Johnson v. Purvis
Johnson v. Purvis
Opinion of the Court
The defence to this action is a species of quia timet proceeding, which crept into our Courts of law, at a time when the Courts of Equity were in some degree inaccessible to the people of the interior of the State. In Grey v. Handkinson, 1 Bay 278, it is said to be an equitable defence, and jurisdiction of it
When the plaintiff sold to the defendant, he put him in possession of the land; that of itself, is a sufficient title until it shall appear that there is a better in some one else; it is at least prima facie evidence of title. The evidence shows, that the legal estate so far as the title has been investigated is in the heirs of Thomas
The report does not state, whether there was or was not a conveyance from the plaintiff to the defendant, and I am led to conclude from the entire silence of the report on that subject, that the writing copied into the report, is either the only evidence of the contract between these parties, or a counterpart of one entered into by the plaintiff; for it purports on its face to be intended to be made by him, which the defendant has kept out of view. If this be true, it furnishes I think another objection to this defence. In that writing there is an express agreement on the part of the plaintiff, “to pay all law expenses,” and it contains also a provision that “if any claim should come, and said land be taken away, if taken away before the purchase money becomes due,” the defendant should pay rent to the plaintiff. Now the necessary inference from this contract, is that a difficulty about this title, was anticipated by the parties, and the possibility of the defendant loosing the land is provided for; and in the absence of any other claim it is a reasonable conclusion, that the very difficulty which has been developed in this defence, is that against which this contract was intended to provide. There has therefore, been no fraud or concealment on the part of the plaintiff; the defendant purchased with a full knowledge of all the circumstances. The plaintiff has gone on to perform his part of the contract, by taking the necessary mea
The defendant’s abandonment of the possession, or his expulsion from it by Bishop Dixon, (if in truth he was disseized by him,) cannot help the defence; in the first case, it is merely voluntary; and there is nothing in this contract, or in the usual covenants of a conveyance, which subjects the grantor to responsibility on account of the unlawful entry of a stranger; no man in his senses would bind himself by such a covenant.
The first ground of this motion is founded on a misconception of the cases of Carter v. Carter, 1 Bailey 217. Bordeaux v. Cave, Ibid, 250, and Hext ads. Morgan (decided in 1829,) and from what has occasionally fallen from the bar in reference to these cases, I am led to conclude, that the impression is not unusual, that want of title in the vendor of land, either in whole or in part, is not a good defence to an action brought at law to recover the purchase money. But these cases inculcate no such rule; they maintain however,, that a Court of law cannot rescind a contract for the sale of land, on account of a partial failure of consideration, on the ground principally, that a Court of law has not the power to do full and adequate j ustice to the parties. It has no authority for example to order a re-conveyance of the land, to which the vendee has title, and the case of Grey v. Handkinson, was an interpolation unknown to the common law. In Morris v. Phelps, 5 Johnson 54, the Ch. J. says, that he was not aware that even a Court of Equity in England had ever undertaken to rescind a sale, because a title to a part of the property failed, except in the case of an exchange of lands. The doctrine of a recission of a contract on account of a partial failure of consideration, is from the civil law, and I see no reasonable objection to it in the abstract, when applied to cases where the objectofthe purchase has been defeated, as in the case of Grey v. Hankinson before cited, and the State v. Gaillard, 2 Bay. 11, and some others of the same class. But.
Motion granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.