213 S.W.2d 530 | Tex. | 1948
Lead Opinion
An evident conflict in our decisions complicates this otherwise simple case involving application of the Statute of Frauds (Art. 3995, R.C.S. 1925) to an oral contract of employment for the term of a year to begin some time after the date on which the contract was made. The Statute recites that "no action shall be brought * * * in any of the following cases, unless the promise or agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum thereof, shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith * * *" and then enumerates in separately numbered paragraphs the various types of agreements falling within its terms, including paragraph 5, which reads as follows: "Upon any agreement which is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof."
The Statute was first enacted in Texas on January 18, 1840 (Acts of 1840, p. 28; Gammel's Laws, Vol. 2, p. 202; Oldham and White's Digest, Art. 936; the wording of the particular provision in question being then the same as its counterpart in the 1677 statute of King Charles II. (Warner v. Texas Pacific Railway Company,
The agreement here in suit provided for a regular monthly salary to be paid currently and also, according to plaintiff employee's version, which was accepted by the jury, bonuses of $1,500.00 each at the end of the first and last six months of employment respectively. The employment period was fixed in calendar terms, so to speak, and contained no reference to the possible death of plaintiff or other contingency that might prematurely terminate the arrangement. Plaintiff was dismissed at the end of the first six months without cause. He had been currently paid his agreed monthly salary up to that time but was denied payment of the $1,500.00 bonus then due and sued to recover it under the agreement. No other or alternative cause of action is alleged. Notwithstanding a verdict favorable to the plaintiff, the trial court rendered judgment for the defendant, which was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.
Only two questions are involved in this court: first, whether the agreement is within the prohibition of the statute, notwithstanding the possibility of termination within less than a year by reason of plaintiff's death, which would obviously render further *109 performance of such an agreement impossible; and, secondly, whether, if within the statute, the agreement is nevertheless enforceable by reason of the performance actually rendered by the plaintiff.
On both questions the Court of Civil Appeals considered our 1936 decision in Paschall v. Anderson,
On the question of whether the agreement falls within the Statute, the foregoing line of authority conflicts with our action in refusing a writ of error in the 1931 case of Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co. v. Warren,
The Wood case is thus the source of the conflict on the question at issue. The agreement in that case was oral and provided merely "to pay Wood $800.00 cash and issue him a pass over the road for himself and family for a period of ten years, the pass to be issued annually on the first of each year, and to stop its trains at his house to let him and his family get on and off whenever they desired to do so during said ten years." The defendant railway company paid the cash obligation but after two years defaulted on the others. This Court held that since the arrangement was personal to plaintiff Wood or to him and his family, and would necessarily terminate on their death, which *110 could have occurred within a year from the making of the agreement, the latter was not one "not to be performed within the space of one year * * *," regardless of whether the parties ever had the possibility of death in mind. There is no logical distinction for purposes of the Statute between the agreement in the Wood case and an agreement to employ a person for more than one year as in Paschall v. Anderson. Yet the opinion in Paschall v. Anderson fails to mention either the Wood case or Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co. v. Warren, supra, which followed it; nor have either of the latter been referred to as overruled by Paschall v. Andereson.
The above described confusion in the decisions obviously compels a re-examination and restatement of the law on the subject matter.
1 The principle of the Wood case seems overly broad and has been condemned by recognized authority. In the Revised Edition of Williston on Contracts, Vol. 2, p. 1449, Sec. 496, the authors state: "It is possible under any contract whatever, that some supervening circumstance may excuse the promisor from liability within a year; and in any personal contract, the possibility of death is the same as in promises to support." The footnote to this part of the text states in part: "This reasoning is used in Weatherford, etc., Ry. Co. v. Wood,
We believe the law, as above restated, to be more in accordance with the weight of authority both within and without this state than the rule of the Wood case and more harmonious than the latter with the fundamental objects of the Statute. Certainly the construction followed in the Wood case would permit parol proof of a far wider class of contracts than does the interpretation here approved.
