The opinion of the court was delivered by
Brewer, J.:The full statement of the case is found in the following findings of the court, to wit:
The above-named parties, on the 8th of January, 1876, mutually made and entered into the following contract, at the city of Fort Scott, Kansas, viz.:
[No. 10,488.] Land Department of the Mo. River, 1
Ft. Scott & Gulf Railroad Co. j
This agreement,'made this 8th day of January, in the year 1876, between the Missouri River, Fort Scott & Gulf railroad company, of the first part, and F. M. Brickley, of the county of Bourbon, state of Kansas, of the-second part, Witnesseth: That in consideration of the stipulations herein contained, and the payments to be made as is hereinafter specified, the first party agrees to sell unto the second party the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section No. 11, in township No. 28, south, of range No. 25, east of the sixth principal meridian, in the county of Crawford and state of Kansas, containing, according to the United States survey, forty acres, be the same more or less, for the sum of one hundred and twenty dollars; on which the said second party hath paid the sum of forty dollars, being a part of the purchase money.
And the said second party, in consideration of the premises, hereby agrees to pay to the said first party, at the land department of the Missouri River, Fort Scott & Gulf railroad company, at Fort Scott, the following sums of principal and interest, at the several times named below:
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And it.being mutually understood that the above premises are sold to said second party for improvement and cultivation, and the said second party hereby further agrees and obligates himself, his heirs and assigns, that all improvements placed upon said premises shall remain thereon, and shall not be removed or destroyed until final payment for said land; and further, that he will punctually pay said sums of money above specified as each of the same becomes due; and that he will regularly and seasonably pay such taxes and assessments as may be lawfully imposed upon said premises, including the taxes for 1875.
In case the said second party, his legal representatives or assigns, shall pay the several sums of money aforesaid, punctually and at the several times above limited, and shall strictly and literally perform, all and singular, his agreements and stipulations aforesaid, after their true tenor and intent, then the first party will make unto the second party, his heirs or assigns, (upon request at the land office of the first party, at Fort Scott, and the surrender of this contract,) a deed conveying said premises in fee simple with the ordinary covenants of warranty, reserving, however, a strip of land one hundred and fifty feet wide, to be used by the first party for a right of way or other railroad purposes, where the line of the Missouri River, Fort Scott & Gulf railroad is laid over the premises.
But in case the second party shall fail to make the payments aforesaid, or any of them, punctually, and upon the strict times and terms above limited, and likewise to perform and complete all and each of his agreements and stipulations aforesaid, strictly and literally, without any failure and default, the times of payment being of the essence of this contract, then the party of the first part shall have the right to declare the contract null and void; and all rights and interests hereby created or then existing in favor of said second party, or derived under this contract, shall utterly cease and determine, and the premises hereby contracted for shall revert to and revest in said first party (without any declaration of forfeiture or act of reentry, or without any other act by the said first party to be performed, and without any right of said second party of reclamation or compensation for moneys paid or improvements made), as absolutely, fully and perfectly as if this contract had never been made.
And it is further stipulated, that no assignment of the premises shall be valid unless the same shall be indorsed hereon, or permanently attached hereto, and countersigned by the commissioner of the land department (for which purpose this contract must be sent to this department by mail or otherwise); and that no agreement or conditions or relations between the second party and his assignee, or any other person acquiring title or interest from or through him, shall preclude the first party from the right to convey the premises to said second party or his assigns, on the surrender of this agreement and the payment of the unpaid portion of the purchase money which may be due to the first party.
In witness of which, the Missouri River, Fort Scott & Gulf Railroad Company hath caused these presents in duplicate to be signed by the commissioner and the secretary, and countersigned by the cashier of the land department, and the second party has hereunto set his name on the day and year first above written. John A. Clark, Commissioner.
H. Wilson, Secretary.
Countersigned: F. M. Brickley, Purchaser.
