Court Opinion

ID: 3607851
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:52:50.94888+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:07:29.767887
License: Public Domain

The judgment of the Special Term cannot be sustained on the ground upon which it was placed, that the action is brought to enforce the specific performance of a voluntary agreement for the conveyance of land. There was no want of consideration for the promise of Vincent Stephens to convey the land. The promise of the plaintiff to pay the purchase-price was a valid consideration for the promise of *Page 324 
the other party. The agreement was in writing, signed by both parties, and was mutually obligatory. It is quite immaterial, in the absence of fraud or mistake, neither of which is claimed, what object or intention the parties may have had at variance with the terms of the agreement, or that both understood that the vendor would not exact the payment of the purchase-money, or that he intended to give the land to his sister. The contract did not operate as a gift of the land, and the intention to give the land could only be consummated by an actual conveyance, and the intention to make a present gift is conclusively rebutted by the covenant which the vendor took for the payment of the consideration. The parol understanding between the parties would be no answer to a suit brought by the vendor to enforce the performance of the plaintiff's promise to pay the purchase-money. The suit was not, therefore, as the learned judge of the Special Term seemed to suppose, brought to enforce a voluntary executory promise to give the land to the plaintiff. The payment of the purchase-money by the plaintiff was made by the agreement a condition precedent to the obligation of the vendor to convey the land, and the plaintiff, in order to entitle herself to a specific performance of the contract, was bound to show that payment, in fact, had been made, or that her promise to pay the purchase-money had, in some way, been satisfied. It is conceded that there was no actual payment of any part of the consideration. The plaintiff, to maintain her right of action, relies upon the fact that her brother, about a month after the contract was made, indorsed upon it a receipt in full of the purchase-price. The judge also found that the plaintiff's brother, when the contract was made intended to give her the land, and that the consideration was inserted to conceal this intention from other relatives, and in connection with the finding that the receipt was subsequently indorsed on the contract, he finds that it was never intended that any payment should be made thereon. These findings, taken together, are equivalent to finding that the vendor, to accomplish his purpose to give the *Page 325 
land to his sister, gave her the debt which represented his interest in the land. He became, on the execution of the contract of sale, a trustee for the plaintiff of the land, having a lien for the purchase-money, and she became his debtor for the consideration.
That the receipt was intended as a gift of the debt is clearly inferable from the facts found. His primary intention was to give her the land. The gift of the debt would not give her the legal title, but it gave her the whole beneficial interest, provided it operated as a legal satisfaction of her promise. The position of the General Term, that when the lien of the vendor, under a contract for the sale of land, for the purchase-money, is extinguished by payment or by what, as respects the vendor, was equivalent to payment, he becomes a naked trustee, and is bound to convey to the vendee the legal title, admits of no controversy. There was no intention in giving the receipt that the vendor should be discharged from his promise. It states that the money expressed therein, was received to apply on the contract. Whether the giving of a receipt for the debt was effectual to confer the benefit intended, is a question of law, but it is clear, from the facts found, that the receipt was intended to operate as a forgiving and satisfaction of the plaintiff's obligation under the contract, so as to leave the right of the plaintiff to a conveyance in force as if the debt had been paid. The case, therefore, comes to this single question, viz., was there a valid gift of the debt to the plaintiff by her brother. The case of Gray v. Barton
(55 N Y, 68), is a decisive authority for the plaintiff on this question. The plaintiff does not, in this case, seek the aid of the court to perfect an incomplete gift. The gift of the debt was complete upon the execution of the receipt. The vendor's purpose of giving the land has never been executed, only so far as it results from his giving the plaintiff the debt for the purchase-money. The plaintiff's obligation under the contract having been satisfied, the only unperformed stipulation remaining, is that of the vendor to convey the land, and this action is brought to enforce that stipulation. *Page 326 
The language of GROVER, J., in Gray v. Barton, answers the objection founded on want of consideration. He says, "the proof of want of consideration for the receipt was annulled and avoided by the proof that it was given to consummate a gift of the debt."
The judgment of the General Term should be affirmed, and judgment absolute for the plaintiff ordered on the stipulation.
All concur.
Order affirmed and judgment accordingly.