Court Opinion

ID: 6807663
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 18:49:24.590755+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:03:16.355165
License: Public Domain

Hinton, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit in equity to enforce the specific performance of a verbal contract for the sale of real estate. The material facts, omitting all mere - minor details of the case, may be briefly stated as follows:
In October, 1872, the appellee, Forney, and the partnership of J. B. Barrett & Go, composed of J. B. Barrett, and J. B. Barrett, trustee for his wife, Rebecca H. Barrett, purchased of one C. H. Allison, a tract of land, in the county of Pulaski, known as “Rich Hill,” for the sum of $6,000, and received from him a conveyance for the same, in which the vendor’s lien is expressly retained. The purchase seems to have been made with a view to operate it in raising iron ore and manufacturing iron, and ultimately selling the land perhaps for a profit.
Upon this purchase, Forney had already made the cash pay.ment of $1,500, less the trifling sum of $100, furnished by Barrett, and had expended several hundreds of dollars in improvements, when he became satisfied that J. B. Barrett, the active member of the firm, did not intend to pay anything towards the next instalment of purchase money, and that he, Forney, would have to shoulder that as well as the other expenses necessary for further developing the property. Disgusted with the condition of affairs, and no doubt anxious to acquire the sole ownership of the property, Forney made one or more propositions to Barrett to sell or buy. One of these propositions of sale Barrett accepted, and afterwards, as the record shows, with a full knowlfedge of his rights, relinquished, when Forney became the purchaser.
. By the terms of this verbal contract of purchase, construed in the light of the acts of the parties, Forney was to give Barrett & Co., $1,500 for their interest in the property, and to assume the payment of the whole purchase money to Allison.
*275This sum of $1,500, Forriey paid upon the spot by a draft for $1,050, that being the amount to which Barrett was entitled after deducting the sum of $450, due from him to Forney on some admitted account.
Upon the receipt of this draft Barrett immediately left the office of Wm. H. Bolling, where the agreement had been made, saying to Judge Bolling, who was acting as counsel for Forney, that he would call at his office and execute it, then take it down to his wife and after she had executed it, would return it to him. It being suggested at the time, that there was a defect in the certificate of the officer wTho took the acknowledgment of Mrs. Allison, to the deed from Allison and wife to Forney and Barrett & Co., and that Forney had just bought Barrett & Co. out, Judge Bolling was also instructed to prepare a deed conveying the land from Allison and wife to Forney alone.
This last mentioned deed was promptly executed by Allison and wife and'delivered to Forney, but the deed from Barrett has never been executed; and although he has been frequently pressed to execute it, he has always put off its execution upon one pretext or another. In the meanwhile, he has carefully held on to the money which Forney gave him for the land.
During all this time Forney has been in actual and exclusive possession of the property, and has expended large sums, amounting in the aggregate to probably as much as six thousand dollars, in erecting buildings, putting up the forge, and in opening and developing the iron deposits on the place.
Upon this state of facts, the circuit court decreed the specific execution of the contract of sale, and required Barrett to make to Forney a good and sufficient deed for the property.
The only question we have to consider, therefore, is, whether, under the circumstances of the case, that decree ought to be *276allowed to stand. It may be generally observed that the remedy of the specific performance of contracts afforded by courts of equity is purely equitable in its character, and is only used as a means by which the ends of justice may be more surely attained than it could possibly be by its legal substitute of damages.
The granting of this equitable -remedy, however, is not a matter of absolute right, but of discretion; not, indeed, of an arbitrary and capricious discretion, depending upon the mere pleasure of the court, but of a sound judicial discretion, controlled by the established principles of equity and exercised upon a careful consideration of all the circumstances of each particular case. While, therefore, no positive rule can be laid down by which the action of the court can be determined in all cases, it may be stated as a general rule that specific relief will be usually granted when it is apparent, from a view of all the circumstances of the particular cases that it will subserve the ends of justice; and that it will be withheld where, from a like view, it appears that it will produce hardship or injustice to either of the parties. Seymour v. Delaney, 6 Johnson Chy. 222; Willard v. Taylor, 8 Wall. 504; 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. Juris, sec. 1404.
But to approach a little nearer the case in hand. It is a principle deeply rooted in the jurisprudence of England, and transplanted along with it into the soil of this country, that equity never suffers a statute, enacted for the prevention of fraud, to be used as an instrument for its accomplishment; and so, in all cases, where courts of equity allow acts of part performance of verbal contracts to avoid the statute of frauds, they always proceed upon the ground that it is' a virtual fraud upon the plaintiff to allow the defendant to set up the statute as a bar to the fulfillment of his agreement. Although, therefore, according to the terms of the statute there is no contract, *277the courts of equity treat the statute as uplifted, and fasten upon the wrong-doer a personal obligation to do exactly what he has verbally agreed to do, and, if necessary, compels him to hold the legal title to the subject matter in trust for the plaintiff, and to consummate his own duty and the other’s right by a conveyance. 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. sec. 867, and note; Lester v. Foxcroft, Lead. Cas. in Eq. Vol. I, pt. 2, p. 1027, and notes; Mundy v. Jolliffe, 5 My. & Cr. 177.
In all of these cases, as was said by this court in Wright v. Pucket, the parol agreement relied on must be certain and definite in its terms. The acts proved in part performance must be referable to the agreement proved; and the agreement must have been so far executed that a failure to enforce full execution would operate as a fraud upon the party complaining and place him in a situation which does not' lie in compensation. Wright v. Pucket, 22 Gratt. 374; Pierce’s Heirs v. Catron’s Heirs, 23 Id. 588; S. V. R. R. Co. v. Lewis, 76 Va. R. 833.
Now, testing this case by these principles, we think that it is clearly one which calls for a specific performance of the contract. Indeed, we think it may be said in this case, as this court said in Rhea v. Jordan, 28 Gratt. 682: “The certainty of the terms of the parol agreement in this ease, th’e long lapse of time during which actual and exclusive possession was held under it, the number and costliness of the improvements erected on the faith of it, and the full payment of the purchase money, are concurring circumstances which render this a peculiarly strong case for specific execution.” Here there is no lack of certainty or definiteness as to the terms of the parol agreement, if what passed between- the parties be viewed in the light of the contemporaneous acts of these parties; there has been possession by Forney actual, long and exclusive, and not joint; and during this time valuable improvements have been put on the property, upon the faith of the agreement; and the *278specific execution of the .contract will alone be adequate and complete justice; and, finally, there was full payment of the purchase money by the vendor, which, although it is not regarded as an act of specific performance, was an item in the contract, and is an evidence of his purpose to carry out all the stipulations on his part; and there remains, therefore, literaly nothing to be done but for the vendor to release the legal title to the vendee, who already has the equitable title, to complete the execution of the contract. Rhea v. Jordan, supra, 3 Pomeroy’s Eq. secs. 1401, 1409, and notes.
As to the various objections which have been made to the decree, it is simply necessary for us to remark, that the most of them have been answered by our statement of the facts and the course of ■ the opinion, which completely exclude the idea that, there was .any other terms in the contract than those mentioned, while they only seem to us to be of sufficient importance to require us to say that they were carefully considered before they were rejected.
Our conclusion is that the decree of the circuit court of Wythe county is plainly right, and must be affirmed.
Decree aeEirmed.