T. H. Annable, Cashier.
At the time of the execution and delivery of said agreement, the plaintiff Brickley paid the defendant $40 on the same, it being part of the purchase-money for said land. At the time of making said agreement, the plaintiff Brickley knew of the existence of a three-feet vein of coal on said land, which was unknown to the defendant, although the means of knowledge were equally open and accessible to both parties; but at the time of the making of the contract nothing was said by either party relative to the existence or nonexistence of coal on said land.
In the fall of 1876, the plaintiff, Brickley, who had been in th.e employ of Isaac Stadden, a .business' man in the city of Fort Scott, Kansas, went to the town of Anderson, in the-state of Indiana, on a visit, leaving his papers, including the aforesaid agreement, in Stadden’s safe and in his possession, and also, a credit due him from Stadden of forty-two or forty-three dollars, without any instructions to Stadden' in relation either to the papers or the credit, he (Brickley) expecting to return in a few weeks to Fort Scott; but while in Indiana, on the 27th of October, 1876, he dislocated his right-ankle, and erysipelas set in, and he was confined to his bed and ro,om by reason thereof till the latter part of March,. 1877, during which time, or a part thereof, he corresponded with Stadden frequently, saying nothing, however, relative to said contract with the defendant until on or after April 4th, 1877.
On the 8th day of January, 1877, the second installment on said agreement fell due, being $40 principal and $5.60-interest, which installment the plaintiff Brickley failed to-pay; and, therefore, on the 2d day of April, 1877, the defendant, after a delay extending from said 8th day of January to the 2d day of April, 1877, exercised the power or right, reserved to it in said contract, and declared the same void for the plaintiff’s failure to pay said installment at the time stipulated in said agreement, and duly notified the plaintiff of its exercise of said power, which notice of forfeiture the plaintiff received by mail on the 5th day of April, 1877, in the-state of Indiana.
On the 4th of April, 1877, the plaintiff wrote the defendant from Indiana, addressing his letter to Gen. John A. Clark, defendant’s land commissioner at Fort Scott, Kansas,, informing Clark that he had met with the aforesaid misfortune in dislocating his ankle, and that he had forgotten whether the second installment on said agreement fell due-■on the 1st of April or the 1st of May, 1877; also, inquiring when said installment did fall due, and stating if then due, to call on Stadden and he would pay it for plaintiff; that he had left the money with Stadden to pay it, which letter the said Clark received, and on the 6th day of April, 1877, replied, informing the plaintiff of the action of the defendant in declaring a forfeiture of said contract, and that he had forwarded him notice thereof, which letter plaintiff afterward received by mail.
On the 14th day of April, 1877, the plaintiff, having arrived at Fort Scott, Kansas, tendered the defendant in legal-tender notes $47, and in silver fifty .cents, in full of said installment falling due on the 8th of January, 1877, together with the interest then accrued on the said purchase money up to that date, which the defendant refused.
On the 17th day of March, 1876, the plaintiff Brickley paid the taxes on said land for the year 1875, amounting to $5.30, and on the 4th day of May, 1877, he paid the tax on the same for the year 1876.
On the 31st day of July, 1877, the plaintiff, declaring that he still held up and continued the said tender by him made on the said 14th of April, 1877, again tendered the defendant $95 as payment in full of both the deferred payments on said agreement, and the accrued interest on the same, by United States legal-tender notes, which was also refused by the defendant.
At the time of the making of said agreement, the said laud was, with the exception of a few acres, wild and uncultivated, and for the most part untillable, and has never been taken into actual possession by the plaintiff Brickley.
The said land, including the said vein of coal thereon, with the said railroad constructed and operated across or close to the same, was worth about $50 per acre, the increase in the value thereof from the $3 to about $50 per acre being due to the existence of the said coal vein and the immediate prospect of the completion of the said railroad, now in process of construction, and the construction of which has been finally determined on since the making of said agreement.
The plaintiff Brickley had knowledge of the probable extension of the Fort Scott, Southeastern & Memphis railway in the direction of the said land when he entered into the said contract; and when he wrote the said letter of April 4th, 1877, to John A. Clark, the defendant’s land commissioner, he had additional information, and of a more reliable character, to the same effect.
