Hepburn and Dundas v. Auld, 9 U.S. 262 (1809)

Syllabus

U.S. Supreme Court

Hepburn and Dundas v. Auld, 9 U.S. 5 Cranch 262 262 (1809)

Hepburn and Dundas v. Auld

9 U.S. (5 Cranch) 262

Syllabus

After a long possession in severalty, a deed of partition may be presumed.

In equity, time may be dispensed with if it be not of the essence of the contract.

A vender may compel a specific execution of a contract for the sale of land if he is able to give a good title at the time of the decree; although he bad not a good title at the time when, by the contract, the land ought to have been conveyed.


Opinions

U.S. Supreme Court

Hepburn and Dundas v. Auld, 9 U.S. 5 Cranch 262 262 (1809) Hepburn and Dundas v. Auld

9 U.S. (5 Cranch) 262

ERROR TO AND APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT

COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Syllabus

After a long possession in severalty, a deed of partition may be presumed.

In equity, time may be dispensed with if it be not of the essence of the contract.

A vender may compel a specific execution of a contract for the sale of land if he is able to give a good title at the time of the decree; although he bad not a good title at the time when, by the contract, the land ought to have been conveyed.

But a court of equity will not compel a specific performance unless the vendor can make a good title to all the land contracted to be sold.

The first of these cases was a writ of error to the judgment of the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, in an action of debt at common law brought by Auld, agent and attorney in fact for Dunlop & Co., against Hepburn and Dundas for $45,000, the penalty of the same article of agreement which are recited in the case of Hepburn and Dundas v. Auld, 5 U. S. 321.

The second of these cases was an appeal from a decree of the same court dismissing the bill in equity brought by Hepburn and Dundas against Colin Auld, to compel him to accept the land and pay the difference between the agreed value of the land and the award.

The questions in the two cases being substantially the same, they were heard and argued together.

The breaches assigned in the declaration in the action of debt by Auld were that Hepburn and Dundas did not, on 2 January, 1800, pay the amount of the award in cash, nor bills of exchange, and did not on that day assign and transfer to Auld the contract of Graham with full powers, &c.

Hepburn and Dundas pleaded a tender of the assignment of Graham's contract in three different pleas, the pleadings upon which ended in demurrers. The first raised the question whether Auld was obliged to accept a deed of assignment, the preamble of which stated a part of the consideration of the assignment to be

"a full acquittance and discharge

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of all the claims and demands of the said John Dunlop & Co. against them being made and executed by the said Colin Auld."

The other two demurrers brought into view the title of Hepburn and Dundas to the land sold to Graham.

The bill of Hepburn and Dundas alleges that the agreement by Auld to accept an assignment of Graham's contract towards the discharge of the debt due from them to Dunlop & Co. and to give an acquittance and discharge of that debt and of all demands was the inducement for them to submit the accounts to arbitration. It also states the acts and letters of Auld subsequent to the tender, to show that he considered himself bound to accept the assignment. That on 27 June, 1801, after recovering judgment in ejectment against Graham's heirs, Hepburn and Dundas offered to make him a deed for the land, but he refused to accept it.

The answer of Auld denies that he was bound to accept an assignment of Graham's contract which should bind him to give an acquittance and discharge of all demands of Dunlop & Co. against Hepburn and Dundas. He endeavors to explain his conduct and letters subsequent to the tender by saying that he was induced to do it by the representations of Hepburn and Dundas that it was necessary, and that the money due to them by Graham might be sooner recovered or raised by sale of the land than by any contest at law relative to the transaction of 2 January, 1800. He denies that he ever considered the tender as good, but was willing to cooperate with them in bringing to an end the suit with Graham, until which time it would be doubtful whether a sufficient title in fee simple could be obtained from them.

He avers that the compromise made with Graham's heirs was without his consent, and may be set aside when they come of age.

He says the offer of a deed on 27 June, 1801, was after he had brought suit against them

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upon the award, and when it was apparent that their title was bad, or at all events doubtful.

In an amended answer he states that he had requested them to exhibit to him their title papers, which they refused to do, and requires that they should produce them in court. He avers his belief that their title is defective.

Hepburn and Dundas filed a supplemental bill which states their title. It avers possession ever since 1773, and refers to certain title papers; they say that they verily believe their title to be good, and never heard a doubt till long after the tender of the assignment; that as soon as the objections were made known, they took pains to remove them, and have lately obtained deeds of confirmation from the surviving patentees. That the title of Sarah, one of the co-devisees of John West, after her death in 1795, descended upon her brothers Thomas, John, and Hugh and her sister Catharine, and that John, Hugh, and Catharine have lately confirmed their title, and refer to the deeds, and they suppose that Thomas had passed all his title to Sarah's part by a deed executed before her death.

