Under the rules the complainant is allowed a certain time after the filing of the answer, within which *16to except to it. If the answer is filed more than three days before the term, the complainant has until the term, but if the answer comes in within three days of the term or during the “sitting of the Court,” then, Rule II,* gives thirty days for filing exceptions. The object of thus giving the complainant a prescribed time for exceptions, is to secure his right to have a discovery by defendant of the matters inquired of by the bill. The benefit of such discovery arises at the hearing of the cause on bill and answer, or bill, answer and testimony. It is then, and for the purpose of obtaining a final decree that admissions in the answer may avail the complainant, and it is in this way that he is prejudiced by the insufficiency of the answer. Henc^, to protect him against the effect of an insufficient answer and secure to him, at the hearing of the cause, the full benefit of his rights to a discovery, the Rule allows him a time to except to the answer and thus compel the defendant to a full disclosure of the matters relied on by the bill to sustain *17its equity'. This right must be secured by exceptions filed and acted on before the hearing ; for at the hearing no objection can be made founded on the insufficiency of the answer, nor does the omission to answer any allegation of the bill make it evidence. Such being the object of the Rule, it has clearly no application to a motion to dissolve an injunction founded on the answer. On such a motion the preliminary injunction is alone in question. The complainant already has it upon his own sworn bill and for this purpose needs as yet no discovery, though he may need it at the hearing, when the question will be whether the injunction be made perpetual, which depends on the usual course of proof and not on the bill alone. The defendant is now the actor, seeking the removal of the injunction, and his answer, so far as it is used for this purpose's properly treated as amere affidavit. With respect to its sufficiency, the proper question is, not whether it makes full discovery of all matters as is necessary for the purposes of a hearing, but whether it shows cause for dissolving the preliminary injunction. If it does not, its insufficiency in this respect like the insufficiency of any affidavit may be objected on the hearing of the motion without exceptions filed. Wakeman, et al. vs. Gillespy, et al., 5 Paige 112. If the answer does show cause for dissolving the injunction, as it usually does by denying all that is material to the equity of the bill, it is then sufficient for this motion, though it may not make full discovery or answer allegations of the bill not material to the question of dissolving the injunction. If defective in this respect the complainant has his time so to except, as if no motion to dissolve were made, and may compel a full answer before and for the purpose of a hearing.
There is some danger, without care, of being misled on this point by the English books of practice. They lay it down, often broadly, that insufficiency of the answer, i. e. any insufficiency, is cause against a motion to dissolve an injunction, and the insufficiency is shown by *18exceptions filed. But all this will be found to apply to the common injunction. This is issued to stay proceedings at law until a defendant shall appear and answer to a bill in equity. It does not issue until defendant’s default and as a means of compelling him to appear and answer — i. e., to make full answer. If the answer is full, the object of the injunction is effected and it is dissolved as a matter of course, unless the answer itself shows cause for continuing the injunction. In these cases, therefore, the sufficiency of the answer is tested in the ordinary way by exceptions, and any insufficiency whatever is cause for continuing the injunction. In this country common injunctions are not known. 3 Dan. Ch.Prac. 1181. note (t).
Finally on this point, it should be said that a motion to dissolve a special injunction (such as all under our practice are) is always in order. A defendant under an injunction has been arrested in the exercise of an apparent right, and the interference, if continued, may often work much injury. A motion to dissolve, therefore, should be‘heard, without regard to ordinary rules of proceeding and with all possible dispatch, consistent with a fair investigation of the subject. It is better to leave such cases to be dealt with according to the exigencies of each, and it is therefore as well that we have no general rule of Court applicable to them.
The hearing of the motion to dissolve was then set for the 19th of April, and, upon the application of the, solicitors for both parties, leave was granted to. exhibit, at the hearing of the motion, depositions in support of the bill and answer, respectively, the same to be taken upon notice to the adverse party, with opportunity for cross-examination, and to be confined to the matters alleged in the bill and answer, respectively.
Under this order several depositions were taken on both sides, before a Notary Public, and under cross-examination.
*19On behalf of the complainant the allegations of the bill were proved as to the agreement for exchange in November 1865, and that the books of the hotel were Called for and taken by complainant into the room where Ortlip and Swindle were. It was also proved that Swindle talked to complainant, in Ortlip’s presence, about staying on if he did not sell, the property, and he wanted the ice house filled, which was afterwards done, Swindle being present. They were standing together during the conversation, but Ortlip did not indicate that he had heard Swindle’s remark. The advertisements were also proved, and that Coulter was at the hotel March 19th, 1880, exhibiting the assignment, and was heard to tell complainant he should hold him for the rent ; also in February or March one William Carson was heard, at the hotel, to tell complainant that Ortlip had sent word, by him, that Swindle had run away and he expected he would have to take the property back and wanted to know if he could have possession. Complainant sent him word that if he released him from Swindle’s lease and would pay him, on the appraisement of two disinterested men, for what furniture he would not want for his own use, he would move out and give up possession. One witness heard the whole conversation and stated that complainant did not send word to Ortlip that he could rent the hotel to whom he pleased. Swindle was present at- the Newark sale and alone controlled it. Ortlip was not present and his name not mentioned in the handbill or conditions of sale. Ortlip held himself out as the owner of the Chester County property, offered it for sale and said, if he did not sell before March 1st, he would have it worked on shares, and about that date asked assistance in getting a tenant. He stated that he would make a clear title by the first day of April.
