Court Opinion

ID: 3889996
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:19:21.699563+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:10.429701
License: Public Domain

The Court, after hearing this cause, directed some amendments to be made, to prepare it for a final decree at the next term, and gave judgment upon the principal matters in controversy as follows: —
Thomas H. Perkins, Daniel Perkins, William Perkins, and Nicholas Perkins the elder, on the 6th of July, 1796, purchased of Joshua Hadley, 640 acres of *Page 149 
land. Hadley executed a writing under seal, stating that he had received $220 in part-payment of said 640 acres of land, describing them, and binding himself to make title on payment of the residue of the purchase-money. That residue was afterwards paid. Before 1804, the purchasers divided the lands they had purchased from divers persons. One-half of this 640 was allotted to the said Nicholas Perkins the elder, and the other one-half thereof to Daniel Perkins. Nicholas Perkins the elder died. By his will half of this tract allotted to him was in a division assigned to his son Constant, and the other half to his son Nicholas. Nicholas, the son. sold his part to John P. Perkins, provided the amount should not exceed 220 acres, which sale was evidenced by a writing under seal. John P. Perkins paid a full and valuable consideration, and took possession of the part allotted to Nicholas, made valuable improvements thereon worth $500, and resided thereon until he died in November, 1807, intestate, leaving the said Eliza his widow. and the other complainant his son. Hadley had a good title to part of said 640 acres, that is to say to forty-nine acres, part of the section allotted to Nicholas the son, which forty-nine acres includes the improvements. Also, he had title to the part allotted to Daniel Perkins. The residue of the 640 acres was covered by an older grant which Hadley knew not of when he sold as aforesaid. Hadley failing to convey the said 640 acres, the said Thomas H. Perkins, Daniel Perkins, and William Perkins sued him on said writing, and in January, 1811, recovered $4,883 and costs, the value without improvements. Hadley thereupon brought an ejectment to recover the possession of the said forty-nine acres of land, and the complainants brought this bill claiming the said forty-nine acres of land, and praying that Hadley may be compelled to convey them, and that the said Thomas H. Perkins, Daniel Perkins, and William Perkins may be enjoined as to such part of their said *Page 150 
judgment as is for the said forty-nine acres. Constant Perkins, son of Nicholas the elder, sold his part, which came to him on the death of his father, being 206 acres, to H. Cook.
Upon this statement the question is, Can the plaintiff retain the forty-nine acres of land allowing for the price assessed in the verdict, and after deducting that from the judgment have the residue of her proportion of the judgment for the lands interfered with and taken by elder and better claims?
It is to be recollected that so far as this bill seeks to retain the forty-nine acres, it is a bill for specific performance. That is in the discretion of the Court, and ought not to be decreed, where it is unreasonable or hard or unjust to decree it, as prayed for. Where lands are sold to several persons, and one bond for title be given to all, it would be unreasonable and injurious to the obligor to permit the obligees, by agreement amongst themselves to take part of the lands for which the obligor could make title, leaving other parts for the obligor. The valuable parts would be selected, and the residue be rendered thereby unsalable. It would consist of unequal and unconnected parts, of no use or value to any one but the owner of the selected parts. This is a situation into which at the formation of the contract it was not contemplated to place the vendor, and one which, if he had been asked about, he would most probably not have consented to. If, then, any one or two of the obligees wall insist to have part of the land to which the obligor can make title, it must be upon condition that he or they will not pick out the choice spots, leaving the mean ones for the vendor. They must take the whole, and deduct from the judgment as is correspondent to the assessed value of the land, — leaving the residue of the judgment above such deductions to be paid by the defendant at law to the other plaintiffs at law. Otherwise the plaintiffs in equity must renounce every part of the land, and take *Page 151 