The title which they show in their supplemental bill is as follows, viz.:

The six thousand acres were included in a patent for 51,302 acres of land, granted on 15 December, 1772, by the State of Virginia to George Muse, Adam Stephen, Andrew Lewis, Peter Hog, John West, John Polson, and Andrew Waggoner. This tract of 51,302 acres was in 1773 divided between the patentees, who have occupied in severalty ever since. One of the shares containing 6,000 acres, was allotted to John West, who died seized thereof and devised all his Ohio lands to be equally divided among his children Thomas, John, Hugh, Catharine, Sarah and Francina, excepting that Hugh was to have 1,000 acres more than any of the other children. The testator had but two tracts on the waters of the

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Ohio, viz., that of 6,000 acres on the banks of the Ohio, and one of 1,400 acres on Pokitallico Creek. The devisees made a partition among themselves; Francina's one thousand acres were allotted to her out of the 1,400 acres on Pokitallico Creek, and she and those claiming under her have ever since held and enjoyed the same exclusively.

The tract of 6,000 was divided between the others, Hugh having 2,000, and the other four having 1,000 each.

Thomas, by deed of 20 May, 1788, conveyed his 1,000 acres to Hepburn and Dundas.

John, by deed of 21 February, 1790, also conveyed his 1,000 acres, in which deed Thomas was a party.

Hugh, also, by deed of 24 April, 1788, conveyed his 2,000 acres.

Catharine intermarried with Baldwin Dade, who, with her and Thomas West, by deed of 20 June, 1788, conveyed to Hepburn and Dundas her 1,000 acres.

Sarah intermarried with John Bronaugh, who, with her and Thomas West, conveyed to Hepburn and Dundas her 1,000 acres by deed of 21 February, 1790.

Thomas, also, by deed of 25 April, 1788, quitclaimed to Hepburn and Dundas the 2,000 acres conveyed by Hugh.

By virtue of these deeds, Hepburn and Dundas aver that they were seized of the 6,000 acres, and so continued seized and possessed until the contract with Graham.

They then proceed to answer some objections to their title which had been suggested by Auld.

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They say that he had objected that the original patentees were joint tenants, and that it does not appear that partition was made among them by deed.

To this they answer first that after such a lapse of time, a deed ought to be presumed. And secondly that upon inquiry they found that George Muse, Andrew Lewis, and Peter Hog died before 1787; that Adam Stephen died since 1787, and Andrew Waggoner and John Polson were still alive, who made deeds of confirmation to Hepburn and Dundas. That they also obtained a like deed from the residuary devisee of Adam Stephen.

They also state that Auld had objected, that the partition between the devisees of John West, not being by deed, was not valid, and that Francina, although she had consented to take her thousand acres on Pokitallico Creek, might yet claim a share of the 6,000 acres.

To this they answer that a parol partition among the devisees was valid.

They state that it was further objected by Auld that Sarah Bronaugh had never duly conveyed her 1,000 acres to Hepburn and Dundas and that she was not privily examined according to the laws of Virginia.

To this they answer that they believe she was privily examined but the commission is lost or mislaid so that they cannot find it. And further that Sarah Bronaugh died in 1795, without issue, and Francina, who had intermarried with Charles Turner, died without issue in 1796, and her husband in 1802, by which deaths the interest of those ladies in the 6,000 acres, if any they had, devolved upon their brothers Thomas, John, and Hugh and their sister Catharine Dade, whereupon Hepburn and Dundas obtained from John and Hugh, and Baldwin Dade and Catharine Dade deeds of confirmation as to the shares of Sarah and Francina. They did not get such a deed from Thomas, because he

Page 9 U. S. 267

had before conveyed to them his interest in those lands.

Auld's answer to the supplemental bill denies that any division ever took place between the devisees of John West under his will and avers that Francina always refused to sell her interest in the Ohio lands to Hepburn and Dundas, and that it was settled upon her husband Charles Turner, who died leaving two children by a second marriage.

That the interest of Sarah Bronaugh never passed from her to Hepburn and Dundas for want of her privy examination.

That the deeds from Hugh West and Thomas West were not recorded within the eight months, so as to be valid against creditors or subsequent purchasers without notice. That Thomas was embarrassed in his circumstances for many years previous to his death, and there are still debts due from him by bonds and judgments which bind any lands which descended to him from his sisters Sarah and Francina.