On the part of the defendant it was in evidence that, on the 22nd of February, Ortlip sent word to complainant that Swindle had run away and he would have to rent the hotel from him (Ortlip) and that on the 24th day *20of February, Marvel sent word to Ortlip that he (Marvel) gave up the hotel at Newark, that Ortlip might rent it to whom he pleased, for what he cared, and that he was going to leave the hotel. Both these messages were sent by Carson, a stage driver, and the latter was also proved to have been sent by Griffith, who had died, and also by Samuel Carlisle who at the same time leased the property from Ortlip. This witness then went to examine the hotel and conversed with complainant, who told him he had leased from Swindle for five hundred dollars, and paid him two hundred and fifty in money ; that Swindle was to roof the house and sheds, of the leaking condition of which he complained. After this conversation the witness closed the lease, but complainant was not theninthe room, nor did the witness inform complainant on that occasion that he had leased or intended to lease. Ortlip went with him over the premises, having first obtained permission from Marvel. A few days afterwards, in Newark, Marvel asked witness if he had leased the house and on being told that he had, said there were a few things he would like him to take. Afterwards, when witness went to measure the rooms, Marvel told him he could measure every room in the house, but he was not going to leave unless he was bought out, and this he repeated later in the day. Carlisle did not attempt to get possession but sent furniture to Newark which had to be stored, and, by losing the hotel, was out of employment, having given up his former place on the faith of the renting from Ortlip. It was also testified that Marvel sent word by Carson to Ortlip and Carlisle to come down and buy the oil cloth and bar fixtures, and take the Swindle lease off his hands, that he was willing to leave it to two men to say what it was worth. This was about two weeks after the first message. Carson distinguished between two messages, and stated that only in the latter, in March, did Marvel refer to being bought off from Swindle’s lease as a condition of giving up the hotel.
*T. F. Bayard, for complainant.The Chancellor:—
The first ground which, the complainant claims, establishes the validity of the lease and Marvel’s right to hold possession under it, is the power of Swindle, as the equitable owner of the premises from the signing of the contract, to dispose of the possession by lease,, to take *30effect absolutely from the time at which the contract by its terms was to be performed.
This power to lease, with the effect claimed, it was urged, was incident generally to the equitable ownership taken under a contract of purchase. The complainant’s counsel did not, however, rely wholly on this legal position, but claimed further that in this case, it appeared from the declarations, acts and dealings, of these parties with the respective properties, that there had been in fact, by mutual consent, either express or tacit, it mattered' not which, an exchange, between Ortlip and Swindle, of an absolute control of the respective properties, to the extent of giving to each the right to dispose of the property taken by him, by sale or lease, to take effect from the twenty-fifth of March absolutely, and not contingently upon the actual execution of the contract; and that such consent annexed to Swindle’s equitable ownership the power so to lease the hotel even though it was not a power generally incident to a purchaser’s equitable estate.
This. ground embraces two distinct points of inquiry, viz :—
- First. Whether a purchaser, under a contract,before its' execution, can, by virtue of his mere equitable estate, without the vendor’s consent, lease the property to take effect after the time fixed for performance absolutely, whether the contract shall in fact be performed at the time appointed or not.
This is stating the question truly : For to this extent the complainant’s proposition, on this branch of it, must go to avail him, and it is material to bear it in mind. What this controversy concerns is the right of possession after 25th March. Ortlip, the vendor, claims to retain it, the contract of sale being unexecuted ; Marvel claims to hold it, notwithstanding the contract is unexecuted, by *31virtue of a lease from Swindle as the vendor. It is, then, Swindle’s power to dispose of the possession before the contract is executed, though after the time fixed for performance, that is in question ; and just now the question is whether, as mere purchaser, equity clothes him with that power.
Considered in a practical view, as affecting the security of vendors of real estate, the proposition is a startling one. For, to the vendoy, the possession, until the contract shall be executed, is about all that is left by the contract in him, the legal title being really but the shadow of that of which the possession is the substance, and the right to hold it is the vendor’s best security for performance by the purchaser. The surrender of this right of possession to any control of the purchaser, to take effect prospectively, it is true, yet absolutely leaves the vendor no other .remedy but in all cases to resort to equity for a specific performance. It takes away the protection of the rule that holds these covenants, which are to be concurrently performed, to be conditions precedent to each other, and that he is not bound to convey and deliver possession until the purchaser tenders performance on his part. Or putting the effect of the proposition in another point of view, as soon as the time for performance arrives it substantially executes the contract on the part of the vendor, and against him, without any. tender of performance by the purchaser or readiness to perform, or perhaps even ability to perform.
