out the word 'improvements,' and leaving the word 'repairs, 1
give the plaintiff all that he has asked by his bill, and I cannot give
him less." This has been thought to be, in effect, an intimation of
opinion by that most distinguished Chancellor that, if the bill had
asked for " improvements," the prayer would have been granted.
But at least it is not a decision to that effect, and the implication is,
at best, a surmise. It will be observed in the report in Cooper that
no reference is made in the narration of the facts to " improvements,"
though " repairs" are expressly mentioned. The prayer in the bill
(1) is stated to be " that the contract might be declared void, and
that the defendants might be compelled to repay to the plaintiff
his purchase-money and what he had laid out on the premises with
interest." This may or may not have been the effect of the prayer,
but at least it does not appear that the prayer was expressed to be
confined to repairs. In his written judgment the Master of the Rolls
concludes by saying (2): "He" (the plaintiff) "must have an
allowance for any money he laid out in repairs during the time he
was in possession." So far, therefore, as the report in Cooper is
concerned, there is no trace of any reference or need for reference to
"improvements " and, as the judgment was written, that omission
was deliberate on the part of the Master of the Rolls. In Swanston
it appears that the decree as actually drawn up included " repairs or
improvements." As Sir Ldward Sugden says in his Law of Property
as administered by the House of Lords (1849), at p. 649, the " case of
Edwards v. M'Leay is imperfectly reported in Cooper, and upon the
appeal the facts and arguments are not stated." Lord Eldon L.C.,
however, begins his judgment by saying (3), " Having read the
pleadings, I am entirely of opinion, that, though it may be necessary
to state with more precision the subject of inquiry relative to repairs
and improvements, the decree is substantially right." Then he
says (4): 'Nothing was done by the plaintiff after he knew the
defect of the title; he certainly could have claimed no allowance
~ even for subsequent repairs." The matter is left too doubtful to
make the case - important as it is in other respects (see Wilde v.