delivered the opinion of the court:
Twо questions are .presented and discussed as arising on this record: One, the indefiniteness of the agreement between the parties; and the other, the application of the Statute of Frauds to the facts in the bill stated. The latter proposition will be first considered.
Section 2, chapter 59, of our Statute of Frauds and Perjuries, (Starr & Curtis’ Stat. p. 1192,) provides: “No action shаll be brought to charge any person upon any contract for the sale of lands, tenements or hereditaments, or аny interest in or concerning them, for a longer term than one year, unless such contract, or some memorandum or notе thereof, shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorized in writing, signеd by such party.”
The averment of the bill is, “that, the parties being so possessed of and owning said lots severally, on June 1, 1890, the complainant proposed to the defendant that they should make a joint venture or partnership in reference to said two lots, and that they should participate in the net proceeds to be derived from the sale of them; that onе of said lots should be sold in a very short time and the other lot should be held longer,” etc. The right of each party to this agreement has been severally acquired to each separate lot, the title to which was held in severalty at the time оf the alleged agreement. By the terms of the agreement the rights acquired, by virtue of the deed, by the appellee tо his lot were sought to be qualified and limited. By this agreement, in consideration of appellant agreeing to divide with apрellee the profits made by appellant on the sale of his lot, appellee was to divide with appellant the profits on his lot when sold. The contract was executory. Both sales were made, and it is sought to enforce the аgreement as against appellee. The contract was not in writing. The agreement affected real estate the title to which had been acquired by appellee before the agreement. If the appellant had any intеrest in the lot it was by virtue of the agreement relied upon, and was by parol, and would be within the statute. It is clear that an interest acquired in the land of another by a parol agreement is within the statute. This proposition is not controverted by the appellant, but it is urged that an agreement for a partnership for the purpose of dealing and trading in lands for profit is not within the statute, and the fact of the existence of the partnership and extent of each party’s interest may be shоwn by parol. In this connection it is insisted, that, it appearing from the bill that the lots have been sold, nothing remains but to account for the profits, and it is denied the Statute of Frauds in any way controls the question.
It is true that a partnership may exist for the purpose of dealing in lands for profit, and the existence of such partnership, and the extent of the interests of the resрective partners, may be shown by parol. (Speyer v. Desjardins,
We hold that the averments of the bill setting forth the purchase price and selling price of the lots, and that the nеt profits derived from the sale were to be participated in by the parties, are sufficiently definite averments to authorize a finding by an interlocutory decree and a reference for an accounting between the parties. The Statute of Frauds, however, presents an insurmountable obstacle to the relief prayed for by appellant.
It was not error in the Appellate Court to affirm the decree of the circuit court of Cook county. The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