I am aware that sometimes purchasers do take possession before actual conveyance of legal title ; but this is under particular circumstances, induced by confidence on the vendor’s part, or some special security to him.
But passing from this practical view of the subject let us examine this question as a legal one to be settled by the course of decisions. A brief examination of it will *32show that equity does not confer upon a purchaser any power whatever over the possession of the premises whether by entry, sale or lease, so long as the contract is unexecuted, though after the time fixed for its execution. The vendor’s right of possession, or technically speaking his seisin, unless it is otherwise stipulated, attends the legal estate and remains with it in the vendor until passed from him by a conveyance of the legal title. Originally it passed only by livery of seisin, now under the Statute of Uses, and our own Statute of Conveyances (Revised Code 266) this seisin passes by deed without livery of seisin. That the vendor should, before the actual execution of the contract of sale, so hold the legal title and with it the possession, is a right under the contract; and this too of equal force,whether expressed as one of its terms or being so by legal construction, as it always is, if there be no stipulation to the contrary.
To subject the right of possession, before the contract is executed, to any control on the part of the purchaser, such as is involved in the proposition considered,would be to change, in a most substantial degree, the terms of the contract, or, which is the same thing, the rights of the parties under it. Equity cannot do this. It does in some respects control the legal rights of the parties, under the contract, but-it does so strictly in furtherance of what is deemed the real object of the parties. Thus it will decree a conveyance after the time stipulated in the contract, because under ordinary circumstances, it holds the agreement to convey to be of the substance of the contract and the precise time subordinate and not essential.
But, even as to time, the matter with which equity deals most freely, whenever, either by stipulation or from the circumstances of the case, time becomes of the essence of the contract, a court of equity is held to be as much bound by it as a court of law. In no single instance, so far as can be found, has equity attempted to confer upon, *33or recognize in, the purchaser a power in any way to control or assume the possession until the actual execution of the contract by a conveyance. On the contrary, this Court has interposed to protect the vendor’s possession against the purchaser, as in Crockford vs. Alexander, 15 Ves. 138, where a purchaser who had got possession under the vendor’s tenant before a conveyance, was enjoined from cutting timber.
Let it be here specially observed that the fact, that the time for executing the contract has passed, does not of itself affect the right of possession, and it is immaterial to whose default the failure to execute is due. For the possession (in the absence of the delivery or consent) passes only by deed with the legal title. Hence, even upon default of the vendor to convey (which is not a feature.of this case) the purchaser cannot enter into possession, or by lease put another in, but is put to his bill for a specific performance, to obtain the legal title, and, even then he may have to resort to an ejectment to recover the possession under the legal title. Though equity thus far relieves the purchaser for his delay in recovering possession, it will, in decreeing a specific performance, also decree to the purchaser the profits, from the time fixed for completing the contract, as it will on the other hand decree interest to the vendor, treating that as done which ought to have been done. And this is the whole relief equity attempts to afford to a purchaser against delay in the performance of the contract.
Then it remains only to consider on this point what the text books, and in some cases the courts mean by the broad description they give, cited in argument, of the purchaser’s equitable ownership from the time of signing the contract,such as the citation from Addison on Contracts, 159, and from Ld. Eldon in Seton vs. Slade 7 Ves. 274. Describing the difference between the effect of the contract at law and in equity, Addison, quoting Ld. Eldon, says : “at law the estate remains the estate,of the Vendor *34“ and the money that of the vendor (until a formal deed “ has been executed); in equity the estate,from the signing “ of the contract, becomes the .real property of the ven“dee.” These expressions taken literally are inaccurate,— taken in their application to the subject matter before the judges who use them,they mean this, that equity, for certain collateral purposes which do not affect the rights of the vendor and purchaser as between themselves, treats the purchaser’s right at law to a future conveyance of the premises as a present estate therein, so as to annex to it some of the incidents of estates at law, making it assignable, devisable, descendible to the purchaser’s heirs and subject to his debts. But equity holds the estate, thus created by it in the purchaser and in all whom it thus enables to take under him, to be subject in all respects to the terms of the contract and to the rights of the vendor, to retain the legal title and the possession undisturbed until the contract shall be executed; and, we have seen from the case in 15 Ves., it will protect the vendor’s possession byinjunction. Addison, onp. 174, thus qualifies thegeneral expressions before used by him. Speaking again of the contract in equity; he says: “ The sale is in effect then “complete; the lands agreed to be sold becoming the “ property of the purchaser, descending to his heirs and “ being devisable by his will although the legal estate and “ the right of possession may continue in the vendor.”
To conclude then this point, Swindle, merely as the equitable owner of the hotel, under the contract, had not, on the 15th of February, the date of the lease to Marvel, nor,at any time since, power to demise the hotel so as to entitle the tenant to the possession after the 25th of March, as against Ortlip the vendor. Such power could only be exercised under Ortlip’s consent.
