Opinion
March Term, 1896.
William W. Cook, Adelbert Moot and George L. Roberts, for the appellant Barse.
Joseph Koch, Frank Rumsey, Charles S. Cary and William H. Henderson, for the appellant Bullis.
Frank Sullivan Smith, Hamilton Odell and C. Walter Artz, for the respondent.
Adrian H. Joline, for the defendant Central Trust Company.
When this case was before the General Term on a former appeal (80 Hun, 570), one question seems to have been presented and decided, and that was whether or not the plaintiff could maintain this action as an action in equity for specific performance, when it appeared on the trial that the defendants would be unable to perform the contracts on the ground that they had no title to the property which they had agreed to mortgage to the trust company to secure the payment of the bonds. That question was decided in favor of the plaintiff on that appeal, and it is unnecessary to say more upon that question than that we adopt the opinion of the court delivered upon that appeal as a correct exposition of the law upon that question, and agree in that opinion. It was therein said: "We take it to be too well settled to require the citation of many authorities, that in case a plaintiff in an equitable action shows that he is entitled to equitable relief which, if granted, would be unavailing because of the defendant's inability to perform, that the damages sustained by the plaintiff may be recovered in the same action. * * * It has been held in many cases brought to compel the specific performance of contracts that damages may be awarded to the plaintiff though specific performance be refused." And we think this rule is expressly recognized by the late case of Haffey v. Lynch ( 143 N.Y. 247), where it is said: "It is a general rule in equity that the specific performance of a contract to convey real estate will not be granted when the vendor, in consequence of a defect in his title, is unable to perform. In such cases specific performance is denied because the court cannot enforce its judgment, and because also it would be oppressive to the vendor. But if the defect in the title existed at the date of the contract, or was due to some fault, or to some act of the vendor subsequent to the contract, the court will generally entertain an action for specific performance and retain jurisdiction for the purpose of awarding damages for the breach of the contract. But where, as in this case, the defect in the title arises after the making of the contract, without any fault of the vendor, and the vendee knew of the defect in the title when he commenced his action, it was formerly the rule that the court would not retain the action for the purpose of awarding damages. ( Wiswall v. McGowan, Hoffman's Ch. 125; Morss v. Elmendorf, 11 Paige, 277.) This rule was adopted because the vendee should not commence a fruitless action in equity simply to recover there his damages for a breach of contract. The rule has been modified since the Code practice, which authorizes the joinder of legal and equitable causes of action, and while the equitable relief will be denied in such a case, now the action will be retained, and the issue as to the breach of contract and damages will be sent to a jury for trial." ( Sternberger v. McGovern, 56 N.Y. 12.)
After the case was called, and before any witnesses were examined, counsel for defendant said: "We would make a formal demand for trial by jury." This motion was denied and defendants excepted. It is claimed that this was error, the insistence being that as the General Term had sent the case back to be tried as an action for damages, defendants were entitled to a trial by jury. To determine whether the motion should then have been granted, the trial judge had before him the pleadings, and his ruling was necessarily based thereon. If therefrom it had appeared that the action was one for damages only, which would be triable by a jury, there might be some ground for the motion. If the pleadings presented questions of equitable cognizance, then the court was right in proceeding with the trial and taking the evidence with a view to determining whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to equitable relief. In effect, the complaint alleged, first, that the defendants Bullis and Barse agreed to convey to the trust company a certain number of acres of unincumbered timber land, to be included in a mortgage as security for the issue of bonds, but instead thereof, and fraudulently and as a compliance with these contracts, they assumed to mortgage land which was not unincumbered, but the greater part of which was subject to mortgages or other liens or incumbrances, for a large amount of which they had no title at all; and, second, that the said defendants were interfering with the construction company engaged in constructing the railroad under the agreements, and that said defendants are making certain unauthorized construction of lines of railroad; and, third, that the defendant trust company is threatening and is about to execute a release of lands to the defendants Barse and Bullis, and that the plaintiff is without an adequate remedy at law to prevent the same. The relief demanded is a judgment for the immediate specific performance of the agreement to convey, or that the defendants Bullis and Barse be required to pay to the trustee, for the security of the bondholders, such a sum of money as the court shall ascertain to be equivalent to the value of the lands which they had agreed to convey; and, second, an injunction against the trust company and the other defendants to prevent the other acts complained of. The answer denied the fraud, and claimed that the defendants Bullis and Barse were not required to convey the lands until such time as a certain number of miles of railroad were built and constructed.
