Court Opinion

ID: 9303669
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:14:43.715997+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:47.585108
License: Public Domain

DAYTON, District Judge
(after stating the facts as above). I have carefully gone over again the technical defenses raised by the demurrer and the motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, and have discovered nothing to cause me to reach any other or different conclusion than the one arrived at upon former hearing thereof. In my judgment, under the facts alleged and now fully proved, these six nonresident plaintiffs owned all the stock of the Pennsylvania Steam Coal & *422Coke'Company, composed its board of directors and officers, and had full power, without the aid of this court of equity, to fully comply with all the essential and vital requirements of their contracts, to wit, to turn over to the defendants all the stock, rights, franchises, interests, and property of this company. They had but to control their own action to do this. While the contracts require the execution of a .deed for the coal lands, and while the execution of such deed was hardly required in order to carry out the true intent and purposes sought to be accomplished, yet it is true, as shown by the evidence, that this action on behalf of the company has been done, as it had in the very nature of things to be done, by the authorization of these six stockholders and directors and of them onfy, for no other interest of any kind was in any way interested.
This coal corporation is therefore in my judgment a wholly unnecessary party, as such, and can well be dismissed from the proceeding. The grave doubt that existed in my mind upon former hearing as to how far defendant Elkins could be bound in these transactions has been wholly dissipated by the allegations of his answer conjoint with his codefendant Sutherland, in which he admits that the latter was acting- in effect as his agent with full authority, that he has beneficial interests in the contracts, and has taken possession of the railroad property under one of them. Viewing these two contracts as substantially one, for reasons hereafter to be stated, and regarding the actual conveyance of the coal field by deed to be substantially immaterial to the true intents and purposes of the contracts (for the transfer of the stock, franchises, and rights of the. company unincumbered accomplishes such transfer of its said realty just as effectively as it could be by deed), there are three reasons why I think the statute of frauds, requiring- contracts- for the sale of realty to be in writing, set up in his fifth ground of demurrer by Elkins, will not avail his release from liability. First. Because there is here a sufficient “memorandum or note in writing,” clear and distinct contracts in fact touching such sale of real estate signed by Sutherland, his agent. “A person owning lands may authorize another to make a contract for the sale thereof; and, if a contract be made under such authority, the owner of the lands may be charged by virtue of the contract, provided there be a memorandum thereof in writing signed by the person authorized to make it. The signing by the agent of his own name as agent is sufficient.” Conaway v. Sweeney, 24 W. Va. 643. Kennedy v. Ehlen, 31 W. Va. 540, 8 S. E. 398, is exactly in point. In that case Ehlen was held bound for a sale of real estate made direct to Buchanan, although his name was not mentioned in the writing and his liability was not known, simply because he had an interest in the purchase and Buchanan was acting as his agent. These cases and others construe the West Virginia statute of frauds, and, under well-settled principles, must be followed by this court. Second. Because there has been part performance, as I have said, by reason of the taking over of the railroad by Elkins.- A part performance makes the contract enforceable specifically in equity. Middleton v. Selby, 19 W. Va. 168; Kennedy v. Ehlen, 31 W. Va. 558, 8 S. E. 398; Lester v. Lester, 28 Grat. 737. Third. Because, notwithstanding the statute, courts of equity, in order to *423defeat a fraud, will compel the specific execution of a parol contract for the sale of lands if the contract is established by clear and convincing proof. Boyd v. Cleghorn, 94 Va. 780, 27 S. E. 574.
Touching the other technical grounds assigned on demurrer, I desire next briefly to consider a little further the ninth one, assigned by Elkins, upon which much stress was laid. It seems that this coal company had executed a mortgage upon its property to the Colonial Trust Company, of Philadelphia, trustee, to secure $135,000 in bonds payable to bearer, $65,000 of which were outstanding. It is insisted that this trustee was a necessary party to this suit, and at first blush it might appear that this position was well taken. The answer, however, I conceive to be is that this mortgage was existent at the time these contracts sought to be specifically enforced were executed, and they were expressly made with the fact of its existence in view by the parties. The bonds under its terms were negotiable and ran 10 years, and in the contracts relating to the sale of the coal lands was this provision:
“Further, the said first parties shall either fully pay all the outstanding indebtedness of said company, including said bonds of $65,000.00 and interest on same to date of said final transfer, and procure the release of said deed of trust and the cancellation of said bonds, or such a reduction from said above named purchase price shall be made as will amply cover all such indebtedness, at the option of said second party. The second party reserving to himself, or his assigns, the option either to require the first parties to pay the said bonds and interest and to procure the release of the deed to cancel the bonds, or to buy the property subject to said bonds and interest and to deduct the amount thereof from said purchase price.”
