to relieve himself from the charge of wilfully misrepresenting the quantity of land, which he agreed to sell to the plaintiff. But this would not be dealing fairly with him, and would be contrary to the rule of *415law, which requires that every man shall be deemed innocent until the contrary be made to appear; and again that fraud shall not be presumed without the proof of such circumstances, at least, as will warrant it. Consequently, until the contrary was shown, it was to be presumed that the defendant had obtained the paper fairly, and with an honest intent; and more espécially so, as he had done all that he could in order to show that he had possessed himself of it innocently, and merely as a memorandum, with a view to show the extent of his purchase from the society, by appealing for this purpose to the testimony of Eugene A. Freeauff, who 'from his connexion with the thing itself, was the most likely, of all others, to be able either to support or to contradict the truth of the defendant’s allegation in regard to it, and if untrue, to expose the fraud. But even supposing that other evidence had been given, tending to prove that the defendant had obtained the paper with a fraudulent design, was it not still a question of fact to be referred, with all the evidence relating to it, to the jury to be decided by them ?
Upon full consideration, we are inclined to think that the paper was proper evidence to be submitted to the jury, in connexion with the testimony of Eugene A. Freeauff, for the purpose of repelling the fraud charged against the defendant'; and though it may have been but slight evidence to acquit him of the imputation, still we think it was such as might be fairly entitled to some weight and consideration by the jury, and that it was therefore properly submitted to them.
The other errors, are founded upon bills of exception to the opinion of the court below, in rejecting the lease executed by Philip Messinger, one of the plaintiffs, by the consent of the other plaintiff, as it is said, to William Levers, for part of the land agreed to be conveyed by the defendant to the plaintiffs; the record also of an amicable action thereon, by Levers against Messinger for a breach of his covenant, contained in the-lease, by not delivering possession of the land in conformity thereto) and of a judgment rendered therein against Messinger for three hundred and eighty-one dollars damages, besides costs of suit, together with the testimony of Levers, showing that these damages and costs so recovered, had been actually paid by the plaintiffs. Now it is perfectly clear, that this evidence, had it been permitted to go to the jury, could not at most be said to have had a tendency to prove any thing more than the damages, and the amount thereof, which the plaintiffs alleged they had sustained and been compelled to pay, in consequence of the defendant’s having fraudulently induced them to enter into the contract with him for the purchase of the land. And it is also equally clear, that the gist of the plaintiff’s action here is a fraud, alleged by them to have been committed by the defendant; and that without proof of the fraud, they had no right to claim or recover any damages whatever. But the jury have found’ in favour of the defendant, *416and acquitted him entirely of the fraud, for had they believed him guilty' of the fraud, it would have been their duty to have found a verdict against-him in favour of the plaintiffs, for nominal damages at least, though no proof had been made of actual damages having been sustained by the plaintiffs. Henoe the evidence mentioned in the two first bills of exception, could not have been material, nor have changed the verdict of the jury in favour of the plaintiffs. They therefore would seem to have no ground for saying that they were prejudiced by the rejection of it.
But independently of this consideration, we think the evidence was inadmissible upon other grounds. The plaintiffs were certainly premature in undertaking to lease the land or any part of it, as they did, before they had acquired a right and control, at least, over the possession of it. The utmost that they could have done with any propriety, at the time they made the lease to Levers, was to have given him a conditional promise to make such a lease, in case they, on the first of April following, 'became the owners of the land, and 'obtained the possession of it. As well might a creditor, to whom a debt of one thousand dollars, or any other sum is due, and payable at a future day, undertake in the mean time to speculate on, and dispose of the money before the receipt of it from His debtor, by entering into an obligation to let another have it on certain terms, and because his debtor fails to pay at the time appointed, then to make him accountable for all the damages and costs, to which he, the creditor, may have subjected himself, and been compelled to pay under his contract, on account of his inability to comply with it, for want of the money coming from his debtor. This would be 'extending the liability or obligation of the party, beyond what he could have contemplated, and of course beyond the legal import of the Contract, as well as the common and ordinary understanding which prevails in regard to it. Besides it is easy .to perceive, that it would be putting it in the power of the creditor in some instances, if not in all, where the debtor may be unable to pay at the day appointed, to ruin him, if he were to be held responsible for all the losses accruing to the creditor, in consequence of the latter not receiving the debt due to him, on the day assigned for the payment of it. So in a case like the present, if such a principle were to obtain, the plaintiffs, before the day came round, at which they, upon fulfilling their part of the contract, would have been entitled to have demanded a title for the land from the defendant, might have gone on, and contracted for the purchase of materials to the value of thousands of dollars, for 'the purpose of erecting expensive buildings and improvements upon the land; and have engaged mechanics' and other workmen to commence putting up the same, as soon as the time should arrive, when they were to obtain the title; and because the defendant failed in making a title, and in surrendering the possession of the land according to his agreement, might *417thus render him liable to pay many thousands of dollars above the real value of the land itself. Such an extent of liability would make all executory contracts -unsafe and perilous in the extreme: it would put it out of the power of a party to such contract, to form even a conjecture in-regard to the measure of compensation, that he would become liable to make in case of his‘failing ,to comply with his contract, if he were to be held responsible to the other for the loss of all speculative gain that might have been realized by the latter, had the former fulfilled his contract punctually; ór for the loss and damages which the latter might be subjected to, and have to pay on account of his failure to comply with his contracts made in anticipation of the former fulfilling his.
It may, however, be said,' that this is not a .case where the defendant failed or neglected to comply with his contract, but one where the plaintiffs considered it their interest not to comply with it on their part; nor to accept a performance thereof from the defendant, because of the fraud alleged to have been practiced by him, in prevailing upon them to make the contract. This is certainly true, for it seerhs that the -defendant offered to fulfil his part of the contract, but the plaintiffs refused to comply with their part of it, alleging that the defendant had knowingly deceived them as to the real quantity of the land. The plaintiffs therefore sought to rescind the agreement, and accordingly refused to carry it into execution,. in which, it would seem, that the defendant acquiesced, after offering to perform his part.. If the plaintiffs had performed their part of the agreement, and taken the title which the defendant tendered them, it is evident that they could have fulfilled their agreement in the lease with Levers, because the title, which the defendant offered to give them, covered all the land which they had leased to Levers, so that it may be said to have been; measurably, a matter of choice with the plaintiffs, that they did not fulfil their agreement with him.
But even under this view of the case, it is difficult, if not impossible to discover any solid grounds upon which the plaintiffs would be entitled to recover the damages claimed here, more than under the former view taken of it; because the same objection still recurs, that the plaintiffs undertook to make a lease of the land before they had acquired, or become invested with any right or title authorising them to do so ; besides.the additional one, that they might if they had pleased, have fulfilled their agreement with Levers, and thus have avoided the payment of the damages and costs recovered by him.
Judgment affirmed.