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in 2 Kinne's Compend. 19, where it is said, "it seems the better opinion that a judgment without satisfaction does not change the property." This is not the case of separate suits against joint tort-feasers, but the tort is several, and we have no hesitation in pronouncing that to constitute a bar to this action, the former judgment against Oden must have been satisfied. Until then, no property vested in Oden, and consequently he could transmit none to the defendant in this case. This conclusion accords

with the justice of the case, and we think harmonizes with the general principle in the law, which forbids that a clear and acknowledged right of action once vested should be destroyed except by release under seal, or something given in satisfaction of the wrong. The circuit court held the former judgment a bar. It erred. Let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded.

JUDGMENTS, WHEN NOT BAR TO SUBSEQUENT ACTIONS: See Chichester ▼. Cande, 15 Am. Dec. 238; Elliott v. Porter, 30 Id. 689; Cook v. Vimont, 17 Id. 157; Valsian v. Coultier, 22 Id. 179; Edelin v. Hardey's Lessee, 16 Id. 292; Hinton v. McNeil, 24 Id. 315; Badger v. Titcomb, 26 Id. 611; Donnell ▼. Thompson, 25 Id. 216; Gates v. Goreham, 26 Id. 303.

ADAY V. ECHOLS, ADM'R.

[18 ALABAMA, 353.]

SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE OF PAROL AGREEMENT FOR SALE OF LAND, upon the ground of part performance, will not be decreed unless the facts alleged to be in part performance be clearly proved; and the contract itself as alleged in the bill should be established by clear and definite testimony. BILL FOR SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE OF PAROL AGREEMENT, WHICH HAS BEEN DENIED because of failure to make out a proper case, will be retained by a court of equity for the purpose of granting compensation to one who, in faith of said agreement, has made valuable improvements, and whose remedy at law is incomplete. WHERE SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE HAS BEEN DENIED, AND COMPENSATION ALLOWED, the land may be charged with the amount ascertained to be due to the complainant, as against the vendor and his representatives, unless some circumstances render such a decree improper.

COURT CAN NOT SAY THAT INSTRUMENT PURPORTING TO BE RECEIPT may not carry marks upon its face conclusive to show that it is not a genuine receipt.

VALIDITY OF RECEIPT WHICH HAS BEEN INTRODUCED IN EVIDENCE, but not acted upon as such, may be questioned at a subsequent period by the master to whom it has been referred to determine compensation, where its only use is to swell said compensation, for reasons appearing upon ita face.

AM. DEO. VOL. LII-15

THE opinion sufficiently states the facts.

Clay, for the plaintiff.

Robinson, for the defendant.

By Court, DARGAN, C. J. To entitle a complainant to a decree for the specific performance of a parol agreement for the sale of land, on the ground of part performance, it is indispensable, not only that the acts alleged to be in part performance should be clearly proved, but the contract itself, as alleged in the bill, should be established by clear and definite testimony. If the proof fails to establish the contract as alleged, or if any of the terms be left in doubt or uncertainty, then a specific performance can not and ought not to be decreed, for it would then be uncertain whether the chancellor was enforcing the contract the parties had agreed upon, or whether he was making one for them, and decreeing its execution. The proof, therefore, must not leave the contract or any of its terms in doubt. This is the result of all the well-considered cases on this subject: See 2 Story's Eq. Jur. 69, sec. 764, and authorities cited; also Goodwin v. Lyon, 4 Port. 297, and the cases there referred to.

Applying this principle to the allegations of the bill, and to the proof, we fully agree with the chancellor, that the evidence does not establish the contract with sufficient certainty to warrant a decree for a specific performance. The bill alleges a sale by Wayland of twelve acres of land, on the first day of January, 1837, for the sum of four thousand dollars, to be paid in equal annual installments, the last falling due the first of January, 1842; consequently the purchase money was to be paid in five annual equal payments. It also alleges that in March, 1838, the complainant sold five acres and a fraction over to one Rice, who agreed to pay Wayland two thousand dollars, but that Rice being dissatisfied with the title of Wayland, it was agreed that Wayland should take this portion back, and credit the complainant with the amount of two thousand dollars on the original purchase, thus reducing the purchase of complainant to six acres and a fraction, and the purchase money to two instead of four thousand dollars. But the time when the payments were to be made remained the same, that is, the two thousand dollars instead of four, was to be paid according to the bill, in five annual installments. Many witnesses were examined who proved the contract of sale and the amount agreed to be given, but none of them speak of the time the payments were to be made except one, who says that the money was to be

paid by the complainant in four or five annual installments. Now, if it had been alleged and proved that the entire purchase money had been paid in full, this, perhaps, would have superseded the necessity of proving the time agreed on when the payments should be made; but it will be at once seen, that when all the purchase money is not paid, and the sale is on credit, that the time of payment becomes material, for the purpose, at least, of ascertaining the amount due to the vendor. The testimony, however, in this case, leaves it in doubt whether the money was to be paid in four or five annual installments, and it is shown that part of the purchase money is still unpaid; a decree of specific performance was, therefore, correctly refused.