In view of this express stipulation in the contract, how does it become necessary for this trustee in the mortgage to be 'made a party to enforce specific performance? By the terms of the contract, these plaintiffs undertook, if required, to pay the bonds and secure release of the mortgage. On the other hand, the defendants had right to take the lands subject to the mortgage and pay the bonds when due, retaining the amount out of the purchase price. In neither event would or could the trustee in the mortgage have any interest or be affected by this controversy. The plaintiffs have alleged their ability and willingness to perform, at any and all times, these contractual exactions upon them, and now insist that the defendants having failed to elect which course they would require, but, on the contrary, having repudiated the contract entire, the election now rests with them, and I am inclined to regard this view sound under the authority of 3 Page on Contracts, § 1391.
I cannot understand what force there can be in the contention of defendants to the effect that, because the plaintiffs did not notify them to make this election (which in this answer they say they did not, but which the evidence clearly shows they did), therefore there exists no right in the plaintiffs to require them to perform the contract at all. The logic of this position would seem to be that because they were not notified to do what they had expressly reserved the right to do, and which it was their plain duty to do, they cannot be required to do anything. Equity and good conscience will hardly sustain such a position. When a man undertakes by contract to do a thing, he must do it without being told to do so. Finally, in the *424fourteenth ground, it was insisted upon for demurrer that the defendants Elkins and Sutherland could not have enforced specific performance of this coal contract, and therefore want of mutuality is shown such as will bar enforcement of it against them. Why could they not, by the aid of a court of equity, have enforced this contract against these plaintiffs if the shoe was on the other foot? Could not such court have enjoined the disposition, by these six plaintiffs, of the whole capital stock of this company which was owned by them, and required its transfer to defendants, thereby substantially meeting every requirement of the contract save and except that of the payment of "the company’s debts? And could i.t not have convened the creditors and out of the purchase money paid these debts? Could it not have enjoined any disposition of the property by the company until such transfer of stock could be decreed, after which, as sole stockholders, the plaintiffs could have organized the company, managed it at will, and caused any deeds to be made by it they might desire? I think so, and therefore I regard this position untenable.
Coming now to the cause on its merits, it is not my purpose to discuss the facts further than to say that, in behalf of the plaintiffs, the evidence of four of their number, the son of one who acted in part of the transactions for his father, and of two attorneys of theirs in the negotiations, is taken, while Elkins does not testify at all, Sutherland but briefly and with but little conflict with plaintiffs’ testimony, and the evidence of Paul, hereafter to be referred to, alone constitutes the evidence of the defense. I regard the evidence as fully maintaining the contentions of the plaintiffs. It establishes beyond question, I think, these facts that Elkins wanted, and wanted badly, the railroad, but did not want the coal field; that Sutherland was sent to purchase the railroad, but was flatly refused a sale of it alone by the plaintiffs, who would only sell it in connection with the coal field; that this negotiation was had just prior to March 28, 1903, with Gheen, Humes, and C. B. McCullough, son of plaintiff McCullough, and resulted in an agreed "price of $200,000 for both properties; that Sutherland undertook to have the contract drawn at Williamsport, where he was going to spend the night with relatives, did have the two original ones drawn, returned, and, upon objection raised by Humes to there being two, he assured them “both properties would go together”; that by the contract .he was given until April 18th following to examine the coal field and the title before closing, but, in fact, took until June 3d, when he returned in company with Attorney Faulkner, secured also the service of Munson, a local attorney, and met four of the plaintiffs with Reardon and McCormick, their attorneys; that he earnestly insisted upon taking over immediately the railroad, but not the coal property; that this was strenuously objected to, and to meet this objection he made most earnest protestations of good faith, revealed- Elkins to be his principal, referred to his high position and character, and assured plaintiffs that, so soon as the “farmer bondholders” were satisfied, the coal property would be taken over, and then tendered and paid $2,500 additional of the purchase price; that under his assurances and those of Faulkner the supplemental contract was executed, and the rail*425road was turned over; that one of the plaintiffs and young McCullough went down next day to Kingwood and paid off the farmers, and on their way home notified Sutherland to come on and take over the property; that objection was then made by Sutherland to doing this because a suit was pending against the coal company by Rakin and others upon a money demand which might result in a lien against it; that plaintiffs offered to indemnify against this, but this was refused, and the matter remained so, until in September, when the local court decided this case in favor of the company; that Sutherland was notified and then objected that an appeal might be taken by Rakin et al., and then in November informed the plaintiffs that he had long since regarded the contract as at an end “because they were unable to comply with it”; that on June 25th he had been asked by letter to make his election as to whether he would take subject to the mortgage or not, but had never expressed his election; that Elkins was appealed to and ratified and approved the repudiation of the contract by his agent, alleging, as reasons, that the plaintiffs had never been in position to make title; that his engineers reported that the coal was not persistent; that it could not possibly be shown that there was coal under all the land; that one engineer reported that there was a disturbance in the coal field caused by the anticlinal, and, “added to all this, the price of coal lands has considerably decreased since Mr. Sutherland’s contract was entered into.”
