Court Opinion

ID: 5462720
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:41:23.547443+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:57.976100
License: Public Domain

Hardin, J.
Confessedly, the equities of this case are very strongly with the plaintiff. It remains to be considered, upon the facts shown upon the trial, whether the plaintiff can, consistently with the rules of equity, have a decree for the specific performance of the alleged agreement made by Cooper in respect to the sale, and to re-convey the premises upon receiving his mortgage debt, interest and costs of the foreclosure.
The defendants deny the agreement set out in the complaint, and set up an agreement to recovery to the plaintiff upon different terms and conditions; and do not, in terms, set up the statute of frauds.
The contract set up in the answer cannot be held sufficient to take the case' out of the statute, as it does not correspond with that alleged in the complaint. (Harris v. Knickerbacker, 5 Wend. 638. Jervis v. Smith, Hoff. Ch. 470. Haight v. Child, 34 Barb. 186.) The latter case very clearly holds, for the reasons given by Justice E. D. Smith, that the defendant need not set up the statute of frauds, in his answer; as, under the modern rule, the party is only called upon to allege the facts he intends to prove, and need not set out or refer to the statute he intends to rely upon. The question raised by the learned counsel for the defendants must therefore be met, and determined, upon the allegations of the complaint and the proofs taken upon the trial, to wit, has there been such a part performance as to take the case out of the statute; or, in other words, such a part performance as to estop the defendants, in a court of equity, from setting up and relying upon the statute.
The early English cases held that part payment of the purchase price was sufficient to take the case out of the statute ;■ but they were soon overruled, and the law settled, in England, that part payment did not relieve from the statute. (Fry on Specific Perf. § 390, p. 256, 3d ed. 3 Washb. on Real Prop. 215. Sug. on Vend., ch. 3, § 7, p. 107 &c. 9 Ves. 234. Willard's Eg. Jur. 284.) *517And it was afterward held, in England, that payment of the whole purchase price took the case out of the statute. But that decision was overruled, and the English rules, as stated above, have been followed in most of the States in this country.
In this State, the rule that part payment of the purchase money is not sufficient to take a case out of the statute has been adopted, and seems now to be so fully adjudged as to admit of no question or doubt. (Rhodes v. Rhodes, 3 Sandf. Ch. 279. Malins v. Brown, 4 N. Y. 403. Baldwin v. Palmer, 10 id. 232. Cagger v. Lansing, 43 id. 550.)
But it has been said, in several cases, in this State, that a payment of the whole purchase money is sufficient to take the agreement out of the statute, and that non-performance would be a fraud. (Willard’s Eq. Jur. 284, 285.)
An early line of cases is to be found where a distinction was taken in favor of payment made in full, by labor and services; but in commenting upon that distinction, Willard, at page 285, says it is not founded in principle; and that “the contract is in both cases fulfilled by the purchaser.” (Willard’s Eq. Jur. 285.) In Fannin. McMullen, (2 Abb. N. S. 224,) it was held that full payment, when it may be inferred that a fraud would result from a refusal, would, in equity, take the case out of the statute. The same case also declares that full payment is sufficient. Daly, J., says, in that case: “ The contract is then fully executed by one, and equity demands that the other should be compelled to perform his part of it.”
In Cagger v. Lansing, (supra,) Grover, J., says that “payment by the defendant, to the intestate, of a part of the purchase money did not take the contract out of the statute, so as to enable the intestate or her representatives to maintain an action thereon for the recovery *518of the balance of the purchase money agreed to be paid for the land.”
The case is therefore an authority only upon the effect of part payment of the purchase money, in an action at law. (See pp. 251, 254.)
It is now settled that a sale made to a mortgagee, for' an inadequate price, will be opened more readily than when a stranger is the purchaser in the usual and ordinary way, in good faith. (Kellogg v. Howell, 62 Barb. 280, and cases there cited.) And the same case holds that the remedy of a party for an inequitable sale is by motion, which is addressed to the discretion of the court.
