In this action the plaintiff sought an injunction and $2,400,000 damages from the defendant. It was returned to the Superior Court in Fairfield County and referred to a state trial referee, who, sitting as the court, rendered judgment for the defendant. From that judgment the plaintiff appealed, to this court.
*537 The plaintiff was the owner of approximately 356 acres of undevelоped land partly in Canaan and partly in Cornwall, hereinafter referred to as the premises. The defendant was a general contractor who was interested in obtaining contracts from the state for the construction of three sections of highway known as route 7. Because each of these three separate projеcts would require a large quantity of fill, before the defendant entered bids on the projects it entered into negotiations concerning the possibility of using the plaintiff’s premises as a source for obtaining the necessary fill. The plaintiff’s suit was predicated upon the claim that these negotiations culminated in a contract under the terms оf which the defendant was to purchase the fill from the plaintiff and that the defendant breached this contract.
The complaint was in three counts. In the first count the plaintiff alleged that the parties entered into a contract under the terms of which the plaintiff would make the premises available to the defendant which would extract thе required fill and transport it to the work site by train and truck. The second count repeated the general allegations of the first count concerning the alleged contract and, without mentioning the Statute of Frauds, did allege that as a result of the negotiations the plaintiff accepted the offer of the defendant and executed the performance requested by the defendant thereby accepting the defendant’s offer and creating a contract between them on the terms set forth in the first count. The third count repeated the substance of the first two counts and alleged that during the negotiations the defendant made false representations with the intent to deceive and defraud the plaintiff and the plaintiff was damaged by his reli *538 anee upon those misrepresentations. In its answer, the defendant denied the material allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint and by way of special defense alleged that the negotiations between the parties working towards a contract never culminated in a contract and were broken off when the parties could not resolve the differences reflected in draft contracts submitted by each to the other.
The court found for the defendant on the first count on the ground that enforcement of the alleged contract was barred by the Statute of Frauds, on the second count on the ground that there was not a part performance by the plaintiff, and on the third count, in fraud, on the ground that the defendant made no intentional or reckless misrepresentation to the plaintiff.
As is to be expected in an appeal in such a case as this where the evidence covered the whole area of the relationshiр between the parties, their conferences, negotiations, correspondence and actions, the court found it necessary to file a lengthy finding of fact, and, in turn, the plaintiff extensively attacked that finding in his assignments of error, seeking numerous additions and corrections. To note and discuss each finding and the attack on it would unduly prolong this opinion. We have examined each one seriatim and, testing the findings and the attacks in accordance with the well established applicable law and rules, we find that the finding is not subject to any material correction, nor is it necessary to attempt to summarize the finding in any detail. It suffices to note the decisive conclusions of the cоurt and the findings relevant to them.
The court concluded that a contract such as that alleged by the plaintiff, to be enforceable, must con *539 form to the requirements of the Statute of Frauds 1 affecting the transfer of interests in land because it provided that the defendant buyer would remove the material from the plaintiff’s land. It also concluded that the contents of two letters sent by the dеfendant upon which the plaintiff relied to satisfy the requirements of the statute were not sufficient because (1) they did not adequately describe the subject of the sale, (2) they did not contain the name of the seller, and (3) there was no reference therein to some other writing or thing certain to provide these missing essentials. The court rejected the plaintiff’s claims (1) that the defendant was estopped from raising the defense of the Statute of Frauds, (2) that the defendant intentionally or recklessly made misrepresentations, and (3) that the plaintiff changed his position in reliance on anything that the defendant said or did. The court concluded that the plaintiff had done nothing sufficient to constitute part performance, had never delivered possession of the premises to the defendant, and had failed to sustain his burden of proof on each of the three counts of his complaint.
In testing the validity of the court’s conclusions, we follow well settled principles. They are tested by the subordinate facts found by the trial court аnd, if the conclusions are logically supported by the facts, they must stand unless they violate law, logic or reason.
Lovett
v.
Atlas Truck Leasing,
The first claim briefed by the plaintiff is that the court erroneously concluded that the alleged contract to be enforceable must conform to the requirements of the Statute of Frauds (General Statutes § 52-550) and that it did not meet thоse requirements. It appears that prior to the adoption of the Uniform Commercial Code (1959 Public Acts, No. 133, effective October 1, 1961) there was some confusion as to whether the Statute of Frauds applied to contracts concerning such a profit a prendre as was the subject of the negotiation in this case. See
Jo-Mark Sand & Gravel Co.
v.