Secondly, This brings us to the second point involved in this ground of equity, which is the complainant’s claim that Swindle, though only the equitable owner, had such *35a power by Ortlip's consent, evidenced by the declarations, acts and dealings of these parties, showing an exchange of control over therespective properties purchased by them.
In considering this point, it is necessary first to deduce from .the bill, answer and evidence together what were the declarations, acts and dealings of the parties on this subject, and then consider their effect.
The consent is claimed to be evidenced by both declarations and acts. What then were they? It is true, the bill alleges that Ortlip “frequently declared,” in substance, that it was a sale and bargain, and that each had control and power to lease. The answer denied, sufficiently, all in this allegation that is material and there is no evidence against this denial, except that the witness Hamilton states, that Ortlip told him that Swindle had traded the farm with him for the hotel, which, as language is usually understood,would not imply necessarily an executed sale. The answer also denies having ever declared it was a “sale” in any other sense than as a bargain or contract of sale ; and in considering the declaration in its bearing upon this ground of equity, as evidencing an actual consent to the transfer of control, the meaning of the defendant is material and properly to be considered. The answer further denies positively, that he “at any “time declared that Swindle had a right to rent,” &c. The denial of his having at any time so declared quite meets the allegation of the bill, which is that “he fre“qnently declared” so. The further denial that he “believed, or’gave complainant any adequate or intended “cause to believe,” the matter stated goes beyond the line of response.' Turning to the evidence on this point, the depositions shew no declarations made by Ortlip at any time to any one as to Swindle’s control over the hotel .or power to lease it; or as to his own like control over the farm, the whole evidence bearing on this question is of acts, not of declarations.
*36I must therefore lay out of consideration this allegation of the bill, treating it as sufficiently controverted for the purposes of this motion, being denied by the answer and unsupported by depositions. With respect to acts of the defendants the bill contains two classes of allegations. It alleges generally an exchange of control, which the defendant denies, except that each, relying upon the performance of the contract of sale, endeavored in advance to procure a purchaser. Next the bill charges specific acts of control, and on this subject, as to what was actually done by either party, respecting the property purchased by him, the facts are easily ascertainable, the controversy having respect not so much to what was done as to the meaning of the parties, artd the impression likely to be made by these acts upon the public.
Taken together the bill, answer and depositions establish these facts ; As to the hotel, Swindle advertised it for public sale on January 9th. The advertisement in evidence is in the usual form of such advertisements by a person having the legal title. His name is signed and it states that “ a good and sufficient title will be given ” and that “ conditions will be made known at sale. ” Pursuant to this notice the property was offered, and Swindle, being present, solely controlled the sale; Ortlip was not present, nor was he named in the advertisement or terms, as read. The property received some bids and was withdrawn because they were not of sufficient amount, and no further effort to sell the hotel appears. On February 15th, Swindle leased to Marvel and received in advance part of the rent. This lease, as well as the advertisement of sale, in its terms, treats the hotel as if it were Swindle’s property, and it is in the usual form. Connected with this act may be considered another, that immediately upon the execution of the contract of purchase Swindle made a verbal promise of the hotel to Marvel for the next year and an arrangement for filling the ice-house in anticipation.
*37As to the farm, Ortlip offered it for public sale on January ioth, 1866, by advertisement, signed by his name, sale to be by him, and terms to be made known by him. He exposed it to sale and withdrew it. Ortlip afterwards offered it at private sale, and inquired of Hamilton if he knew any one who wanted to buy, stating his terms, and on Hamilton’s naming a person in reply, he went with Hamilton to see that person, and offered to sell. If this person is the James Hatton afterwards referred to in Hamilton’s deposition, then we have what passed upon this offer of sale respecting Ortlip’s title. He told Hatton “ that he would make a clear title by the 1st of April,.”he “ did not intimate that he had “ title in him ; ” nothing more than this, says the deponent, was said about the title.
Hamilton further states that Ortlip told him he should hold it at private sale till March 1st, then, should he not sell, he would have it worked on shares. The same witness also states that, about the 1st of March, Ortlip told some one, on the tavern porch at New London, to tell Joshua Menough to let a person, they had been talking about, have the place. The answer further admits that Ortlip verbally agreed to lease the farm to Robert Tremanas. The time at which this was done is not stated nor indicated by any testimony unless Tremanas was the person referred to in Ortlip’s message to Menough. This is a full and exact statement of the several acts and dealings of each party with the respective properties contracted for by them after the date of the contract.
And now the question arises do these acts, of offers to sell and of leasing, prove that there was between these parties a mutual consent, or arrangement, that each should deal with the property purchased by him as the absolute owner, and might dispose of it, by sale or lease to take effect after the 25th of March, immediately and in all events and not to be affected by the failure of the execution of the contract of exchange.