The last-mentioned railroad is a branch road connecting with the defendant’s road about four or five miles south of the city of Fort Scott; and Clark, the land commissioner of the defendant, had knowledge of the said Fort Scott, Southeastern & Memphis railroad company’s determination do extend its road in the direction of said land about the time of the said declaration of forfeiture made by him of said contract, as the agent of the said defendant; and said Clark issued said declaration of forfeiture immediately upon his receiving an order from the general manager of the’defendant’s road to withdraw their lands along the line of the Fort Scott, Southeastern & Memphis railroad from the market.
The custom of the defendant has been, when deferred payments on its contracts for the sale of its lands fell due, and were not met at the time by the purchaser, in case he was actually occupying the land, to notify him of the fact, and extend the time of payment if desired; but in case the purchaser did not occupy and improve, then its custom has been to hold the contract subject to cancellation, upon its rpeeting with a satisfactory offer from another purchaser to buy the same.
The default of the plaintiff Brickley was not willful, and for the purpose of awaiting the contingency of a rise in the value of the land, but was the result of his misfortune in having his aukle dislocated, and his consequent sickness which detained him from home, together with his mistake in the recollection of the time when the payments on the said contract fell due, and some slight negligence on his part in observing the times of payment thereon.
The defendant has publicly advertised for several years that it is always ready to receive the deferred payments on its contracts for the sale of its lands in advance, and to make deeds to the purchasers at any time on complete payment pf the whole of the,purchase money.
The plaintiff herein pleaded the tenders above mentioned in this action, and held them, and both of them, up on trial; and the defendant pleaded a tender back to the plaintiff of the whole amount of money that the plaintiff has paid to it on said contract, and held up the tender on the trial hereof.
Upon the findings it is apparent that if the contract between these parties is enforced according to its terms, judgment was improperly entered in favor of Brickley. They had stipulated that upon his failure to make the payments punctually, the 'times of payment being of the essence of this contract, it should have the right to declare the contract null and void, and thereupon all his rights thereunder should cease. He did fail to make such punctual payments. It exercised the power reserved in it, and declared the contract at an end. By what right may the court ignore this stipulation of the contract, while it upholds and enforces the others? The parties fix the price at a certain sum. Does the court ever attempt to change that price? Does it not always say that it cannot make contracts for parties, and as they have agreed upon the price, that concludes the matter? May they not also fix the time at which the price must be paid? — and if not, why not? Why is the matter of time outside the power of the parties absolutely to determine, when all other matters — price, interest, security, etc.— must be determined by them alone? It is true that at one time it was the doctrine of the court of chancery that parties could not make time of the essence of a contract of sale of real estate. Such seems to have been the opinion of Lord Thurlow, from the case of Gryson v. Riddle, cited by Sir Samuel Romilly, from his own notes in the argument of the case of Seton v. Slade, 7 Vesey, 265. But that doctrine has long since been overthrown, and now, in equity as well as at law, wherever it clearly appears to be the intention of the parties that time should be of the essence of the contract, that essential feature will be upheld. (Hudson v. Bartram, 3 Madd. 440; Boehm v. Wood, 1 J. & W. 419; Williams v. Edwards, 2 Sim. 78; Hipwell v. Knighi, 1 Y. & C. Exch. Ca. 401; Nokes v. Lord Kilmorey, 1 De G. & S. 444; Parkin v. Thorold, 16 Beav. 59; Gedye v. The Duke, 26 Beav. 45; Hudson v. Temple, 29 Beav. 536; Benedict v. Lynch, 1 Johns Ch. 370; Wells v. Smith, 2 Edwards Ch. 78; 7 Paige, 82; Scott v. Fields, 7 Ohio, 424; Brewer v. Connecticut, 9 Ohio, 189; Davis v. Stevens, 3 Iowa, 158; O’Fallon v. Kennerly, 45 Mo. 124; Kemp v. Humphreys, 13 Ill. 573; Chrisman v. Miller, 21 Ill. 327; Grey v. Tubbs, 43 Cal. 359; Phelps v. Ill. Cent. R. R., 63 Ill. 469; Reed v. Breeden, 11 P. F. Smith, 460; Bullock v. Adams, 5 C. E. Green, 371; Jennisons v. Leonard, 21 Wall. 302.) It is true that courts of equity do not presume that parties intended that time shall be of the essence of such a contract, but rather that the substantial matters are the transfer of title on the one side and the payment of the price on the other, and that if these be accomplished, although not at the exact time named therefor, the contract is in its substance and intent upheld. Hence it is common for courts to say, when there is simply a' bond to convey upon the payment of certain amounts at specified times, that time is not of the essence of the contract, and decree conveyance of the title upon tender after the specified times of the stipulated price and interest. But this interpretation of the effect and intent of certain contracts is no denial of the right of the parties to make time of the essence of the contract, and no assertion of the right of the courts to disregard or annul such stipulation when made.
