Court Opinion

ID: 6673093
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:13:54.284404+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:36.552108
License: Public Domain

■By the Court.
This case involves the construction of Section 8448, General Code, as to the power of a court of equity to decree specific performance of a contract to deliver specific ■ or ascertained goods. This section of the General Code *115is Section 68 of the Uniform Sales Act, passed May 9, 1908, to take effect January 1, 1909 (99 O. L., 413). Section 8448; General Code, is as follows:
“When [where] the seller has broken a contract to deliver specific or ascertained goods, a court having the powers of a court of equity may, if it thinks fit, on the application of the buyer, by .its judgment or decree direct that the contract shall be performed specifically, without giving the seller the option of retaining the goods on payment of damages. The judgment or decree may be unconditional, or upon such terms and conditions as to damages, payment of. the price and otherwise, as to the court may seem just.”
The Uniform Sales Act was passed for the purpose of codifying and declaring in statutory form the common law as it then existed in this and other states, and also to modify and extend it where necessary or proper, to provide a uniform law of sales that would be common to all states adopting the same.
While it is true that courts of equity have heretofore as a general rule refused to decree specific performance of contracts for the sale of chattels, where compensation could be made in damages, and the parties have been left to their remedy at law, there are many cases where such contracts were enforced, usually depending upon the nature of the property sold, and specific performance was allowed -to enforce the sale of personal property of peculiar or extraordinary character, such as heirlooms, slaves, vessels, and in numerous other instances. In modern days there has been a *116tendency, outside of statute, to widen this jurisdiction of courts of equity in specifically enforcing contracts for 'the sale of personal property. It is said by Judge Story in his work on Equity Jurisprudence (14th ed.), Section 994:
“The truth is, that upon the principles of natural justice Courts of Equity might proceed much farther and might insist upon, decreeing a specific performance of all bona fide contracts, since that is a remedy to which Courts of Law are inadequate. *■ * * for it is against conscience that a party should have a right of election whether he would perform his covenant or only pay damages for the breach of 'it. But on the other hand there is no reasonable objection to allowing the other party who is injured by the breach to have an election either to take damages at law or to have a specific performance in equity, the remedies being concurrent but not co-extensive with each other.”
Interesting and instructive briefs have been filed by both sides upon the history and state of the law on this question, but for the purposes of this case it seems to be unnecessary for the count to enter upon any discussion, and it is sufficient to merely say that the language of this section of the law, as we now find it, clearly gives to the trial court the power to decree an enforcement of the sale, where the purchaser demands that sort of relief and the court finds it to be equitable and proper.
In this case the court below entered a decree requiring the defendant to deliver a specific ascertained cron of tobacco, which had been sold to the *117plaintiff at a specified price, and declined to entertain the defense made by the defendant that because of injury by a storm the tobacco would not meet the terms of the contract as to its condition,— evidently finding that if the plaintiff was willing to' take it in its damaged condition, and to pay the price asked, defendant had no cause to complain on that account.
A review of the record fails to disclose any error to the prejudice of plaintiff in error, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

Jones, P. J., Gorman and Hamilton, JJ., concur.