*38This is a question of intention. The equity here relied upon is based on a supposed consent or arrangement, operating, as between themselves,as an exchange of absolute control of the properties for the purposes stated, énlarging the usual powers incident to a merely equitable ownership, without reference to the question what influence these acts might have on the minds of parties thus dealt with. The acts referred to will be separately considered in the latter aspect on the question of estoppel. But, for the present, confining our consideration of them to the question whether there is proved by them such mutual consent or arrangement as stated, I am obliged to conclude after weighing them with much care and attention that they do not; that they are to be referred, not to any express or tacit concession of power by each to the other to deal with the property as an absolute owner, in advance of the execution of the contract, but rather to the implicit confidence which each party felt that the contract would be executed at the time stipulated. With the existence of such confidence there is but one circumstance seemingly inconsistent. This is the message,which, Hamilton states, Ortlip sent, by some one, to Menough to let a person, they had been talking about, have the place. The time of this message, as stated by the witness, is about the ist of March, after Ortlip, by other testimony, appears to have known of Swindle’s running away,and also after, as Ortlip himself says in his answer, he had been informed by the assignees that they could not make him a title. There is an improbability, growing out of the circumstances of the case, that Ortlip at this time would incur the responsibility of attempting to lease the farm; He knew that Swindle had absconded, must have felt it at least doubtful whether the assignees could or would execute the contract and heis proved to have,before this, sent word to Marvel of the failure of the contract and had already leased the hotel to Carlisle. We must reasonably conclude that Hamilton is inaccurrate in his recollection *39either of the date or purport of the message. It was probably sent before Swindle absconded which was not long before the 1st of March, “about” which Hamilton states as the time of this message.
That a purchaser of property, who is to receive the legal title and possession at the expiration of the current year of the tenancy should make prospective arrangements for the following year’s tenancy, and even enter into a written lease for the following year, cannot be unusual. It is a course necessary for the productiveness of the property, which, ordinarily, a purchaser will not hesitate to take, without seeking any consent or sanction of the vendor, or guaranty against the risk that his lease may be ineffectual, through a failure in the execution of the contract. This is a risk which men are not likely at the time to estimate seriously or provide against, but they rather act, confiding that all their arrangements will be carried into effect. Offers to sell, by a purchaser under an unexecuted contract of purchase, are more unusual, as men do not generally buy to sell again at once. And yet, where men are buying for speculative objects, the same, confidence, that the contract will be performed at the time stipulated, might well induce the purchaser to offer the property for sale, in advance of the execution of the contract ; and if in doing so he does not undertake to transfer the legal title and possession, until a time at which, by his own contract, he is to receive them, and there is neither allegation nor evidence that either of these parties did so undertake, such a dealing with the property is not inconsistent with the vendor’s rights, so that, to warrant it, we must infer the concession to the purchaser of powers beyond what properly attach to his equitable estate.
I have specially weighed in this connection the fací that each advertisement, for public sale, was in the usual form and held out, (though without any express terms,) that the subscriber was the legal owner, and that the *40property if sold, would be certainly conveyed ; nor does it appear that, by the conditions of sale, the real relations and powers of the advertiser were indicated.
I do. not consider that this mode of advertising proves that these parties gave to each other, or that either meant to assume, ány power not consistent with their actual relations to the property. They felt, (as men always do under such circumstances,) implicit confidence that the contract between themselves would be executed ; they weighed lightly, if at all, the contingencies ; they must have been sensible that it would prejudice their offers of sale to announce the incompleteness of their title and that the execution of their own sales if made, would be contingent. Rather than incur this prejudice, a purchaser would naturally take what he would feel to be but the small risk of his not being in a condition to complete a sale if made. These I take to be the real inducements to the mode of advertising adopted and not any arrangement or understanding between these parties. The question of good faith to the public is not here involved. The understanding of the parties, as between themselves, is the matter inquired of.
There are two considerations which weigh strongly against the complainant’s construction of these acts as implying an exchange of absolute control over the properties. These are; x. Such an exchange of control would take from each, after the 25th of March, the right to hold his own property until actual execution of the contract, a right which we have already had occasion to observe is most important to the security of the vender and which remains to him under the contract. Thus, such an exchange of control, with the effect claimed, would, in the case of Ortlip, deprive him entirely of the liotel property during the term of the lease, while by the failure of the contract of sale, he lost entirely any benefit from the farm. Now parties may thus surrender their rights, yet, if it is to be inferred from acts, those acts should *41be of a conclusive character, not reconcilable with any other hypothesis.
2.'The defendant’s answer denies that Swindle’s mode of advertising the hotel, (as he in fact did advertise it,) was with his defendant’s consent or authority. The answer respecting this advertisement states among other things “he (Swindle) had no authority to advertise or sell “it as then his his own, and, if he did so, he did so with“out sanction of this defendant and without right.” Now this is a denial of the very fact which the complainant infers from the mode of advertisement and sale by Swindle, viz : that there was consent, an arrangement, a mutual exchange of control, &c. This answer is responsive to the bill. The bill charges generally a mutual exchange of absolute control over the properties, and specially the acts and dealings of the parties, including the offers for sale in absolute terms, as done by consent, to warrant the general allegations. The defendant denies the general allegation, and also his consent to the offer of the hotel for s.ale in the mode charged. The defendant’s consent is materially involved in the complainant’s charge and its denial by the defendant is therefore responsive. Now considering that the acts may, as we have seen, have been naturally induced without the defendant’s consent to the exercise of any power, unusual to purchasers, or not warranted by the contract, I do not feel justified in inferring such consent, against the express denial of the answer, not controverted by evidence, and the acts themselves being inconclusive.