The syllabus in Wyncoop v. Cowing, 21 Ill. 570, reads:
“Where parties make time-one of the conditions of .a contract, courts of equity will not relieve a defaulting party where there is no waiver by the other party.”
That in Kemp v. Humphreys, 13 111. 573, says:
“Parties have the right to make their own contracts, making the time of their performance material, so that a failure to perform at the time will avoid the agreement. A court of equity has no power to enforce the specific execution of a contract contrary to the clearly-expressed intention of the parties.”
And in Chrisman v. Miller, 21 Ill. 227, Chief Justice Catón says:
“It is conceded on all hands that parties have the right to make their contracts as stringent as they please, and to make time of the very essence thereof; and if one party, without the consent of the other, állows the specified time to pass, no matter from what cause, without performing the condition, the stipulated consequences must follow. Here, by the express contract of the parties, time is made of the essence of the contract. The contract is, that if payments should not be made at the stipulated times, then the purchaser’s interest under the contract should cease.”
See, also, a later case, in which the court says:
“A party demanding specific performance is bound to show that he himself has always been ready, and willing, and eager to perform on his part, when the contract'itself does not make time of its essence. In cases where time is of the essence, it has been the constant ruling of this court, that such a provision cannot be dispensed with, but will be enforced except under very peculiar circumstances. A court of equity has no power to alter contracts of parties, hut to enforce them as made.” (Phelps v. Ill. Central R. R., 63 Ill. 469.)
It being then settled, at law and in equity, that the parties to such a contract may make time of its essence, and that when so made that stipulation like all others is binding upon the court, let us examine the contract and the findings to ascertain what were the rights of the parties under the one, and if any ground is shown in the other for setting aside or disregarding the stipulations of the former. In reference to the contract, counsel for Bricldey contend that a failure to make punctual payment does not of itself avoid the contract, but only gives to the company the right to avoid it; that this option must be exercised immediately upon the default in payment, or it will be waived; or if it must.not.be exercised immediately, and is in fact attempted to be exercised months after the default, that then a reasonable time for payment' exists after notice of the claim of forfeiture. Again, they say that this was a sale upon condition subsequent, and that equity will relieve against the breach of a condition subsequent, when compensation can be made, and that interest is the legal compensation for breach of a contract to pay money; and further, that having regard to the fact that this is a sale upon condition subsequent, that possession is given, and that the improvements are to remain until payment of the price, this should be regarded as really a contract for the security of the payment of money — in fact, tantamount to a mortgage. None of these claims can be sustained. This is purely and strictly a contract for the sale of land. That is its purpose and object, and not the loan of money, or mere security for money loaned. No better description of the character of this contract can be found than that given by Mr. Justice Hunt, in the case from 21 Wall., supra, as follows:
“This was one of the sales of real estate by contract so common in this country, in which the title remains in the vendor and the possession passes to the vendee. The legal title remains in the vendor, while an equitable interest yests in the vendee to the extent of the payment made by him. As his payments increase, his equitable interest increases; and when the contract price is fully paid, the entire title is equitably vested in him, and he may compel a conveyance of the legal title by the vendor, his heirs, or his assigns. The vendor is a trustee of the legal title for the vendee, to the extent of his, payment. The result of this state of things is quite unlike'that of a conveyance subject to a-condition subsequent which is broken, and when reentry, or a claim of title for condition broken, is necessary to enable the vendor to restore to himself the"title to the'estate. The legal title having, in that case, passed out .of him, some measures are necessary to replace it. In the case of a contract like that which we are now considering, no legal title passes. The interest of the vendee is equitable merely, and whatever puts an end to the equitable interest, as notice, an agreement of the parties, a surrender, an abandonment, places the vendor where he was before the contract was made.”