Page 9 U. S. 270

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court as follows:

By the agreement of 27 September, 1799, the plaintiffs bound themselves, in the event of not paying, on 2 January, in bills of exchange or money, the amount of the award to be rendered between the parties, to assign and transfer on that day to the defendant a contract they had made with Graham by which they had sold to him a tract of land containing 6,000 acres for the sum of $18,000,

Page 9 U. S. 271

payable at different times, with interest. They also bound themselves to execute an irrevocable power of attorney enabling the defendant, in their names, to recover the possession of the land or to enforce the payment of the purchase money, at his election.

The defendant covenanted to accept this assignment towards the discharge of the award, and if it should exceed the amount thereof to pay the excess.

On the part of the defendant it has been contended that this assignment was to be received as security for, and not as payment of, the debt due to Dunlop & Co. But on this point it is impossible to entertain a doubt. The contract itself is conclusive. The word "towards" was obviously introduced because, the award not being then made, it was uncertain whether the assignment would completely discharge its amount. But the words of the agreement admit of no other construction than that it was to be received either in part or in full payment, as the sum awarded might be of a greater or less amount than the stipulated value of the contract to be assigned. All the testimony connected with the agreement of September, 1799, tends to confirm this construction.

The next inquiry respects the transactions of 2 January, 1800. The plaintiffs insist, and the defendant denies, that the tender made by Hepburn and Dundas on that day was a legal offer to do what they had covenanted to perform.

The efficacy of the assignment itself is not questioned, but it is contended on the part of the defendant that the instrument is vitiated by the clause which is introduced into it, reciting, as a part of the consideration on which it was made, that a release of all claims and demands whatsoever, on the part of John Dunlop & Co. against them, had been given.

Page 9 U. S. 272

The contract of September, 1799, certainly does not in terms stipulate for such a release, and if this recital in the deed of assignment could possibly prejudice John Dunlop & Co., that circumstance would unquestionably invalidate the tender. But if it should be deemed an unimportant recital, then the tender is a substantial performance of the contract, so far as it was to be performed on 2 January, 1800, and at least imposed on Colin Auld the duty of preparing an unexceptionable deed and demanding its execution.

It has already been stated that under the agreement of September, 1799, the assignment of Graham's contract was to be received in payment, and consequently that assignment, accompanied with a proper power of attorney, would discharge the award as fully as a payment in bills of exchange or money. Had the deed, therefore, limited its recital to a discharge of all claims and demands under the award, it would have been strictly correct, for to such a discharge Hepburn and Dundas were entitled. The deed of assignment, properly executed and received, and the power of attorney would, in law, have been a full payment of the award, and the subsequent claims of John Dunlop & Co. would grow out of the agreement of September, 1799.

The inquiry, whether the general terms of the recital affords any substantial objection to the deed, produces two questions.

1. Could John Dunlop & Co. have had any other claims and demands on Hepburn and Dundas than were comprehended in this award?

2. Would this recital in the deed of assignment impair those claims which grew out of the agreement?

1. The papers themselves sufficiently show that every claim whatever of John Dunlop & Co. on Hepburn and Dundas was settled in the award. The

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general complexion of the agreement of September, 1799, proves this; but the particular stipulation to give "a full receipt and discharge of all claims and demands of John Dunlop & Co. against them," in the event of payment of the award being made in money or bills of exchange, places the subject beyond any doubt. Dunlop & Co. had no claims and demands on Hepburn and Dundas, which were not settled in the award.

2. Could this recital impair the rights of Dunlop & Co. under the agreement of 1799?

The covenants of that agreement which were not completely satisfied were 1st, that Hepburn and Dundas would not, after executing the deed of assignment, interfere with the measures which Colin Auld might think proper to pursue for the recovery of either the land sold to Graham, or the money due under Graham's contract; 2d, that they would convey the said lands in fee simple, after the termination of the suit then depending, to the person who should be decided to be entitled to them.

1. The covenant not to interfere was not a present duty. The obligation it created did not come into existence until after the execution of the deed of assignment. It was to be a consequence of that deed. At the time of its execution, this was not a claim or a demand. Taking the words in their most literal sense, the covenant not to interfere would not, in the opinion of the court, be released by them; but the Court is also of opinion that if this was in any degree doubtful, these general terms would be restrained by the manifest intent of the parties, apparent on the face of the papers.

2. This release could not discharge the obligation to convey the lands, after the termination of the suit with Graham, for the reasons assigned against the foregoing objection, and for this additional reason, the deed intended to transfer to

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Auld all the rights of Graham under the contract, and is so expressed, and one of the covenants in the contract assigned was to make a conveyance with a general warranty of a title free from all encumbrances.