I have thus far referred only to the offers at public sale. I need not stop to consider the effort of Ortlip to dispose of the farm at private sale; for it presents no new or peculiar feature, except one which is in Ortlip’s favor. For in the negotiations with Hatton, he said he would make a good title by the 1st of April, which, besides proving that he did not undertake to complete his sale until he expected the title, also carries the impression *42that he considered and treated his ability to make a title to be contingent.
I proceed now to the other ground of equity relied upon in the bill. It is this ; — that Ortlip, both by acts, and declarations, induced Marvel to believe that Swindle had the power to lease the hotel so as to give the tenant a right of possession after the 25th of March ; that under this belief, so induced, and relying upon the acts and declarations of Ortlip, Marvel took the lease and paid in advance part of the rent, and that thereupon Ortlip is equitably estopped from impeaching the validity of the lease as against Marvel.
It was upon this ground of equity that the injunction was ordered. I thought then and still think that the bill charges facts sufficient to estop Ortlip from disturbing the possession of Marvel under this lease. It charges that Ortlip had frequently declared “that Swindle had a per“fect right to rent, sell or do what he pleased with the “said hotel property in Newark and that he Ortlip had “the same rights and powers in relation to the farm,” and in a subsequent part of the bill he charges that, being induced by and relying upon these declarations made to himself as weli as others, as also by certain public acts and dealings of Ortlip and Swindle with the proprietors, which were, at least, in harmony with these declarations and gave them force, he took the lease and paid his money; and under the charges of the bill Marvel does not appear to have been then cognizant of the contract or its terms. A clearer case of equitable estoppel than that here charged it is difficult to put. The rule is this ; — where one by his acts, declarations or silence, where it is his duty to speak, has induced another person, in reasonable reliance on such acts or declarations, to enter into a transaction, he shall not, to the prejudice of the person so misled, impeach the transaction. He need not have acted *43fraudulently, or willfully have misled the other party. The object of the rule is not to punish for fraud or falsehood, but to adjust equitably a loss between two parties one of whom must bear it, and it is considered that he should bear it who has caused it. This is a most beneficent principle, for it enforces good faith and gives security to that trustfulness which must enter much into business transactions and it applies itself not to any special class or sort of cases, but to all dealings between man and man. But it must be observed that' equity applies this principle of estoppel cautiously and only in a case clear upon the circumstances, because in doing so it interferes with what otherwise is to the party an admitted legal remedy. Hence it is required that the 'matter of estoppel i. e., the facts out of which it arises, be clearly established in evidence ; and then the facts so established must present these two requisites, viz :
1. That the party claiming the estoppel was misled and induced to enter into the transaction upon the faith of the declaration, act or silence of the other, or upon the fact or relation which he seeks to restrain the other party from denying.
2. That his being so misled was not through his own negligence, or want of attention to proper means of information. For the general maxim, “ Vigilantibus non dormientibus leges adjuvant,” ought specially to apply here, since the interposition of equity in these cases is extraordinary and restrictive of legal rights, and will not be extended to those who have not exercised reasonable diligence to protect themselves.
It is not necessary to refer to cases, to show the rule or its limitations. The subject is a familiar one. It is fully treated in 2 Smith’s Leading Cases 400, &c.
Returning now to the case before us.
*44Although, upon the charges of the bill, a ground of estoppel is shewn, I find it sufficiently denied by the answer and not sustained by affidavits against the answer and must therefore dissolve the injunction.
The estoppel is charged by the bill to arise from both declarations of Ortlip and the acts and dealings of Ortlip and Swindle together. What the acts and dealings of these parties were, are the offers for sale and the leasing of the properties with the attendant circumstances. These taken in connection with declarations made by Ortlip to Marvel, such as are charged, would have weight on the question of estoppel, because they would give force and probability to the declarations ; but considered by themselves without any declarations on the part of Ortlip to Marvel and considering them as impressions on one cognizant, as Marvel was, of the contract, they are not sufficient to estop Ortlip from claiming his right, as the legal owner to the possession of the hotel. And for this clear reason ; equity in applying this doctrine interferes with the legal remedy of the party and with what but for the estoppel, is his clear legal right. It is a serious interposition. To warrant it the matter of estoppel should be plainly made out, the facts well established and their effect or construction conclusive,, at least not doubtful. The present is a clear case for the necessity of this caution. The vendor is to be debarred from the possession of his property before he receives the consideration for it,under the effect of a lease,which, by the omission of Swindle to give notice to quit, may be one of indefinite duration, and he is turned over to his remedy against Swindle, á species of remedy always undesirable and under the circumstances of this case very embarrassing. An estoppel working such effects should be conclusively established.
