46 W. Va. 1 | W. Va. | 1899
This is a chancery suit in the circuit court of Wetzel County by Thomas M. Cunningham against Thomas Cunningham to enforce specific performance of an oral contract for the sale of land, in which a decree for the plaintiff was made, from which the defendant appealed.
Counsel for defendant argues the case as if there were no contract of sale, on the idea that the contract alleged in the bill is not the same as that proven or admitted in the answer. The bill sets out an oral contract, and the answer admits it, and does not rely on the statute of frauds as a defense, and therefore there is no need of proof of the contract or of a writing to show it. Bariett v. McAllister, 33 W. Va. 738, (11 S. E. 220); 9 Enc. Pl. & Prac. 713. Of cburse, the contract admitted must not be a substantially different one from that alleged in the bill, to apply the above rule. There is no such substantial difference in this case. The bill states the sale of the land on certain terms, and the answer admits it as so stated; the only difference being that the bill says that the defendant was, within a reasonable time, to make a deed retaining a lien for deferred purchase money, while the answer, admitting the sale and its terms, says an executory contract was to be
The plaintiff took possession of the land. Defendant says that he did so as tenant, not under the said oral contract. This would raise the question whether mere remaining in possession after the contract could be considered as delivery of possession required by equity to make an oral contract good, as likely it would be; but this question does not arise, because .the contract is admitted, and the statute of frauds is not relied upon, and neither a writing, nor evidence of delivery of possession to take its place, is required. Besides, the evidence of plaintiff that he took possession first under the contract of sale conflicts with that of the defendant, that possession was first taken as tenant, and we would not reverse the circuit court under this head.
Another defense is that the contract was orally rescinded, or, I should rather say, waived, renounced, or abandoned, by plaintiff, as there surely is no definite contract of recission. Counsel for the plaintiff takes the position that a contract of recission, or a waiver of the sale contract, is not valid unless executed by a surrender of possession. I think this is so. There was no surrender of possession,
The plaintiff explains his delay of payment by the defendant’s neglect to make a deed. It was the duti^ of defendant to execute such deed. Clark v. Gordon, 35 W. Va. 736, (14 S. E. 255). The decree required the defendant to
Affirmed.