The recital, then, presents no solid objection to the deed of assignment, because it could not impair the rights of Dunlop & Co. Yet it is unusual and unnecessary, and had Colin Auld prepared a deed which was perfectly unexceptionable, and Hepburn and Dundas had refused to execute it, this Court, although the tender might have been good at law, would probably have held them responsible for any injury which might have been sustained in consequence of such refusal.

The power of attorney, which was tendered at the same time with the deed of assignment, appears entirely unexceptionable.

It is, then, the opinion of the Court that on 2 January, 1800, Hepburn and Dundas offered to do everything which it was at that time incumbent on them to do, and that the tender made on that day, with the refusal of that tender, do in law amount to a performance, so far as to place Hepburn and Dundas in the same situation, with regard to the claims of Dunlop & Co. under the award, as if Colin Auld had accepted the deed. This, however, did not discharge them from the duty of executing a proper deed when required, nor from the duty of making conveyances for the land which was the subject of the agreement of September, 1799.

If a doubt existed on this point, the subsequent conduct of Colin Auld would, in a court of equity, amount to a waiver of the day, so far as respects the tender of the deed, and a consent to accept such deed at an after day within a reasonable time.

The subsequent demand of a deed by Colin Auld, when the tendered the money which was due on account

Page 9 U. S. 275

of the excess of value in the estimated price of the land over the sum awarded to John Dunlop & Co. was made in a manner and under circumstances which are not deemed reasonable. Hepburn and Dundas had a right to consider and to take counsel on the deed they were required to execute, and although their delay was unnecessarily great, yet the offer they made might have been acceded to. In fact, they might reasonably insist on leaving the transaction on the ground on which it was placed by the contract of September, 1799, which would have been done in a manner free from all exception by executing such a deed as that tendered on 2 January, 1800, after striking out that part of the recital which respected the release.

The interference of Hepburn and Dundas, in accommodating the suit with Graham, is also urged as an objection to their conduct. They had certainly no right to interfere without the consent of Colin Auld. But when the correspondence is inspected and it is perceived that they interfered only to effect the object he had himself desired, and which he had avowed his own inability to effect without their consent, the interference must be considered as innocent in point of intention, and unproductive of injury in fact.

The court, then, perceive nothing in the conduct of the plaintiffs up to the decision of the suit with Graham which ought to defeat their right to demand a specific performance of this contract. Could they at that time have conveyed a good title, Colin Auld ought to have accepted it.

It is alleged that the title, sold by the heirs of West to Hepburn and Dundas, was not a title to 6,000 acres of land in severalty, but an undivided interest in a much larger tract, and that, as this purchase was made, not for the purpose of acquiring an estate, but for the purpose of immediately selling and paying a debt which Auld was authorized to collect, the time of executing the contract is very material.

Page 9 U. S. 276

It is not to be denied that circumstances may render the time material, and the Court does not decide that this case is not of that description. But the majority of the Court is of opinion that the estate is to be considered as an estate held in severalty.

That a complete partition was made by an agreement, binding on all the parties who were interested, is in full proof. This partition would unquestionably have been protected in equity, and the majority of the Court conceives that after such a lapse of time and such a long separate possession, a deed of partition ought to be presumed, and that the court in which the verdict in the ejectment against Graham was found might so have directed the jury.

It remains, then, only to inquire whether Hepburn and Dundas hold a title under West, which is so free from exception that the defendant ought to be decreed to take it.

Long previous to the contract with Colin Auld, Hepburn and Dundas had obtained deeds from all the devisees of John West, Jr., who were entitled to undivided parts of the 6,000 acres lying on the Ohio. But the deeds from Thomas West and Hugh West were not recorded, and the privy examination on Mrs. Bronaugh, one of the devisees, does not appear. By her deed, therefore, nothing passed, and the deeds of Thomas and Hugh West were liable to very serious objections.

Had Colin Auld refused to receive a conveyance from Hepburn and Dundas after the termination of Graham's suit, because they were unable to make a good title, the objection would certainly have been entitled to very serious consideration. But his rejection of the conveyance then offered was not induced by any defect in the title. He previously determined not to receive a conveyance, because Graham's contract had not been assigned in such manner as he conceived to be a full execution of

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the agreement of September, 1799. These omissions, then, to record the deeds of Thomas and Hugh West, and the total want of title as to Mrs. Bronaugh's part, have produced no real inconvenience to Colin Auld. Had the title been unexceptionable, it would still have been refused, and this contest would still have been carried on with the same determined perseverance which marks the conduct of the parties. Under these circumstances, it is the opinion of the majority of the Court that this case ought to be governed by those general principles which regulate the conduct of a court of chancery in decreeing a specific performance, if the defect of title, which existed at the time of contract, be cured before the decree.

