90 Ky. 255 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion op ti-ie court.
September 12, 1881, 'appellee, in consideration of fonr thousand dollars, sold and conveyed to appellant his interest in a tract -of land leased jointly with B. P. Bryant from R. ‘C. O’Bryan for ten years, beginning ■ June 1, 1879, upon which was a distillery.
The deed, in addition to the contract for sale of the .realty, contained .the .following: “It is hereby covemanted and 'agreed that said P. M. Head, party of the
November 28, 1883, appellee instituted this action for judgment on the second installment of purchase price of the brand mentioned, which became due September 12, 1883, the first having been paid, and judgment also upon the remaining six installments, to take effect as they respectively become due. The judgment rendered was for recovery of the second installment, together with interest, and that defendant be required to show cause by the next term of court why he should' not be adjudged to pay these other installments, which the plaintiff suggested to the court had then become due and remained unpaid. Power to enforce payment of the other installments from time to time was reserved.
Section 135, Civil Code, provides: “A party may be allowed on motion to file a supplemental pleading alleging material facts occurring after the filing of the former pleading ; but if a plaintiff, having a lien for a debt due and a debt not due upon property which he seeks to subject, state both claims in his petition, he may, upon a suggestion of record that one of them has become due, pendente lite, have judgment for a sale of the property therefor.”
The main defense set up in the answer, to which a general demurrer was sustained, is, that the agreement sued on is not enforceable, because within operation of section 1, chapter 22, General Statutes, as follows: “No action shall be brought to charge any person * * * * upon any agreement which is not to be performed within one year from the making thereof, unless * * agreement * * * or some memorandum or note thereof be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by his authorized agent; but the consideration need not be expressed in writing; it may be proved when necessary, or disproved by parol or other evidence.”
It was definitely settled by this court as early as Roberts v. Tennell, 3 Mon., 247, that a parol agreement to pay money, though not to be done within a year, is not void if the consideration be legal. In that case a distress warrant for rent, payable in two years, was issued, and the court said: “On a verbal lease for more than a year no action will lie; but as the
In the same case it was held an action can not be maintained upon an agreement the borrower shall repay at the end of two years money loaned, because, by the terms of the agreement, it is not to be performed within a year from the making thereof. But it was said : “To give the statute the effect of making the contract void, and thereby utterly preventing the lender from recovering the money lent, or if' he be allowed to recover the money upon the implied contract resulting from the loan, to give to the statute the effect of not permitting the borrower to prevent the recovery of the money lent before it is due, or of a higher rate of interest than is due by the terms of the contract, would be extending the operation of the statute beyond its letter, and instead of making the statute the means of preventing frauds, it would be converting it into an instrument of fraud and injustice. It most certainly could not be said to be demanded by the reason and spirit of the statute.”
In Montague v. Garnett, 3 Bush, 298, it was held there was a distinction between contracts executed in part or whole, and one wholly to be executed by both parties; but the right of the plaintiff to recover for the pork and corn loaned to the defendant was based alone upon the implied contract to return or pay for the articles, simply because the agreement was not to be performed within a year, although the statute was then said to have been “never designed to enable one man to get property of another by virtue of a parol contract, and then refuse to either execute the contract or return the property.”
It seems to us that allegation, if true, constitutes a defense, and it was error to sustain the demurrer to ■ the answer, and the judgment must be reversed for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.