It will thus be seen that the answer does not allege inability to comply with the contract, nor does it allege that the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law, but it puts in issue the plaintiff's charge of fraud, and disputes the construction of the contract as contended for by the plaintiff, and the whole defense in effect is that the defendants Bullis and Barse have fully complied with the agreements which they entered into. Upon these pleadings it would have been entirely competent for the plaintiff to show, if he could, that Bullis and Barse had the land which the court could compel them to convey; and the alternative relief prayed for, which is the usual one in an action for specific performance, is not a demand for damages in the ordinary sense, namely, damages which the plaintiff has suffered and which should be ascertained. Nor did the plaintiff demand a sum in liquidation to be paid over to him by the defendants. What he asked was, that Bullis and Barse should mortgage the lands. And inability to perform not having been set up by way of defense, it would have been entirely competent for the defendants Bullis and Barse, upon the judgment going against them, to have complied with their contract by mortgaging the lands, which the court adjudged they had contracted to mortgage, by acquiring the title to the lands and mortgaging them to the trust company, and thus have relieved themselves from a judgment for the alternative relief asked for. We think, therefore, regard being had to the pleadings, that the relief demanded by the plaintiff was purely equitable, and that the refusal to comply at that stage of the case with the formal demand for a jury trial was right. And if defendants wished for a trial by jury, after it appeared that they were unable specifically to perform, they should have then made a specific demand.
The right of either the plaintiff or the trust company as trustee for the bondholders to maintain this action to enforce specifically a contract made between Newcombe Co. and the defendants Bullis and Barse, is questioned by appellants. The contracts were under seal. Newcombe Co. had been asked to furnish capital to complete the railroad contemplated by the parties. With this end in view, and to obtain the money necessary for the completion of the railroad by the agreements of October 8, 1889, and December 9, 1889, the defendants agreed that they would cause to be created a mortgage or a deed of trust upon the railways, properties and franchises of several railroad companies that the parties contemplated consolidating into one corporation, and also upon 30,000 acres of land, to be duly executed to the Central Trust Company of New York, as trustee, for the purpose of securing mortgage bonds to an amount specified. Upon the mortgage being executed, thus becoming a lien upon the said railroad property and franchises, and upon the said 30,000 acres of land, Newcombe Co. undertook to sell at par a certain number of the said bonds and to use the proceeds thereof for the purpose of completing the railroad which was to be built. As a compliance with this contract, the defendants Bullis and Barse executed a mortgage to the Central Trust Company, which purported to comply with the contract by creating a lien upon the railroad properties and franchises, and upon the said 30,000 acres of land. It subsequently appeared that of the 30,000 acres of land which the mortgage purported to convey to the trust company to secure the payment of the bonds, the defendants had no title to a large portion thereof, and another part was valueless and did not comply with the contracts, as all the timber upon it had been removed, and substantially all of the remainder was covered by other liens and incumbrances.
When this conveyance was made to the trust company, if Newcombe Co. had themselves purchased and held the bonds and advanced the money required by the contracts to be advanced by them from the proceeds of the bonds, the trust company would have been trustee for Newcombe Co., and it is clear that Newcombe Co., or the trust company as trustee of the express trust, could have maintained an action for the specific performance of the contract made by the defendants to convey this land to the trust company to secure the payment of the bonds. Newcombe Co. having transferred the bonds to bona fide holders for value, such bona fide holders would have been subrogated to the rights of Newcombe Co. to enforce this contract, and the trust company as trustee for such bondholders would have been entitled to commence an action to compel the specific performance of the contract made by the defendants with Newcombe Co. for the benefit of the bondholders.
Whether that cause of action would have vested exclusively in the trust company, or whether the bondholders would have been entitled to maintain such an action as those who had become subrogated to Newcombe Co.'s right of action to have the contracts specifically enforced, is not important, as the plaintiff sues on behalf of himself and all other bondholders, and he could enforce any rights existing in the bondholders or in the trust company as trustee for them. It is settled that an assignee of a contract for the purchase of lands has the same rights to enforce the contract as his assignor. (See 22 Am. Eng. Ency. of Law, 936, and cases cited.) And the purchaser of these bonds would be considered in equity as the assignee of Newcombe Co.'s interest in their contract with the defendants whereby the defendants agreed to convey to the trust company the said 30,000 acres of land as security for the payment of the bonds. It is also clear that the execution of the mortgage by the defendants as a compliance with this contract, whereby they purported to convey to the trust company 30,000 acres of land to secure the payment of the bonds, was a distinct representation both to the trust company and to Newcombe Co. that they had such a title to the land that the lien provided for by the agreements attached to such land to secure the payment of the bonds. Thus, a contract between the trust company and the defendants was created, which the trust company was entitled to enforce.
We think it clear, therefore, that the plaintiff, suing on behalf of himself and all other holders of the bonds issued under the mortgage given in pursuance of the contracts between Newcombe Co. and the defendants, and having alleged a request to the trust company to enforce this contract, which was refused, was entitled to maintain whatever action either Newcombe Co. had to enforce the contracts, or the trust company, as trustee for him and the other bondholders, had to enforce the covenants of the defendants contained in the mortgage which purported to comply with the contracts to convey the lands so that the same should be held subject to a lien to secure the payment of the bonds.
A careful examination of the testimony has satisfied us that the findings of fact by the court below were amply sustained by the evidence, and we are clearly of the opinion that upon those findings the plaintiff was entitled to the relief granted to him by the judgment.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
VAN BRUNT, P.J., RUMSEY and INGRAHAM, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.