It is to be remembered that the granting of the equitable remedy of specific performance “is, in- the language ordinarily used, a matter of discretion, not of an arbitrary, capricious discretion, but of a sound, judicial discretion, controlled by established principles of equity, and exercised upon a consideration of all the circumstances of each particular case. Where, however, the contract is in writing, is certain in its terms, is for a valuable consideration, is fair and just in all its provisions, and is capable of being enforced without hardship to either party, it is as much a matter of course for a court of equity to decree its specific performance as for a court of law to award a judgment of damages for its breach.” Pom. Eq. § 1404.
Without entering into an elaborate discussion of the law governing the administration of this equitable remedy, it may be well to say here that, as in all other equitable remedies, conditions existing in different states and localities have established different precedents. Tn our state, where many difficulties have existed touching land titles, our Supreme Court of Appeals has gone far to extend the application of this remedy. For instance, in Bennett v. Pierce, 50 W. Va. 604, 40 S. E. 395, it has been held:
“Though at the date of a conveyance of land, retaining a lien for purchase money, the title of the grantor is defective, yet, if at the time when he asks a decree to enforce that lien in a suit, brought for the purpose the title has become good and valid, the original defect of title will not debar the grantor from such relief.”
In Rader v. Neal, 13 W. Va. 373, it is held:
“Where a purchaser knows, when he makes his contract, that there Is a defect in the title, and that it will take a considerable tim$ to remove it, or acquires this knowledge after his purchase, and acquiesces in the delay, or pro*426ceeds, with knowledge of the defect, in the execution of the contract, lie cannot afterwards complain” — citing Vail v. Nelson, 4 Kand. 478, 481; Goddin v. Vaughn’s Ex’r, 14 Grat. 125.
And it has been held, further, that it is immaterial if plaintiff has title at all or whether title be outstanding in another, or whether it be defective or not at the time of bringing his suit, provided he can confer such title at any time before the decree granting him relief. Tavenner v. Barrett, 21 W. Va. 656; Core v. Wigner, 32 W. Va. 277, 9 S. E. 36. Touching the insistence of the defendants that no tender was made of the stock of the coal company, of the contracts held by it, the maps, surveys, abstracts of title, boring, etc., of the lands and of the deed specified in the contract whereby the right to demand specific performance became lost to the plaintiffs, it is sufficient to say that the courts of equity under modern administration, and especially so in this state, have swept away these technicalities as shown by such cases as Vaught v. Cain, 31 W. Va. 424, 7 S. E. 9; Koon v. Snodgrass, 18 W. Va. 320; Poling v. Parsons, 38 W. Va. 80, 18 S. E. 379; Thompson v. Lyon, 40 W. Va. 87, 20 S. E. 812; Creigh’s Adm’r v. Boggs, 19 W. Va. 240; Blanton v. Kentucky, etc., Co. (C. C.) 120 Fed. 318; Pollock v. Brainard (C. C.) 26 Fed. 732; Cheney v. Libby, 134 U. S. 68, 10 Sup. Ct. 498, 33 L. Ed. 818. From these cases we find it is not a prerequisite to specific performance that tenders be made of deed, papers, property, or money where the opposite party has especially expressed a purpose not to comply with but to repudiate the contract.
This brings us to the last matter of defense set up and sought to be established by the evidence of Paul alone, to wit, the lack of the contract number of 4,073 acres of coal. If it was clearly shown'that there was any considerable failure in this particular, this court would be very prompt in granting relief, either by an abatement of the purchase price, if that could under the terms of the contract properly be done, or, if not, by' rescinding all the contracts and restoring the parties to their original condition. Believing, as I do, that the sale of the railroad, and the coal property was substantially one and the same transaction, and that to allow the defendants to take the railroad and not the coal would be to allow them to perpetrate a palpable fraud upon the plaintiffs, if I had to construe this contract as allowing no abatement for lack of acres of coal, as insisted on by defendants, then I would' feel constrained to allow plaintiffs to file an amended bill, praying rescission of all these contracts, and would decree accordingly. But, as I view this testimony, it is not necessary for me to construe this contract in this particular, for I do not regard the facts and evidence sufficient to sustain the contention that there is' any deficiency. In the first place, the contract gave to Sutherland from its original date of March 28th until April 18th to examine into this very matter. He took until June 3d, and then raised no question as to this. He, in fact, made no objection on this ground until his answer in this* cause. Paul, the witness, went on to some land indicated to him as this field by Flynn and Matheny. He did not know it was this land, and Flynn and Matheny‘are not called to state it was. He made no survey. He stepped off and estimated what he believed would amount to 215 acres of land that was *427barren of the Upper Freeport vein. It is known from the geology of this section of West Virginia that these lower coal measures generally consist of the Masontown, Upper Freeport, Lower Freeport, and Kittaning veins, and that frequently two, or even more, of these veins are found in merchantable quantity under the same land. Paul made no test. He believed the Upper Freeport, and therefore necessarily the Masontown, veins to be absent on a part of the land which he stepped over and estimated to be 215 acres. He could not tell whether the Lower Freeport or Kittaning veins were under this 215 acres or not. He only believed not, but could not tell. This testimony seems to me to be wholly insufficient upon which to base this defense.
I am of opinion that the plaintiffs are entitled to the relief prayed for, and will so decree.