Are Hepburn and Dundas now able to convey a perfect title?

Mrs. Bronaugh and Mrs. Turner, two of the devisees of John West, Jr., are dead. On the death of Mrs. Bronaugh, her real estate descended on her brothers and sisters, who were her coheirs. Deeds of confirmation from Hugh and John West, and from Dade and wife have been obtained. Thomas West joined in the deed from Bronaugh and wife for the purpose of releasing his supposed reversion, but there is no conveyance from Francina Turner.

The Court is not satisfied that Thomas West, by uniting in the deed for the purpose of conveying his reversionary interest, has conveyed a title which afterwards descended on him, or has estopped himself from asserting that title. To Thomas West's part of Mrs. Bronaugh's 1,000 acres, then, Hepburn and Dundas have no title.

On the death of Francina Turner, her interest in her sister Bronaugh's estate, passed to her brothers and sister, who were her coheirs. To Thomas West's share Hepburn and Dundas have no title.

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The undivided interest of Thomas West, which descended on him at the death of Mrs. Bronaugh, is 166 2/3 acres, and the undivided interest which descended on him, at the death of Francina Turner, is 41 1/3 acres; making 208 acres, to which Hepburn and Dundas have at this time no title.

The omission to record the deed from Thomas West is not cured, and this Court is now to decide whether, under these circumstances, Hepburn and Dundas are entitled to claim a specific performance.

Had there been simply a deficiency of 208 acres, the majority of the Court would have considered it as a case for compensation; or had the parties entitled to this land been before the court, a division might possibly have been directed, and compensation for that quantity ordered; but however this might be, as persons not before the Court hold this interest, no order can be made respecting it, and it may very much embarrass those acts for asserting the title which may possibly be necessary. The part actually conveyed by Thomas West, too, never having been confirmed by a deed from himself or his heirs, properly recorded, might impose on Colin Auld the necessity of bringing a suit in chancery to perfect his title, or of being subjected to the inconveniences constantly attending the establishment of a deed not recorded, and the risks inseparable from such a deed.

This, therefore, is thought by a majority of the Court to be a case not proper for a specific performance, and the bill is to be dismissed.

LIVINGSTON, J. expressed his nonconcurrence in the reasoning of the Court in the latter part of the opinion just delivered by THE CHIEF JUSTICE.

He would dismiss the bill even if a good title could now be given by the complainants. This Court can no more dispense with punctuality as to time in any case than with any other part of the

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agreement. But in this particular case, time was of the essence of the contract. The object was payment of a debt, and from the anxiety of the defendant to resist a decree for a conveyance and the desire of the complainants to urge it upon him, it is to be presumed that the lands have fallen in value during this delay of the title. The remedy by a decree for a specific performance is a departure from common law, and ought to be granted only in cases where the party who seeks it has strictly entitled himself to it. It is said that by the English authorities, the lapse of time may be disregarded in equity, in decreeing a specific execution of a contract for land. But there is a vast difference between contracts for land in that country and in this. There, the lands have a known, fixed, and stable value. Here, the price is continually fluctuating and uncertain. A single day often makes a great difference, and in almost every case time is a very material circumstance.

He dissented also from another part of the opinion, which intimates that if this were simply a deficiency of a few hundred acres, it would be considered as a case of compensation. This part of the opinion does not seem to be necessary, and does not affect the present case; but this Court can in no case compel a specific performance on terms and conditions. We cannot decree a special execution for part and assess damages as to the residue.

This is like a contract for 5,000 bushels of wheat. A tender of 4,500 would not be good, and we could not compel the purchaser to take a less quantity than he contracted for. So here the contract was for 6,000 acres. The complainants have a title to a part only; we could not compel the defendant to take that part and give him damages for the nonconveyance of the residue.

JOHNSON, J. observed that he had perhaps taken a peculiar view of this subject, but he should be in favor of decreeing a specific performance generally,

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leaving Auld to his remedy upon the warranty of the complainants for any defect of title which might appear.

Auld perhaps thought it would be a good speculation, and had stipulated for a general warranty.

He acquiesced, however, in dismissing the bill because he considered the judgment in the action at law brought by Auld against the complainants, as equivalent to a decree for a specific execution of the agreement, inasmuch as it prevents him from obtaining satisfaction in any other way for the sum awarded.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL declared the opinion of the Court, in the action at law, to be that the tender of the assignment of Graham's contract, and the power of attorney, was good as pleaded, and that Auld ought to have accepted it.

Judgment reversed.