their proportion of the damages recovered. In the present instance, the plaintiff in equity can not at her pleasure take part of the land such as suits her, and for such parts as do not suit her take damages. If she take damages, then she ought to be allowed for the permanent improvements made on the land. The rule is, that whoever takes possession under a contract which afterwards for any cause is rescinded or relinquished, shall be allowed for intermediate improvements made on the land. They are made by the approbation and consent of the vendor. If, instead of conveying the land agreeably to his contract, he so manages as not to comply with his contract to convey, whether wilfully or involuntarily, he ought to make retribution; and become not richer at the expense of another by taking advantage of his own failures. Indeed, he ought to do so upon another ground also. He ought not to receive the profits of another's labor without just compensation, unless he can show that the labor was done without his consent and against his will. Cas. T. Talbot, 234; Hard. 579; 3 Call. 135;1 Wash. 329; 5 Johns. 272. There is no difficulty as to the part or share of the judgment to be allotted to the complainant, for it is admitted that the plaintiffs at law, who are three out of four of the obligees, recovered for the whole land. Perhaps by our law, even as it now stands, there could not be a recovery or part. At the common law this would have been a joint bond, to be sued by the obligees jointly by one action, and not by several actions. Where that is the nature of the original contract, the death of one produces survivorship; and there is but one action allowed. Much less can the parties who are obligees, by an act of theirs, divide it into several actions. The law abhors multiplicity and splitting of actions. For this reason it is that you can not assign a bill of exchange for part of the sum due by it. The defendant thereby might be subjected to one hundred actions instead of one. So also, in case of warranty, if it be *Page 152 
made by feoffment to A. and B., and they enfeoff different persons, the warranty is gone, for it can not be used unless by different and several vouchers and actions instead of one, and the law will rather destroy it altogether than allow that; so also of a partition of lands when not pursuant to law, the warranty is gone, for the same reason. The defendant must not be subject to more actions than by his own contract he was originally made liable. Carth. 166; Salt. 65. So also of a feoffment with warranty to two, and one enfeoffs a third, the warranty does not go to that third, for if it did then he would vouch, and the other feoffee also; and so two vouchers and recoveries be substituted in place of one. The original feoffee may still vouch, for, as to him, there is but one action still. Co. Litt. 385. Has our law operated any alteration in this particular by abolishing joint tenancy, 1784, c. 22, section 6, "in all real and personal estates held in joint tenancy, the part or share of any person dying shall not, c., but shall descend or be vested in his executors, administrators, or assigns, respectively of the tenant so dying in the same manner as estates held by tenancy in common." On the side of the obligors, by 1789, c. 57, section 5, on the death of a joint obligor, the joint debtor's contract survives against the heirs, executors, or administrators of the deceased obligor. The law of joint tenancy in personals remains unaltered after the death of one, except in the point mentioned in the act; which as between the obligees regards the right of property, but the remedy is not altered so as to become two actions instead of one. The remedy is still single, but with the addition of another plaintiff. If the survivors sue without the executors of the deceased, there, as the latter ought to be parties in order to secure the share of the judgment which by the law of 1784 they are entitled to, the others ought to be stopped by plea in abatement from proceeding in the action brought by them alone. How else can the executors ever get *Page 153 
their share, under the act of 1784? The judgment when collected is to be paid to the plaintiffs, and they are not so. The action by whomsoever brought, is for all the damages, and can not be for less unless by consent. For it is a claim for a breach of an entire contract, in which a part-performance is no plea, nor can damages be claimed for a non-performance in part. It is not only so by law, but, in this instance, it is admitted that damages have been assessed for all the interest.
In putting a construction on the Act of 1784, the Court will not overturn a rule so carefully fostered by the law, as this for the prevention of multiplied actions. But will, pursuing the spirit of the common law, adopt that of two constructions, which will leave the rule unimpaired. All must be joined in the action, and if some will not agree to prosecute the suit, such must be summoned and severed, and the others permitted to proceed alone.
Therefore decree that the plaintiff shall be entitled to the one-fourth part of the damages recovered by the plaintiffs at law, the defendant at law first allowing to her the value of the permanent improvements made upon the land, by the obligees or any of them, or those claiming under them, to be ascertained by the report of the master. Let a reference be made to him for that purpose, and his report be made to the next term. An allowance to be made for the rents in the meantime; that is to say, a reasonable allowance for the use and occupation of the lands in the meantime by the obligees or any persons holding under them. The costs to abide the final hearing of the cause and further directions to be then given.
NOTE. — This case seems to have been overlooked by Mr. Meigs in his Digest, the only omission of any consequence I have yet discovered in his laborious and exhaustive work. — ED.