Pantanella,
The plaintiff has also attacked the court’s conclusion that the alleged agreement did not meet the requirements of the Statute of Frauds. The subоrdinate facts, however, amply support this conclusion. The “writing” upon which the plaintiff chiefly relies consisted of two letters which the defendant had sent to the plaintiff’s uncle and father during the negotiations. As the court’s conclusion recites, those letters, taken separately or together, do not adequately describe the subject of the sale, do not contain the name of the seller and contain no reference to any other writing or thing certain to provide those missing essentials.
As this court said in
Santoro
v.
Mack,
*543
It is also wеll settled that the requirements of § 52-550 apply equally to actions for specific performance or for damages for breach of contract.
Kilday
v.
Schancupp,
We find no error in the conclusion of the court that the requirements of the Statute of Frauds were not met. It properly concluded that the letters which the defendant wrote to Theodore M. Mitchell, the plaintiff’s uncle, and Patrick A. DeLuca, the plaintiff’s father, upon which correspondence the plaintiff chiefly relied as satisfying the Statute of Frauds, were not sufficient in themselves and made no reference to any other writing or thing certain to provide the missing essentials. While the plaintiff submitted other documents and memoranda whiсh it claimed supplied the missing essential information, the court properly ruled that they were not sufficient. The reasons for its ruling are summarized in its memorandum of decision which we may examine to ascertain the grounds upon which it acted.
Burns
v.
Gould,
Further assignments of error briеfed by the plaintiff are addressed to the conclusions of the court (a) that the defendant was not estopped to raise the Statute of Frauds as a defense despite the plaintiff’s claim of law to the contrary which the court overruled, and (b) that the plaintiff did nothing which constituted part performance of the alleged contract so as to render the proscription of the Statute of Frauds inapplicable, overruling the contrary claim of the plaintiff.
When the Statute of Frauds is claimed, the doctrine of estoppel may be applied to prevent the use of that statute to accomplish a fraud.
First Connecticut Small Business Investment Co.
v.
Arba, Inc.,
The court’s conclusion that the plaintiff did not establish his entitlement to the benefit of the doctrine of estoppel by any performance of the type of act necessary to constitute part performance is amply supported by the subordinate facts, and we find no error in this conclusion.
*546 The plaintiff’s final claim of fraud on the part of the defendant requires but brief comment. The claim of the plaintiff was, essentially, that the .defendant, by its false representations, induced the plaintiff to believe that the parties had a binding contract for the sale of the fill, that these false representations were made recklessly or intentionally and were relied and acted upon by the plaintiff to his detriment and, accоrdingly, the defendant was liable to him in fraud. The court overruled those claims, finding that there was no reckless or intentional misrepresentation by the defendant and that the plaintiff did not change his position in reliance on anything that the defendant said or did.
“Fraud, of course, is not to be presumed and must be strictly proven by clear, precise and unequivоcal evidence.
Creelman
v.
Rogowski,
Upon conflicting evidence, it is peculiarly within the province of the trier of fact to judge the credibility оf the witnesses and to draw proper inferences. Kuk
anskis
v.
Jasut,
Prom the entire record in this case, the conclusion is inescapable that there were extended negotiations looking toward the execution of a contract by the terms of which the defendant would purchase fill from a site which, as it turned out, was in fact owned by the plaintiff, that the final terms of that anticipated contract were nevеr agreed upon, that the closest the negotiations came to fruition was the cross submission of proposed drafts of a contract and that attempts to resolve the differences reflected in these two drafts were unavailing.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The relevant portion, of § 52-550 of the General Statutes entitled “Statute of Frauds; Written Agreement or Memorаndum” provides: “No civil action shall be maintained . . . upon any agreement for the sale of real estate or any interest in or concerning it . . . unless such agreement, or some memorandum thereof, is made in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith or his agent . . .
“ [1959 Public Acts, No. 133] Section 2-107. goods to be severed erom realty: recording. (1) A cоntract for the sale of timber, minerals or the like or a structure or its materials to be removed from realty is a contract for the sale of goods within this Article if they are to be severed by the seller but until severance a purported present sale thereof which is not effective as a transfer of an interest in land is effective only as a contract to sell.”
