Court Opinion

ID: 8257518
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:33:22.425698+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:03.088286
License: Public Domain

Harris, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The assignors of plaintiff in error sold a tract of land to the defendant in error, and to secure the payment, the defendant executed his two notes for $50 dollars each, one due in twelve months, and the other in twenty-four months from their date; simultaneously therewith the vendors executed their title-bond, obligating them*540selves to make title on full payment of the purchase-money. After-wards the vendors sold and delivered the notes to the complainant and plaintiff in error, who filed this bill to rescind the contract of sale, or to subject the land to the payment of the purchase-money. Only one of the notes is alleged to be due.
To this bill a demurrer- was filed:
1. Because defendant is not bound to accept title from complainant, who is the assignee of his vendor.
2. Because there was no assignment of the notes in writing to complainant.
3. Because the bill does not show performance, or an offer to perform the contract by the vendors, or the assignee, so as to put the defendant in default.
4. That the bill does not show that complainant notified the defendant of the assignment to him before suit.
5. That one of the notes is not yet due; and other causes.
The demurrer was sustained by the court below, and the cause brought here by writ of error.
The demurrer should not have been sustained on any of the grounds taken.
This is not a case of mutual and dependent covenants. The vendee, or his assignor, was entitled to payment of the first note beyond question, when it fell due, without any’ act on his part. The payment of the first note, by the terms of the contract, was to be made twelve months before the vendor stipulated by his bond to make titles. The bill was therefore proper, so far as it seeks to collect the first note by subjecting the land to its payment, though not sufficient in its allegations to ask a rescission of the contract.
That the assignee may proceed in equity to subject the land to the payment of his debt, was decided by this court in Tanner v. Hicks, 4 S. & M. 294.
The bill should not therefore have been dismissed, but the court should have proceeded to decree the relief to which the complainant might show himself entitled on the hearing, .though he might not be entitled to the full measure of relief sought by his bill.
Let the judgment be reversed, demurrer overruled, and cause remanded for further proceedings.