105 Ky. 748 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion cot the court.
The appellant, Dickey, plaintiff below, filed his petition and amended petition in the Barren Circuit Court, alleging that on the 6th day of January, 1897, he purchased from the appellee, Dickinson, his one-third interest in a certain newspaper (the Glasgow Times) then being published in the town of Glasgow, and paid therefor the price of 82,250, cash; that, as a part of the consideration entering into the contract, the appellee, Dickinson, obligated himself to the appellant not to again engage in newspaper business in the town of Glasgow. Appellant further alleged that he immediately took possession of the one-third interest purchased, and, in connection with others, continued to publish the Glasgow Times, and was so publishing the same at the time of the institution of this action; but that the appellee, Dickinson, in violation of his contract, had engaged himself with others in publishing another.newspaper in Glasgow, known as the Glasgow Semi-weekly News, which
On demurrer the petition was dismissed. The correctness of that judgment depends on the question whether this contract, admitted to be verbal, comes within out statute of frauds, which prohibits one from being charged on account of a contract ‘not to be performed within a year,” unless the same be in writing, or there be some memorandum signed by the party to be charged therewith.
We can not agree with counsel for appellant that the statute can have no application to contracts of this character. A contract to refrain from doing a thing may be one not to be performed within a year, and is capable of being embraced within the terms of the statute. Thus, it would seem that if A., in 1896, agreed with B. that he would not publish a newspaper published in the town of O. during the presidential year of 1900, the contract would be within the statute. There the stipulation of the contract leaves no uncertainty as to the time of its performance, — that is, the time of the act of refraining;- and this time is expressly postponed beyond a year from the making of the contract. In such case the contract is capable of being performed only beyond the year. The death within a year of the party contracting to refrain might render the contract a dead letter, and its performance impossible. Still, the statute looks to the performance, and not to the defeat, of the contract, and the death can not be said to be a
Discussing a similar question, this court, in the case of Stowers v, Hollis, 88 Ky., 548, said: “If the performance of a contract depends upon a contingency which may happen within a year, then it is not within the statute, although that contingency may not in fact happen until after the expiration of the year, and although the parties may. not have expected that it would occur within that period. It is sufficient if the possibility of performance existed.” There the court held that notwithstanding the fact that the contract to support a child was verbal, and was to cover an indefinite number of years, still the contract might
The case of Blanchard v. Weeks, 34 Vt., 589, was a case where a physician, for a certain consideration, verbally agreed that he would refrain forever from the practice of medicine and surgery in a certain vicinity, while another of his own profession, who had paid the consideration, should reside and practice medicine and surgery in the named vicinity. In discussing the question as to whether such contract was within the statute of frauds, the court there said: “This stipulation in its character is strictly personal, to be performed by the defendant himself, and one which can never become binding upon his representatives or any other person. It is not to be performed by any active agency of the defendant, but only requires a passive acquiescence in its provisions. It is binding upon the defendant while he lives; but at his death all obligation terminates, the end sought to be attained by it is fully accomplished, and the contract is then performed. Although the expressions are that the defendant will refrain from the act, forever, it is but saying that he will not do the act, the obligation of which ceases at his death. It is a contract, therefore, to be performed during the life of the defendant, and, if not violated during his lifetime, is fully performed at his death.”
And so, in the case of Lyon v. King, 11 Metc. (Mass.), 411 [45 Am. Dec., 219], the court held that an oral agreement “not to hereafter engage in the stable or livery business in S,” is not within the statute of frauds. The court there said: “In the case at bar the contract might have been wholly performed within a year. It was a personal engagement to* forbear doing certain acts. It stipulated nothing beyond the defendant’s'
The cases along this line are numerous, and there are none to the contrary. It will be found upon examination that the statutes of frauds in the States of Vermont and Massachusetts, as discussed in the decisions heretofore cited, are quite similar to our own statute of frauds.
It is insisted by counsel for appellee in the case at bar that the contract under consideration is not like a contract to do a thing that might be accomplished in a year, but that it is a contract not to do a certain thing at all, in a certain place. The contract, as alleged, could not be performed within a year. The decisions above quoted meet .this question fully, holding that it was possible that the contract could have been performed and fulfilled within a year by the death of the obligor
The obligation of the appellee is not one that survives. The obligation determines and is fulfilled upon the death of the obligor; and, while it may not be at all probable that this contingency — the death of the obligor within a year — would happen, yet it is clearly possible of performance. The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent herewith.