2 It follows that the Court of Civil Appeals in the instant case correctly held the agreement to be within the prohibition of the Statute. The remaining question is plaintiff's contention that his six month's actual service under the agreement made it enforceable notwithstanding the Statute, to the extent of the $1,500.00 bonus due at the end of that six-month period. We think the Court of Civil Appeals properly rejected this contention also on the strength of Paschall v. Anderson, supra. As already stated, that case was one in which the plaintiff employee had served for the full term of the agreement, so is applicable to the instant case even if we treat the latter as one of complete *112
performance instead of performance for a mere half of the service period. On this point we fail to find any conflict between the holding in Paschall v. Anderson and our dismissal of the writs in the cases of Stanfield v. Texas Power Corp.,
A view contrary to Paschall v. Anderson has, it is true, been taken by some authorities such as the American Law Institute, supra, p. 262, par. 198, but we nevertheless regard the case as sound on principle within its self-imposed limits. Enforcing a forbidden parol agreement notwithstanding the Statute is not just a matter of relieving against hardship. The Legislature naturally contemplated that such a statute would impose hardship on those who might contract in ignorance of its terms. But the Statute unmistakably declares a policy that parol testimony is too unreliable for proof of certain types of agreement, and courts must give heed to that policy as well as to considerations of an equitable character. They have done so in cases arising under other sections of the Statute than that involved here — for example, the case of a parol sale of land, in which "full performance", in the sense of full payment of the consideration by the purchaser, is held not to make the contract enforceable unless accompanied by other circumstances, such as change of possession and erection of valuable improvements. These accompanying circumstances are important not merely as equities but also as "* * * at least a corroborative fact that the contract was actually made." Hooks v. Bridgewater,
"* * * There is nothing in the nature of these acts which suggests the existence of a contract. The sale of oil leases to one party doss not suggest the existence of a prior oral contract with another party to convey royalty interest in consideration therefor. Every act of plaintiff may be explained quite separate and apart from any alleged oral contract and no act is `unequivocally referable' thereto. These acts do not tend to *113
prove the existence of the parol agreement relied upon by plaintiff. Clegg v. Brannan,
"`There must be performance `unequivocally referable' to the agreement, performance which alone and without the aid of words of promise is unintelligible or at least extraordinary unless as an incident of ownership, assured, if not existing.
"`An Act which admits of explanation without reference to the alleged oral contract or a contract of the same general nature and purpose is not, in general, admitted to constitute a part performance.' Woolley v. Stewart,
"What is done must itself supply the key to what is promised. It is not enough that what is promised may give significance to what is done."
If in the case of an employment contract for the term of more than one year from its making, the employee should have worked the full term without receiving any compensation at all, or if, on the other hand, the employer had paid the compensation for the entire term at the very outset, such circumstances, even though ultimately resting in parol, might well be sufficiently "corroborative" of or "referable to" the claimed agreement to justify a judicial departure from the Statute. But no such circumstances were present in Paschall v. Anderson, and the record discloses none in the instant case.
The judgments of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals are affirmed.
Opinion delivered June 30, 1948.
Concurrence Opinion
The result, as I see it, is right. The better view seems to call for a departure from so much of the Wood case as takes a contract not to be performed within a year out of the operation of the statute of frauds merely because one of the parties might die within the year. But the holding of the main opinion goes further than I think necessary or proper and cites Paschall v. Anderson, without challenging its holding that full performance of peresonal services under an oral contract not to be fully *114 performed within a year does not take the contract out of the bar of the statute and entitle the employee to recover what his employer had agreed to pay him. In such a case the employee has done the work and there is nothing left for his employer to do but pay what he had promised. This he should be made to do. It is reasoned in this connection that the statute was meant to prevent, not to aid, the perpetration of a fraud. Now the case at bar involves partial performance of a statutorily inhibited oral contract for personal services. The main opinion correctly holds in effect that in the absence of special equitable considerations, none of which appear here, partial performance by the employee will not bar the employer from raising the statute as a defense. The employee's remedy is ordinarily a suit for the reasonable worth of his services, or, put another way, in quantum meruit. The employee did not show himself entitled to a recovery on this basis. The judgment was rightly against him.
But there is no need to cite or rely on Paschall v. Anderson, which not only involves a different fact situation but is, I submit, against the great weight of authority and much the better reasoning. When a state of facts like that in Paschall v. Anderson arises, it is my hope that this court will not regard the opinion as authoritative. Overruling the Wood case places Texas in line with the more widely accepted rule that the possibility of death does not take a contract like the one in this case out of the statute of frauds. If at the same time we departed from Parchall v. Anderson, it would finish the task of lining Texas up with definitely the majority as well as what I think much the better view that full performance by the employee or an oral contract required by the statute of frauds to be in writing because not to be performed within a year takes the contract out of the statute. Diamond v. Jacquith,
Opinion delivered June 30, 1948.
Addendum
3 In the motion for rehearing, able counsel representing the petitioner in the appellate courts urges that, even should we adhere (as we do) to our holding that there was no error below, we, nevertheless, reverse and remand the case to the trial court, to enable petitioner to amend and sue in quantum meruit. Conceding, for argument, that trial court counsel not unreasonably thought we would overrule Paschall v. Anderson,
The motion for rehearing is overruled.
Opinion delivered October 6, 1948.