9 N.H. 355 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1838
The contract, as stated in the second count, is clearly within the statute of frauds. 5 N. H. Rep. 130, Lane vs. Shackford, and the authorities cited for the defendants.
If the plaintiff could recover, it must be on the first or third counts.
Laying out of the case any thing in those counts, to show that the contract, as there stated, is within the statute, and viewing it as a contract that the plaintiff should build a house on the defendants’ land, and that the defendants should pay him the amount expended, if he should so elect, we are of the opinion that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. Taking that as the whole original contract—upon a new contract, subsequently made between the parties, the plaintiff purchased the land, and received from the defendants a deed of it. This must be held to be a waiver of the former contract, unless the presumption is expressly negatived. An express contract that the defendants would still be holden by the former agreement, and pay for the expenses of the house, and permit the plaintiff to hold it as his own, might perhaps be sufficient. But this could not be supposed to be the understanding of the parties, unless there was evidence offered of such new contract. There is no suggestion that when the plaintiff received the deed he paid for the value of the house, as well as the land.