Now the acts and dealings of Ortlip and Swindle as facts are established and so notorious that Marvel must have been cognizant of them, and to one ignorant of the *45contract they would have caused the impression of ordinary absolute ownership. But to one cognizant of the contract and its terms, as was Marvel, these acts were inconclusive, that is, we cannot say that by such acts alone one, cognizant of the contract, was reasonably induced to believe that Ortlip had conferred on Swindle an absolute right to dispose of the possession after the 25th of March. The acts were as naturally referable to the readiness of the purchaser to anticipate and treat as certain the execution of the contract. This.has already been fully considered in another connection. One cognizant of the contract, and about to deal with the purchaser, should be reasonably held to inquire beyond such acts as these for the authority of the purchaser to sell or lease the property absolutely, and the omission to do so would deprive him of an equity to this extraordinary relief. I have assumed as a decisive feature, in considering the effect of these acts, that Marvel knew of this contract.
It appears by the complainant’s affidavits that he was present at the signing of the contract between Ortlip and Swindle, and must have been cognizant of its terms. Armstrong states that this contract was made in a room at the hotel, that Marvel came from the room for the hotel books and took them into the room, that Marvel, Ortlip and Swindle returned together from this room, where the contract was made, into the bar room, and a conversation ensued which shewed that the contract had then been concluded.
I have considered the acts and dealings of Ortlip and Swindle with the properties and their effect separately, because, although in the bill they are charged in connection with declarations of'Ortlip, yet, as the case is now presented, they stand alone. The charge of the bill that there were declarations of Ortlip inducing Marvel to take the lease is fully denied by the answer. The denial I have already quoted. The affidavits prove no such declara*46tions. There is but one transaction shewn which has been relied upon as having the force of sucha declaration. It is the conversation between Swindle and Marvel, in Ortlip’s presence, in which Swindle promised Marvel the tenancy if he should not sell the property, and engaged Marvel to fill the ice house, which Marvel agreed to do and did. Ortlip was present and must be taken, on the evidence, to have heard it, but said nothing. Now it is true, that silence, when there is an obligation to deny certain facts or relations, upon the faith of which another party is about to act, and the omission to deny which must be supposed to have influenced the party to act,is equivalent to an affirmation of these facts or relations, and may thus work an estoppel. But it must appear that the party claiming the benefit of the estoppel did act upon the faith of the supposed facts or relations, that the party to be estopped was bound to interpose — that,but for such interposition, he would not have become involved in the transaction. These are tests so plainly equitable that no authority for them need be cited.
They will be found implied if not always expressed in all general statements of the doctrine. Let us apply them to the transaction in question. Did Marvel in this conversation agree at all to become Swindle’s te'nent, so that he could have been held ? The testimony does not shew on this occasion more than a proposal by Swindle, not a bargain. What Marvel did afterward as to refilling the ice-house in January does not seem material to the effect of the conversation on the 7th of November, and Ortlip’s duty then. Again, supposing Marvel had then accepted the proposed tenancy, could we say that, being cognizant of the contract and knowing that Swindle was but a purchaser under an unexecuted contract, he did not accept the tenancy as Swindle offered it in mere reliance upon the certainty of the contract being executed ? Can we suppose on the other hand from anything that-occurred, that Marvel believed that Swindle could put him *47in possession on the 25th of March, whether he got the title from Ortlip or not ? And if he did so believe, was it not his own mistake as to the legal rights of parties under the contract? Had not Ortlip, if he heard the proposal, reason to believe that it was made and received upon the assumed certainty that the contract would be executed ? There being no reason then to doubt this certainty, whence arose this obligation to suggest a doubt ? Had Ortlip any reason from the circumstances to imagine that Marvel supposed Swindle could put him in possession on the 25th of March, without the execution of the contract of purchase ? If not, whence this obligation to interpose ?
I have found it impossible to answer these and similar questions, so as to involve Ortlip in any breach of duty by his silence on that occasion, and without a breach of duty, silence does not work an estoppel. Indeed I can see nothing in the whole transaction but the natural result of the confidence all must be supposed to have felt that the contract would be duly executed on the 25th of March.
It only remains to add on this subject that it does not appear that Ortlip was present when Marvel took the written lease, or at all cognizant of it- or of any other conversations or transactions connected with Marvel’s tenancy.
In the argument of this case, the complainant’s counsel objected, on two grounds, that the defendant’s answer does not entitle him to move for dissolution of the injunction.
First. Because the answer, as he insisted, is evasive 'and does not frankly .and fully respond to the allegations of the bill. I do not think, upon a careful examination, that the answer is willfully evasive,taking into consideration the character of the facts. Whether it would be held sufficient, upon exceptions filed under the rule of Court, is not material upon the present motion. To entitle a defendant to move to dissolve a preliminary injunction, his *48answer need only deny the facts necessary to the equity of the bill, this much is essential but not more. The sufficiency of the answer as to other matters, and as to all matters about which discovery is sought by the bill, will remain open, and, without respect to this motion or its result, may be tested by exceptions, and further answer if necessary obtained for the purposes of a hearing.
