Judges: Cardozo
Filed Date: 6/6/1922
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
One Rose Gluckin made a contract to sell a house and lot in Brooklyn to Weinstein and Joblin. The price, $12,550, was to be paid partly in cash and partly by the execution of a purchase-money bond and mortgage payable in semi-annual installments within a period of three years. The vendees assigned to the plaintiff their interest in the contract and in the land therein described. A suit for specific performance followed the vendor's refusal to convey. The Special Term gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The Appellate Division reversed on the ground that specific performance will not be granted at the suit of an assignee, unless the assignment of the contract is coupled with an assumption of its burdens. The result has been thought to be a deduction from cases which have conditioned relief in equity upon mutuality of remedy. We think the deduction must be rejected as unsound.
The assignee of such a contract succeeds by force of the assignment to the position of the original vendee as "the equitable owner" of the subject of the sale (Lenman v. Jones,
We hold, then, that specific performance was available to assignee as to assignor. Nothing to the contrary was intended by our decisions in Wadick v. Mace (
The judgment of the Special Term permits the plaintiff to substitute cash for the purchase-money bond and mortgage which under the terms of the contract were to be signed by the vendees. The evidence is uncontradicted that the vendees were present on the law day and were ready and willing to deliver the bond and mortgage if required. The vendor repudiated the contract altogether. In these circumstances, there was no need of a new trial by reason of the variance permitted by the judgment in the method of performance. We are not informed that the cash was less acceptable than the mortgage. If, however, it was, a modification of the judgment would have furnished the required correction. Even that modification, however, is no longer of practical importance. The judgment directs specific performance as of May 14, 1919. The mortgage called for by the contract was to be payable in three years. The cash, therefore, would now be due, if the mortgage had been given.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the judgment of the Special Term affirmed, with costs in the Appellate Division and in this court.
POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; HOGAN, J., concurs in result; HISCOCK, Ch. J., absent.
Order reversed, etc. *Page 495
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