The specific performance of contracts must always rest in the sound discretion of the court; to be decreed or not as shall seem just and equitable under the peculiar circumstances of each case. It is frequently ordered in favor of a party who has been for a considerable period in default, if he has never abandoned the contract, and the ofher party has suffered nothing from the delay for which he can not be compensated in the decree. If, however, succeeding the default, there has been a considerable change in the value of the property, this may be reason sufficient for denying the specific relief, inasmuch as, the contract would thereby become an unequal one, and to enforce it would be to eyn courage delays by enabling the party to take advantage of changes in his favor, though he, might have delayed performance' intentionally, and riot meaning to perform unless, favorable changes should occur.
*502The contract in question in this case was made Octo- . ber 1, 1856. It is apparent from the evidence that it was entered into by Smith as a matter of speculation, and in the hope of making money by the sale of the pine timber. Before the first annual payment fell due, the depression in business circles was so great as to render that which before seemed likely to result in profit, a losing bargain. That payment was not made; and it is highly probable that there was no time from thence until the sale to Lawrence and Backus, nearly six years later, when Smith would not gladly have been relieved of his contract if practicable without actual loss.
Horatio I. Lawrence, however, did not press for payment, and the correspondence between the parties shows clearly that he was willing to receive payment and to recognize the contract as valid up to the 25th of February, 1862. At that time he writes Smith that the contract had long been forfeited as far as the latter was concerned, and that he, Horatio I. Lawrence, was only hesitating as to what he would do on his part.
To know what was meant by this last clause of the letter, it may be necessary to look a little into the prior correspondence between the parties. It appears that Smith had been making propositions looking to a surrender of the contract on being repaid what he had expended under it, and that he had also proposed to take a part of the land only on payment of a sum named. Lawrence had not accepted either of these offers, but had proposed to Smith that the latter surrender the contract cancelled, without any re-payment. This, Smith had declined for the time, assigning as a reason that he needed it for the purposes of a suit which he had brought against Sidney Lawrence, for the price of pine timber sold him from "the .lands in, 1851", but saying that when that suit was disposed of he trusted the business could be settled between them. In another letter, apparently referring to the same proposition *503by Horatio I. Lawrence, 'he says that when he can make the collections due from Sidney Lawrence he shall be willing to accede to a former proposition of Horatio I. Lawrence if still made.
Without looking at the case as it stands upon the evidence aside from this correspondence — which is certainly the most favorable view to take for the complainant — we think it apparent that for some time preceding February 25, 1862, Smith had not contemplated performing the contract, but had relied upon being able to make some more satisfactory and advantageous arrangement for himself when the suit with Sidney Lawrence was disposed of. And although it is probable that nothing had occurred up to this time which would preclude a specific performance on his behalf if he had sought it, yet the letter from Horatio I. Lawrence of that date, apjn-ising Smith that he considered the contract forfeited, was a sufficient notification to the latter, under the circumstances, that if he desired to perform, he must apply in a reasonable time thereafter for the purpose.
The statement by Lawrence that he was hesitating as to what he should do on his part is very far from an intimation that he concurred in any. further extension of time, and may have had reference either to Smith’s proposition to purchase a portion of the land, or to proceedings against him for declining to cancel the contract, or to sales to others. Whatever it may have meant, it certainly is no such clear assent to the extension of the contract as we think should be shown where a party claims an extension after the long delay which had here intervened, and after being fairly notified that the vendor considered the contract forfeited.
Smith, however, took no steps towards performance; and in June, 1868, the lands, so far as they were of value, were sold to the defendants, Sidney Lawrence and Backus. Hp to that time the taxes had for the most part been paid by Horatio I. Lawrence, and although Smith claims to have *504paid a small amount to apply on the contract besides the down payment of $1,000, yet the proof on the subject is not very clear, and the amount as claimed was of small importance. Although after the sale to Sidney Lawrence and Backus, Smith informed them that he claimed rights under the contract of sale to himself, he still took no steps to enforce that contract, and it was only after they had taken off timber for one season that he commenced the present suit. In the meantime it is apparent that a great change had taken place in the value of the land. Horatio I. Lawrence had sold the second time at a considerable deduction from the first contract price, but in January, 1865, when the present suit was commenced, pine timber on the stump is shown to have been worth twice as much as it was sold for by Smith the year after he made his contract. In this great rise in the value of the timber is the secret, so far as we can discover it from this record, of Smith’s willingness and anxiety to have this contract performed in his favor. He waited until the circumstances were all changed; until the land had been sold; until his losing bargain had become a speculation, and nearly three years after being notified that the contract was considered forfeited, before filing the present bill. At no time had he ever tendered performance, though he had said on one occasion that he was ready to perform, but without adducing any evidence of readiness. The payments which he had made, conceding the most that could be claimed on the evidence, were less than the interest over due on the contract. We are unable to perceive any circumstance upon which a court of equity could seize as warranting specific performance in his favor, and we think the Circuit Court was correct in dismissing his bill and ordering the contract to be cancelled.
Decree affirmed with costs.
The other Justices concurred.