Second. The other ground of objection was, that Ortlip could not move to dissolve the injunction until the other defendants, or at least Swindle, had answered. The general rule on this subject and the exceptions were understood alike by the counsel. This case seems to be clearly within the exceptions. Consider these features of it: 1st. The remedy, by injunction, is sought against Ortlip alone. He alone is seeking to dispossess the complainant, and it is against him only that the injunction is prayed. 2d. The equity of the complainant, if any, must spring from the declarations or acts of Ortlip, and it is only so far as the bill charges Ortlip with these that it Shows an equity to relief. The complainant’s case rests upon the validity of the lease, which, the bill charges, springs, either from Ortlip’s transfer of the control of the hotel to Swindle, or from his acts and declarations working an estoppel. ' Now no acts or declarations but his own could either transfer the possession of the hotel or estop him from claiming his legal rights in it. It is then Ortlip’s transfer of the control of the hotel, or his acts and declarations influencing Marvel to take the lease, that constitute the ground of equity or what is the same thing the gravamen of the bill. Swindle’s transactions could at best only be circumstantial evidence of an exchange of control. But without Ortlip’s connection with them they give the complainant no equity to relief. 3rd. Another material feature of the case is that there is no community of interest between Swindle and Ortlip but it is between Swindle and the complainant. • The complainant claims *49to hold as Swindle’s tenant and is maintaining Swindle’s right of possession. If it was necessary for the complainant to make Swindle a party at all, it was not for the purpose of any relief against him under the injunction, but to enable him to protect his own interest in a possession, claimed under his lease. Under these circumstances he is really, and in interest,an adversary party to Ortlip,and his answer would not be read against Ortlip, nor in any way affect his rights nor help the complainant on this motion. •
In the argument some questions were necessarily discussed which in the view I have taken of the case have become immaterial.
One of these is, whether Swindle and his assignees still have a right to a specific performance of the contract. Whether they have or not is immaterial, for, unless Ortlip gave to Swindle the power to lease the hotel from the 25th of March absolutely, or unless he has estopped himself from impeaching the lease, his right as the legal owner to the possession of the hotel remains until the contract is in fact specifically executed. Besides the question whether Swindle’s assignees are entitled to a specific performance can only be tried by a bill filed by them for that purpose. We could- not debar Ortlip from the possession of the property of which he is the legal owner upon the assumption that the assignees have an equitable right which, if they were to seek to establish they might fail and which they may, in fact, not claim, and it is doubtful, under the circumstances, whether they ever will.
If the complainant were the assignee or heir of Swindle so that he could carry into effect Swindle’s part of the contract he might file a bill for a specific performance and in this way avail himself of Swindle’s rights. But not having Swindle’s equitable estate, he is not in a condition to perform Swindle’s obligations to Ortlip under1 *50the contract and therefore cannot claim, on the part of Ortlip, a performance nor the surrender by Ortlip of any right which depends upon performance. Unless his lease is valid, upon the special grounds of equity charged in the bill his remedy is against Swindle alone.
The defendant’s answer, and his counsel in argument, took several, objections to the equity of the bill which did not go to the merits of the case. These were, that the relief sought’is in conflict with the rule that a tenant shall not deny his landlord’s title, also that the issuing of an injunction in such a case was an infringement of a jurisdiction exclusively conferred upon the Justice of the Peace; that the complainant, if he claimed under Ortlip, had an adequate remedy in the proceeding before thejustice, and that he could not claim under Swindle, for, having received the possession under Ortlip, a claim to hold under Swindle would be substantially an attornment to a new landlord, which the statute requires to be in writing.
Having been obliged to decide the motion against the complainant, on the merits, these- questions were properly discussed, but it is not necessary for me to examine them and I will express no opinion on them, further than to say that they would not prevent me from ordering an injunction again under like circumstances.
At the time of this opinion, Rule 11 was as follows:—
It is ordered, that in case of an answer coming in during the sitting of the court in term, or within three days preceding, the complainant or complainants shall have one month’s lime next after the filing of the same, to except thereto; and in case no exceptions be exhibited within that time, that the Register enter replication and rejoinder gratis, and rules for commissions on both sidesj to be directed to commissioners to be named by the parties respectively, in vacation, to the Register on ten days’ notice to the opposite party, who, if he do no not name commissioners, then the commission to issue ex parte on like notice; and in case commissioners are named by both parties, commissions shall issue on like terms ex parte, on ten days’ notice of filing interrogatories, at the instance of either party; but in case exceptions be filed to the answer, then the Register shall forthwith transmit the papers in the case to the Chancellor, and on return of the same to the Register, if the exceptions be allowed, a rule shall be entered for further answer in six weeks, or attachment; and on the coming in of that answer, the Register shall enter a replication and rejoinder gratis, and rule for commissions on both sides in like manner, to be carried into execution as above directed; provided, however, if the complainant should give notice to the Register that he elects to go to hearing on bill and answer, a rule to that effect shall be by him entered, instead of the replications as before provided for.