In the case of Walker v. Rogan, 1 Wis. 527, cited by counsel, there was an express conveyance of the legal title. A deed was executed conveying the fee in consideration of one dollar, and the bond thereafter recited and conditioned, that if the grantee should fail to comply with the conditions of said bond, the same being a bond for the payment of money, then the conveyance and the estate thereby created should cease, determine, and be of no effect, and the grantor should have the right to reenter, etc. That plainly was a deed upon ■a condition subsequent. Here, the company owned the land, •and desired to sell it. It made this contract to effect the sale. It retained the legal title, not as security for money loaned, •but for the unpaid portion of the price. This was no mere mortgage, in which security for the payment of money is the primary purpose, but a contract, in which - the. sale of real estate is the thing intended. It did not convey the title subject to a lien: it retained the title, and simply gave to the purchaser the right of obtaining a title upon performance of certain prescribed precedent conditions. Instead of being a conveyance of title upon conditions subsequent, it was a contract to convey upon conditions precedent. Again, the contract gives to the company the option, upon the default of Brickley, to declare the contract at an end. Nowhere is it said that this option must be exercised at the exact moment of default, or be lost to the company, nor can any such inference be drawn from any reasonable construction of the language. The same rule applies here as in case.of the time of payment.- Time is not presumed to be of the essence, and is only held to be so when expressly stipulated, or when the facts and circumstances clearly indicate the intention of the parties' that it should be so. Here, there is no expressed .stipulation for fixing the exact time of exercising the option, nor do the facts and circumstances indicate any such intention, but rather the 'reverse. And in order to clearly interpret a contract in ■the light of the surrounding facts and circumstances, we must regard rather the situation at the time the contract is entered into, than those matters which may transpire thereafter. What, in view of that situation, did the parties intend? is ■the question, and not, What in the light of those after-matters would ■ have been the most prudent, and attended with the least risk ? It must be presumed that Brickley, by entering into this contract, intended to. purchase this land, desired to do so. Asking time for part of his payments, it cannot be presumed that he desired that the company should cut off his entire interest in the premises, and all his rights in the contract upon the first happening of any default. The. more time the company would give him, the better. .The longer it waited before exercising its option and destroying his contract, the greater .the probabilities of his finally completing the purchase and securing the land. The company insisted that time of payment should be of the essence of the contract, instead of executing a deed and taking a mortgage back; in which event, upon default, a foreclosure suit would have been necessary to recover money or land. It simply gave its contract to convey upon the payment of certain sums at specified times. It protected, its rights by reserving the option to declare the contract at an end upon Brickley’s default. Qf what value to it was any limitation on the'time of exercising this option ? Must it be presumed that it was contracting in advance, that.it would show no mercy, or that it was so framing its agreement that it could grant no favor without, giving .up an essential element of its security? Even against a corporation, no such presumption as that obtains, but rather, .while insisting upon the right of putting an end to the contract whenever the purchaser should make default as essential to its security, it might, nevertheless, without yielding this right, postpone its exercise so long as a due regard to its own interests and the rights of the purchaser should permit.
