Court Opinion

ID: 8187315
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:09:58.1439+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:28.058472
License: Public Domain

*351The following opinion was filed March 11, 1902:
Dodge, J.
From among the nnmerons objections urged by defendant to the maintenance of this action, there is one which seems to us very clearly to justify the conclusion reached by the trial court in the exercise of its judicial discretion, — that a court of equity ought not to undertake to specifically perform the contract set forth in the complaint, notwithstanding it should be found that such contract was entirely valid, upon a full consideration, and that its breach was unjustifiable and must do grievous wrong to the plaintiffs, incapable of adequate remedy in a court of law. That objection consists in the uncertáinty and incompleteness of the contract as to the starting point and location of the proposed road. By the terms of that agreement, while at a distance of some thirteen miles or more the road must strike the village of Balsam Lake, the point of departure from the east and west line of defendant’s railroad, running across the southern part of Polk county, is wholly undetermined. The contract is satisfied by starting the road at any point within a space of about twenty-five miles. Again, when that point is ascertained, the course of the road may be anywhere, at the will of the defendant, so that it reaches the village. ■'Such uncertainty as this may not defeat the validity of the contract. It may be that defendant as much breaks the contract when it refuses to exercise its option and to build somewhere as if the location were defined, but the location of the road is not fixed and determined by the contract until, under its provisions, the defendant has exercised its option in that respect. It cannot be said that there is an agreement to build the road upon any line which the court might select; hence, should any line be adopted by the court, and the road be required to be built thereon, it would, in effect, be making a contract to build the road there, for the parties had made none. That courts of equity will not enter this field of sup*352plying elements of contract which the parties have not themselves included is, as a general proposition, so well settled as to hardly require more than simple statement. Blanchard v. D., L. & L. M. R. Co. 31 Mich. 43, 53; McKibbin v. Brown, 14 N. J. Eq. 13; Schmeling v. Kriesel, 45 Wis. 325, 328; Consolidated W. P. Co. v. Nash, 109 Wis. 490, 506, 85 N. W. 485.
True, it may well he urged that the selection of the starting point and of the course of the proposed railway rested wholly with the defendant, and, if it had performed its duty under the contract, all uncertainty would have been removed therefrom. There is much force to the argument that it ought not to profit by its own wilful defiance of its contractual obligation. Were the question new or unsettled, my personal inclination would tend strongly toward either compelling the defendant to exercise its option, or toward holding that it had forfeited its privilege of election and yielded to the plaintiffs or the court authority to select a line within the limits of the contract. The subject, however, is neither novel nor unsettled. At least as early as Lord Eldon's day it was decided that courts of equity would exercise their discretion against undertaking specific enforcement of incomplete contracts, lacking certainty as to essential terms, although the uncertainty existed by reason of defendant’s fault. Wilks v. Davis, 3 Mer. 507. That view has been followed with surprising unanimity by courts since. A few only of the cases need be cited: Morgan v. Milman, 3 De Gex, M. & G. 24, 34; Taylor v. Gilbertson, 2 Drew. 391; Darbey v. Whitaker, 4 Drew. 134; Blanchard v. D., L. & L. M. R. Co. 31 Mich. 43, 58; Huff v. Shepard, 58 Mo. 242, 247; Domestic T. & T. Co. v. Metropolitan T. & T. Co. 39 N. J. Eq. 160; Woodruff v. Woodruff, 44 N. J. Eq. 349, 16 Atl. 4; Stanton v. Miller, 58 N. Y. 192, 200; Duffield v. Whitlock, 26 Wend. 55; Hopkins v. Gilman, 22 Wis. 476.
*353At tRe foundation of that attitude of tRe courts is tRe principle tRat tRe plaintiff Ras no absolute ldght to tRe aid of a court of equity to enforce specific performance of tRe contract. His strict rigRt is only to tRe remedy which common-law courts can give. Courts of equity therefore grant or decline their aid in their discretion, albeit a sound judicial discretion, guided, if not controlled, Ry precedents which Rave now pretty well defined its limits. Williams v. Williams, 50 Wis. 311, 6 N. W. 814; Menasha v. W. C. R. Go. 65 Wis. 502, 27 N. W. 169; Mulligan v. Albertz, 103 Wis. 140, 78 N. W. 1093. TRe field of activity being discretionary, one consideration which has led the courts to‘decline attempts to enforce contracts when any of the terms depend on the will, discretion, or personal acts of individuals, is their reluctance to proceed where their decree may by any possibility fail of complete efficacy. A very early illustration of this attitude is the famous opera-singer case. Lumley v. Wagner, 1 De Gex, M. & G 604. Another still earlier is Kemble v. Kean, 6 Simon, 333. In these the court refused to attempt to decree specific performance of contracts to sing or to act at specified theaters. Obviously a decree of specific performance might in such case fail of its purpose if the defendant resisted to the extent of enduring punishment for contempt. A conveyance of land can be effected by the decree itself, although the defendant refuse to obey it. The performance of certain work, in the like contingency, the court can accomplish through its receiver. But a decree in equity, neither ex proprio• vigore, nor through the medium of a master or a receiver, can supply the opera singer’s music which the contract contemplated. .So, here, where the contract calls for a junction point to be fixed by the defendant, of course through its officers, the court cannot ascertain that point if those officers refuse to act. That the court cannot adequately perform the duty of those officers is, of course, apparent.
*354The considerations involved in tbe selection of a junction point or branch are multitudinous, complicated, and of grave importance. Those involving questions of mechanics, engineering, and expense hardly compare in importance with others relating to the safety and convenience of the defendant’s railway, and therefore of its patrons, the public, which, even in the light of the fullest evidence, must be in large measure beyond the ken of a court. The importance of such an act, and the necessity that it be done in light of the broad general policy of the company, is recognized by statute; for sec. 1831, Stats. 1898, takes from the ordinary executive officers authority to select the place and route for a branch railroad, and requires that it be passed upon by the board of directors. The court cannot, even aided by all possible evidence, make the selection as the defendant company was by the agreement to make it, and, in any attempt so to do, may outrage the contract instead of enforcing it. For this reason, we must decline to disturb the conclusion reached by the trial court in the exercise of his judicial discretion, — not to undertake specific performance of defendant’s promise to build a railroad to Balsam Lake.
None of the reasons exist here which have sometimes led courts of equity to give redress by way of damages when they find specific performance beyond their power or duty. The present case is before us at its very inception. Testimony has not been taken. No bar of limitation has run against a proper action at law. The plaintiffs’ damages may perhaps yet be affected by their own efforts to supply what defendant contracted to give them. Such damages may, upon the evidence, be of a character incapable of computation, and especially within the proper field of decision by a jury. Further, it must not be overlooked that, as a general rule, legal rights should be enforced in a court of law, where the constitutional right to trial by jury is preserved. Only in exceptional cases, where unnecessary hardship clearly de-*355mauds, should courts of equity assume that province. Combs v. Scott, 76 Wis. 662, 671, 45 N. W. 532; Cole v. Cetzinger, 96 Wis. 559, 71 N. W. 75; Blanchard v. D., L. & L. M. R. Co. 31 Mich. 43, 59.
By the Court. — The order appealed from is affirmed.
A motion by the appellants for a rehearing was denied May 13, 1902.