153 Mass. 268 | Mass. | 1891
The following opinion was prepared by Mr. Justice Devens, and after his death was adopted as the opinion of the court by the Justices who sat with him at the argument.
The plaintiff and her six sisters were tenants in common of several parcels of land, and the plaintiff made an oral agreement with them by which she was to pay to each the sum of $1071.43, and they severally were to convey to her their right and title in and to one of these parcels, situate in Marblehead, upon which she resided. Relying upon each and all these agreements, three of the sisters soon conveyed and released their respective interests in the parcel, each receiving the sum stipulated therefor. Subsequently, but before the commencement of this suit, two of
The contract between the plaintiff and the defendant being oral, the statute of frauds (Pub. Sts. c. 78, § 1, cl. 4) is a bar to its enforcement by a decree for specific performance, which is the relief sought, unless the plaintiff can bring her case within some of those exceptions which have been held in equity sufficient to take a case out of the operation of the statute. She contends that she has so changed her position by reliance on the defendant’s promise that she cannot be restored to her original situation, and that the serious prejudice which will result to her if the defendant fails to convey is constructively a fraud practised on her by the defendant.
Where an oral contract has been partly performed by the party seeking to enforce, and where he cannot be restored to his original situation, as where he has been permitted to enter upon land under an oral promise of a conveyance, and has made valuable improvements thereon, it has been held that the statute of frauds would not be a bar to its enforcement. Glass v. Hulbert, 102 Mass. 24, 31. Potter v. Jacobs, 111 Mass. 32. Curran v. Holyoke Water Power Co. 116 Mass. 90.
But in the case at bar there has been no part performance of .any contract made with the defendant. The contracts which the plaintiff made with her sisters were several, and although she may have relied upon the fact that she had made contracts with all the tenants in common, so that, if performed by all, she would obtain a complete title to the parcel, neither sister was bound orally by any contract made by the other. When the plaintiff had purchased the rights of the three sisters, she had not performed any portion of her contract with the defendant. Even if she relied on the promise of the defendant, and would not have purchased these rights but for her reliance on the performance of that promise, such purchase was not any part performance of her contract with the defendant, but was a purely collateral matter. The reasoning by which a part performance of an oral contract for the sale of land has been held to take it out of the statute has never been extended to a partial or complete performance
The plaintiff urges that she is liable to lose the money she has paid her three sisters, as well as any benefit from their conveyances, by reason of the fact that they were voidable by the defendant as cotenant, they being conveyances by metes and bounds of their interest in one among several parcels held in cotenancy. It is a general rule, that a conveyance by metes and bounds of any separate parcel, or of a share thereof, by one cotenant, is voidable by his cotenants, and is available only by way of estoppel against the grantor and his heirs. To allow and give legal effect to such alienation of the interest of a tenant in common in a part of the estate held in common, without the consent of the other cotenants, would be to create new tenancies in common in tracts and parcels of the estate held in common, to their injury. Blossom v. Brightman, 21 Pick. 283. Adam v. Briggs Iron Co. 7 Cush. 361. Barnes v. Lynch, 151 Mass. 510. But the only persons entitled to disregard and wholly avoid such a conveyance are the other cotenants, and it is only they whose interests are affected. De Witt v. Harvey, 4 Gray, 486. The defendant now offers, for the protection of the title of the plaintiff, to surrender any claim she may have to avoid the