Chinn v. Heale
Chinn v. Heale
Opinion of the Court
The Judges pronounced their opinions.
Charles Chinn, by his last'will and testament, (whereof he appointed his sons Charles Chinn, E. Chinn and John Chinn, his executors, all of whom qualified,) directed all his lands in the Counties of Eoudon and Pauquier to be sold by them. The executors, pursuant thereto, set up at public sale a lot thereof, “containing two hundred acres, being the lands which the said Charles Chinn, deceased, purchased of R. Downman, which land had been willed by R. Chinn to Bryan Stott, and by the said Stott sold to William Downman.” Of this lot the complainant William Heale became the purchaser, and on the 29th of September, 1788, passed his bond for 2001. the purchase money; and, on the same day, the executors above named executed their joint and several bond to the said Heale, reciting the premises, with condition to be void, 69 “if the said ^executors should convey to the said Heale, by good and sufficient deeds of conveyance, the aforesaid land, to contain two hundred acres, whenever they should be thereto required.” The bill is brought for a conveyance; suggests a deficiency in the lot called Stott’s land, and requires that the deficiency be made up out of the adjacent lands of the testator. And from an examination of the condition of the bond, as noticed above, the payment of the full sum of 2001. by the purchaser, and the acceptance of ir by the executors, I have no doubt that, according to the spirit and intention of the sale, the plaintiff is entitled to have the full quantity of two hundred acres of land, if there were so much land in Bryan Stott’s lot; and if not, out of any adjacent lands of the testator, which were to be sold pursuant to the directions of his will. There is, however, one or two errors in the decree of the County Court. Pirst, either in proceeding to a final decree against all the executors by whom the land was sold, although one only had put in an answer, without proceeding to take the bill for confessed against the others, in a regular course;
The depositions in this cause, and particularly that of William Metcalf, prove satisfactorily, that whatever uncertainty or difference of opinion might have existed touching a line of division between the two tracts of land in question, at a prior time, the same was adjusted between the parties just before the sale by the executors; at which time the line was set-
With respect to the objection that the decree in this case does not extend to the executors other than Charles Chinn; it is expressly stated that the defendants (the two omitted ones included) appeared by their counsel and filed their answer; which answer, however, as set forth, is the answer of Charles Chinn, one of the executors. .Nothing is more common or reasonable, than that the answer of one defendant should be adopted by another: if it was done .in this instance, so as to bar the plaintiff of the benefit resulting from the oath of the other defendants, as he might have 72 objected ::'to the proceeding, and require an answer sanctioned by this solemnity, so he might waive that right and accept the answer in question. This he has done by replying generally, setting the cause for hearing, taking depositions, and failing to proceed against the other defendants for not answering in a mote particular and special manner. The plaintiii has proceeded on the maxim “quisquís pot-est renunciare juri pro se introducto.” The case of executors, in the present instance, is stronger than that of separate individuals; for one executor is competent to bind his testator, and nothing is more common than for one of several executors to do the whole business. In the case, however, of Freelands v. Royall,
My opinion is, that both decrees be reversed, and compensation made to the appellee, in proportion to the quantity of land deficient, at the rate of 20s. per acre. It would be wrong to turn over the appellee to a Court of law to recover damages, because he was competent to come into equity to pray a discovery; and, being there, that Court should make a final end of the case, as a certain criterion presents itself whereby that compensation can be estimated.
On a critical inspection of this record, the merits of the cause seem to be comprised within a narrow compass. I put out of view the depositions of Welsh and Powell, which go to prove a promise of Chinn to make up in land any deficiency there might be in the land sold to Heale, (as being clearly within the statute of frauds and perjuries,) and confine myself to the written covenant, as stated in the condition of the bond for conveying the land to the purchaser; which was sold for 200 acres, at twenty shillings per acre. Heale, at the time of the purchase, had no other land than that called Stott’s tract in contemplation, nor any idea that he had purchased any other land; but was doubtful whether it contained the quantity of 200 acres; and refused to give his bond until it should be ascertained by actual survey. At length on Heale’s executing a bond for
Being doubtful whether the answer of Charles Chinn ought to be considered as the answer of the other defendants, I think it safest, and the most regular proceeding, to direct that it shall appear that the decree nisi has been served on the other defendants, before a final decree. 1
The following was entered as the decree of the Court. 1
“This Court is of opinion that the said decree is erroneous in having affirmed the decree of the County Court of Rauquier, rendered the 28th day of August, 1798, in which said decree of the County Court there is error in this, in affirming an interlocutory decree of the said Court passed the 27th day of March, 1798, in which it is decreed and ordered that the complainant recover against the defendant (Charles Chinn) 36 3-4 acres of land, to be laid off out of his lands adjoining the complainant, and appointing commissioners to lay off the said quantify of land accordingly, and report their proceedings to the Court for a final decree: and in having further ordered that the said defendant convey to the complainant the land described in a survey made by Charles Kemper in this cause, bearing date the 8th day of June, and referred to in the report of the said commissioners of the same date. And a majority of this Court are further of opinion, that the said County Court erred in proceeding to a final decree in this cause before the decree nisi had been duly served on the defendants Rawleigh Chinn and John Chinn, and a return of the service thereof made to the said Court. 75 Therefore, it is '"decreed and ordered, that the decree aforesaid of the said Superior Court of Chancery be reversed and annulled, and that the appellee pay to the appellants their costs by them expended in the prosecution of their appeal aforesaid here. And this Court proceeding to make such decree as the said Superior Court of Chancery ought to have pronounced, it is further decreed and ordered, that the decrees aforesaid of the said Qounty Court of the 27th day of March, and the 28th day of August, 1798, be also reversed and annulled, and that the appellee pay to the appellants their costs by them expended in the prosecution of their appeal in the said Superior Court of Chancery. And it is ordered, that the cause be remanded to the said Superior Court of Chancery to be remitted to the County Court aforesaid for further proceedings to be had against the executors of Charles Chinn, deceased, who have not answered the complainant’s bill; and that, at a final hearing of the cause, (unless the executors shew good cause to the contrary,) a compensation in money be made to the said complainant, at the rate of twenty shillings per acre, tor the deficiency of 36 3-4 acres of land, with interest thereon from the 29th day of September, 1788, until payment. ”
1 Hen. & Munf. 206.
2 Hen. & Munf. 575.
2 Hen. & Munf. 575.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.