Again, the contract gives the company the right upon default, to declare the contract at an end, and provides that “all rights and .interests hereby created or then existing in favor of said second party, or derived under this contract, shall utterly cease and determine.” This plainly implies that upon the declaration of forfeiture, the contract shall then, ipso facto, be at an end, and not that it shall end unless payment be made within a reasonable time. It does not provide for a future but a present termination of the contract. This does not assimilate the case in which, time not being of the essence, there has been a long delay on the part of the purchaser, and the vendor elects to put an end to the contract, arid gives notice of his intention thereto, in which it is held that the vendee has a reasonable time thereafter in which to pay. In such case, the courts are not interpreting the very terms of the contract, but are enforcing the equitable obligations of the parties; and it is held that the vendor, having himself waited long, shall not be permitted in a moment to cut off all rights of the purchaser. (2 Leading Cases in Equity, White Tudor’s Notes, part II, page 1001, and cases cited.) It seems to us, therefore, that under this contract, ex m termini, the plaintiff had lost all his rights in the land.
But again, at law each party always stood upon the very letter of the contract. He could claim nothing which the contract did not in terms give. “As to the contract of the party,” says Lord Eldon, in the case of Seton v. Slade, supra, “the slightest objection is an answer at law.” Only in equity was relief ever granted to any one who had not complied with every stipulation of his agreement. If the purchaser had not paid at the very time he had promised to pay, the law gave him no relief, and equity only interfered when it was equitable to do so. “Where either the vendor or purchaser has not completed the contract on his part at the appointed time, if the contract be inequitable or the price unreasonable, that is to sav, inadequate in one case or exorbitant in the other, equity will not afford its aid by decreeing specific performance.” (Whorwood v. Simpson, 2 Vern. 186; Lewis v. Lord Lechmere, 10 Mod. 503.) In the leading case of Longworth v. Taylor, 14 Peters, 172, Story, J., speaking for the court, says:
“In the first place, there is no doubt that time may be of the essence of a contract for the sale of property. It may be made so by the express stipulation of the parties, or it may arise by implication from the. very nature of the property, or the avowed objects of the seller or the purchaser. And even when time is not thus either expressly or impliedly of the essence of the contract, if the party seeking a specific performance has been guilty of gross laches, or'has been inexcusably negligent in performing the contract on his part; or if there has, in the intermediate period, been a material change of circumstances, affecting the rights, interests or obligations of the parties, in all such cases courts of equity will refuse to decree any specific performance, upon the plain ground that it would be inequitable and. unjust. But except under circumstances of this sort, or of an analogous nature, time is not treated by courts of equity as of the essence of the contract; and relief will be decreed to the party who seeks it, if he has not been grossly negligent and comes within a reasonable time, although he has not complied with the- strict -terms of the contract. But in all such cases, the court expects the party to make out a case free from all doubt, and to show that the relief which he asks is, under all the circumstances, equitable.”
Would it be equitable to enforce this contract, under all the circumstances? We think not. The land is worth $2,000. For the pitiful sum of $120, plaintiff asks the court to compel the company to convey him this land. That is, he asks the court to take $2,000 worth of property away from the defendant, while he is only willing to pay therefor $120. Surely, there is nothing in that to appeal to the conscience of a chancellor, or to set the eager footsteps of a court of equity in motion. He that seeks equity must do equity; and one who asks to take from another property of such great value, without the payment of the sixteenth part of such value, ought to be able to show that he has himself done all that is “ nominated in the bond.” It is true, the findings show the value at the time of the decree, and not that at the time of the • contract; but the difference between such value and the price is found to be owing to a vein of coal, and to the prospective construction of a railroad in proximity to the land. The one was there at'the time of the contract, and was known to the purchaser, and not to the seller. Whatever of additional value that gave, then existed — a value which he knew, but the company did not. They did not therefore contract upon equal terms. The railroad company, supposing the land merely farm land, sold it upon the basis of its value as such, for cultivation and improvement. Brickley, saying nothing of the larger value he knew that it possessed on account of the valuable coal deposits underneath its surface, bought it not for farm, but for mining purposes. And while this ignorance on the part of one, and knowledge on the part of the other, might not of itself be ground for setting aside the contract, yet it is a very potent reason why the strong arm of the chancellor should not be lifted to relieve him from the consequences of his own failure to comply with the terms of this unequal contract. Again, the prospective construction of a railroad in proximity to the land is the other element affecting the valué. That there was some prospect of this, Brickley knew at the time of the contract. Whether the company did or not, the findings do not show. In all probability it did, however. But about the time of the forfeiture, each party became aware of facts renderinS • more probable the. immediate construction of this .road, and undoubtedly the action of the one. party,, and certainly the action of the- other, was influenced by this additional information. In other words, since the contract, and, indeed, since the default, there had been a material change of circumstances affecting the value of property. Such a change of course does not affect the yalidity of the contract, nor release either party from the obligation to perform, but like the other element referred to affecting the value, it is material in determining whether it. would be equitable to relieve the plaintiff against a forfeiture caused in part, at least, by his own negligence.