In this case, it must be obvious upon the proofs, to any one who carefully considers them, that the agreement of the defendant Cooper lulled the plaintiff so that she made no attempt to open the sale, by motion, and that some ten months- elapsed after the sale before the defendant signified his intention to insist upon it. Although it is not clear that a resale would have been ordered, yet an important right which the plaintiff had, to make, promptly, a motion for a resale, by relying upon the agreement of the defendant, has been waived or lost.
In all the cases upon the subject of part performance, whether by payment or entry upon possession, it is held that specific performance will be decreed when the court can see that the party seeking it cannot be restored to all 'his rights, by an action at law. (Lowry v. Tew, 3 Barb. Ch. 407.) That principle is applicable to this case. Connor v. Brush, (2 N. Y. Leg. Obs. 289,) cited 2 Abb. Dig. 81, holds that ‘ ‘ an agreement between a judgment creditor who has purchased real property on his own excution, that if. the debtor would not redeem he should have the surplus upon the sale of the property, beyond the amount bid and the interest and. charges, creates no trust in the property, and is a valid agreement, although by paroi, and not within thd statute of frauds.”
*519It ■ was said by Johnson, J., in Carpenter v. Oakley, (2 Lans. 458,) that to allow a party “thus to take advantage of the statute of frauds would be using it to promote fraud, instead of preventing frauds and perjuries.” In Ryan v. Dox, (34 N. Y. 307,) it was held that a fraudulent use of the statute will not be permitted.
Although there was no agreement, here, before the sale, to bid in for the mortgagor and for her use, as in Ryan v. Dox, the court is able to see, upon the proofs, an acquiescence in the sale, with a reliance upon the agreement of the defendant, and that the same, to some extent, ripened so as not to be as liable to' be set aside upon motion. And this occurred because the plaintiff relied upon the agreement to give up the land, and to make a reconveyance upon repayment of the mortgage debt, interest and costs.
The plaintiff cannot be completely restored to the position which she had before she relied upon the defendant’ s agreement. To permit a party to avoid his agreement, under such circumstances, and obtain a property worth $10,009, and hold a judgment for $2,000 deficiency, in liquidation of a mortgage debt of some $4,00d, “would be allowing the statute of frauds to be used as an instrument of fraud, instead of a shield against it.” (Bennett v. Abrams, 41 Barb. 619. Ryan v. Dox, 34 N. 7. 307. Rathbun v. Rathbun, 6 Barb. 106.)
It will not do for the defendant to answer that the plaintiff lost her right to move for a resale by loches ; for the evidence indicates that her reliance was upon the agreement of the defendant to waive the sale, and reconvey; and that is a sufficient excuse for not having asked, at an earlier day, the interference of a court of equity. (Williston v. Williston, 41 Barb. 635.)
The learned counsel for the defendants is correct in saying that the possession, which will take a case out of the statute, must be referable to the agreement of which *520performance is sought; but when the acquiescence has been for a considerable time in the possession of the premises, that circumstance must be taken into consideration, upon the question as to the right of the vendor to set up the statute. (Fry on Specific Perf. 259, § 400, and cases cited,; id. § 397.) Here the possession of the plaintiff was allowed, voluntarily, for a period of about eleven months, and during a whole season for beneficial enjoyment of an agricultural farm. She had no other title than such as she must be deemed, in equity, to have acquired in virtue of the defendant’s agreement to waive the sale and reconvey the premises. Under such circumstances, the acquiescence of the defendant in the possession—especially as the use of the premises was valuable—must have been significantly against the defendant’ s right to avail of the statute.
[Herkimer Special Term,
September 2, 1873.
Hardin, Justice.]
The equities of this case, and the foregoing considerations, lead the court to the conclusion that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded, substantially; and judgment must be entered for the plaintiff.
The money was in the hands of the defendant’s agent and attorney before the commencement of this action, and he was notified thereof, and urged by a discreet and careful counsellor of this court to perform the agreement to waive the sale, and convey the premises to the plaintiff. And as he refused to do so, and his agent has kept the money during the considerable time that has intervened since the same was placed in Ms hands; and as the defendant has sought, inequitably, to profit out of the plaintiff, he should be required to pay the costs and disbursements of this action.
Judgment is ordered for the plaintiff, against the defendants.