We agree also with the chancellor, that although a decree for a specific performance can not be allowed, yet this is a case that requires that the bill should be retained, and a decree rendered in favor of the complainant for the amount of the valuable improvements made by him under the contract, and also for the amount he had actually paid as part of the purchase money, for the rule is, that when a purchaser enters into possession, and upon the faith of a contract has made valuable improvements upon the land, and afterwards files his bill to compel a specific performance, but fails to make out such a case as entitles him to that relief, the bill may be retained for the purpose of allowing him compensation if he has not a full and adequate remedy at law: 2 Story's Eq. Jur. 109, sec. 749; Pratt v. Law, 9 Cranch, 456; Phillips v. Thompson, 1 Johns. Ch. 131; Goodwin v. Lyon, 4 Port. 314. When the amount to which the complainant is entitled is ascertained, either by a reference to the master, or upon an issue of quantum damnificatus, I think it clear that the chancellor may charge the land with the payment of the amount, unless some specific right has attached in favor of some third person upon the land, which it would be inequitable to displace in favor of the complainant. If this could not be done, the very object of retaining the bill, which is to prevent a failure of justice, might be defeated. In the case before us, the complainant made the improvements on the land which enhanced its value, upon the faith of the contract, and, no doubt, under the belief that his possession would never be disturbed, and in the same manner paid a portion of the purchase money. If he should be now remitted to the orphans' court to receive a pro rata dividend with the other creditors of Wayland's estate, which is insolvent, injury would result to him from the contract, and the general creditors be benefited at his expense;

for he has increased the value of the land, which increased value would be a fund for common distribution. The correct rule, I hold to be this: Whenever compensation is allowed and a specific performance is denied, the land may be charged with the payment of the amount ascertained to be due to the complainant, as against the vendor and his representatives, unless some circumstance appears that would render it improper to make such a decree. But I can not think that the insolvency of the estate of Wayland is a sufficient reason why the land should not be charged with the payment of the sum as ascertained to be due the complainant as compensation. The general creditors of the estate have acquired no specific lien on the land, and have no greater right or equity than Wayland himself had, and if we could be warranted in decreeing the amount of compensation as a charge on the land against Wayland, I see no reason why it should not be done against his heirs and administrator, although his estate may be insolvent. We therefore think the court erred in refusing to charge the land with the payment of the amount ascertained to be due to the complainant, by way of compensation.

We can not say that the chancellor erred in overruling the exception to the register's report. The complainant by his amended bill exhibited a paper, purporting to be a receipt executed by Wayland to him for the sum of four hundred dollars, dated February, 1841, in full of all notes then due by complainant to Wayland. Before the hearing, the receipt was proved viva voce as an exhibit in the usual manner, but the register, in taking the account, refused to allow it any weight as evidence, because the instrument upon its face satisfied him that Wayland never executed it as a receipt, although the signature was genuine. The chancellor upon inspection of the paper was of the same opinion, and confirmed the report of the register. The instrument itself is not before us, and we can not say that a paper, purporting to be a receipt, may not carry marks, or evidence upon its face, conclusive to show that it is not a genuine receipt, although the signature attached to it may be in the handwriting of him whose receipt it purports to be. Had the receipt been acted on by the chancellor as evidence, in his decree, before the reference was ordered, it would have then been too late to raise any objection to it in taking the account; but the equity of the bill was not in the slightest degree dependent on the receipt, nor could any question have been raised in reference to it, except in taking the account before the

register; the receipt could have no influence except in swelling the amount of compensation. The question was, therefore, raised the first time the instrument was offered to be used as evidence, and notwithstanding the signature to it may have been proved viva voce to be in the handwriting of Wayland, we do not think this precludes the examination of the question of genuineness, when that question is raised by matter apparent on the face of the instrument itself, irrespective of the signature.

The only error in the decree is the refusal of the chancellor to charge the land with the sum due to the complainant. For this error the decree must be reversed, and the proper decree here rendered.

It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the final decree of the chancellor be reversed, and the court here proceeding to render such decree as should have been rendered, it is ordered and decreed that the land described in the pleadings, to wit, the six acres and a fraction, claimed by the complainant to have been sold by Wayland to him, be charged with the payment of one thousand and sixty-seven dollars and fifteen cents, the amount of compensation ascertained to be due the complainant by the report of the register, and if said sum be not paid within ninety days from the rendition of this decree, the register of the court below will proceed to sell the land at public auction, at the courthouse in Madison county, upon giving the same notice, required by law of sheriffs in the sale of real estate, and from the proceeds of the sale of said land, he will first pay the costs of this suit, and then the amount due to the complainant, after which the administrator of Wayland will be entitled to receive the residue. It is further ordered, that the defendants in error pay the cost of this court.

PARSONS., J., not sitting.

AGREEMENT MUST BE CLEARLY PROVED TO ENTITLE PARTY TO SPECIFIO PERFORMANCE: See Simmons v. Hill, 1 Am. Dec. 398; Townsend v. Houston, 27 Id. 732. The principal case is cited to the point, in Williams v. Barnes, 28 Ala. 613, that in bills for a specific performance of a parol agreement for the sale of land, the contract must be strictly proved as alleged; also in Shelburne v. Letsinger, 52 Id. 96.

WHERE SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE CAN NOT BE DECREED, COURT WILL DECREE REPAYMENT OF PURCHASE MONEY AND INTEREST, together with the value of the lasting improvements: See Johnston v. Glancy, 28 Am. Dec. 45.

AFTER REFUSING SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE, BILL WILL BE RETAINED for the purpose of granting compensation: Kelley v. Allen, 34 Ala. 663, citing the principal case.

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