In the case of Margraf v. Muir, 57 N. Y. 155, where no default was claimed on the part of the purchaser, and where the only imputation of wrong on-his part was in his concealing the fact of a rise in the value of real estate, the court refused to enforce the contract or give to the purchaser any further damages than the return of the money paid by him, and interest. Earl, J., in giving the opinion of the court, uses this strong language:
“This was an unconscionable contract, and could not be specifically enforced on the ground of the inadequacy of the consideration. The plaintiff lived near the lot, and knew its value. The defendant lived at a distance, and did not know its value. While the plaintiff did not make any misrepresentations, he concealed his knowledge of the recent rise iu value of the lot, and took advantage of her ignorance, and thus got from her a contract to convey to him the lot for but a little more than one-third its value. Such a contract, it is believed, has never yet been enforced in a court of equity in this country. When a contract for the sale of lands is fair and just and free from legal-objection, it is a matter of course for courts of equity to specifically enforce it. But they will not decree specific performance in cases of fraud or mistake, or of hard and unconscionable bargains, or when the decree would produce injustice, or when such a decree would be inequitable under all the circumstances.” (1 Story Eq. Jur. §769; Willard’s Eq. J. 262; Osgood v. Franklin, 2 Johns. Ch. 1; 14 Johns. 527; Seymour v. Delancey, 6 Johns. Ch. 222; 3 Cow. 445.)
• In this last citation is a long review of the authorities by Savage,'C. J., which is very satisfactory. ■ See, also, Howard v. Edgell, 17 Vt. 28; Robinson v. Robinson, 4 Md. Ch. 182; Kimball v. Tooke, 70 Ill. 553. So far as plaintiff’s accident is concerned, while that of course is always a ground for the interposition of equity, yet it will be noticed that he did not leave in the hands of his employer an amount fully sufficient to make the payment; that he, during his confinement, frequently corresponded with such employer, but made no allusion to his contract; that he did not seem impressed with any anxiety to perform on his part until he received the additional information which led him to believe in the immediate construction of the railroad ; that he never entered into actual possession or made any improvements, as was contemplated by his contract; and finally, as the court finds, his own negligence contributed in some degree at least to his default.
So far as the public advertisement of the company is concerned, that, of course, refers only to payments in advance of the specified'times, and cannot be construed as meaning that the company waived all forfeitures and agreed to hold all contracts perpetually open.
Though the contract provides for a forfeiture of all moneys paid under it, yet the company tenders back- all moneys it had received.
On the whole case it seems to us more in consonance with equity, which means equality, that the plaintiff seeking to purchase a valuable tract of land whose value he knew, but of which the defendant was ignorant, should, on being reimbursed his money, lose an enormous speculation, than that the defendant should be compelled to part with its property for a pitiful and-grossly-inadequate consideration; and the -plaintiff, having lost his right to rely upon the letter of his contract, must abide by that which equity says is just and fair between man and man.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to render judgment in favor of the defendant, the railroad company, upon its making its tender good.
All the Justices concurring.