137 A. 769 | Conn. | 1927
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of premises located on Whitney Avenue in New Haven which it uses for club purposes; that the defendant, who owns neighboring property on the other side of the street, gave an option through a broker for the sale of his property and received therefor $1,000; that the prospective purchaser, in furtherance of plans to use the premises for business purposes, employed an architect to prepare plans, and procured a building permit; and that thereupon all of the property owners on Whitney Avenue within the blocks bounded by Lawrence and Cottage streets became fearful that their property would be seriously damaged by the advent of stores or business places in this neighborhood, and entered into a verbal agreement with the defendant whereby it was agreed that if they would relieve him from further responsibility on the option, allow him to keep the $1,000 he had already received, and procure a release from his liability to the broker, the defendant would agree, in writing, to and with the plaintiff and the other property owners within said blocks, their administrators, executors, successors and assigns, that no part of the property owned by him, or by them, would be used or occupied for a period of five years as a store, or for business or public or club purposes, except that two of the property owners then occupying their premises as clubs could continue to do so. It is further alleged that the plaintiff and the other property owners, relying on the agreement and being induced thereby, carried out their agreement and procured the releases, paid $1,000 to the prospective purchaser, and in addition paid $24 for the building permit, and $95 to the architect, and also executed a *246 written agreement expressing the contract between the parties, but that the defendant not only wilfully refused to execute it, but that he has taken out a building permit himself and has begun building operations for the purpose of altering the building for stores and business purposes. It is further alleged that if the defendant is permitted to complete and use these stores, the value of the property belonging to those who executed the agreement will be greatly lessened, and that the plaintiff brings the action for the benefit of the other owners who were parties to the agreement. The defendant pleaded a general denial.
Upon the trial the plaintiff called as its witness the agent of the plaintiff, who is alleged to have made the oral agreement with the defendant, and asked him to state the conversation he had had with the defendant. This was objected to as an attempt to prove a verbal agreement that the property should not be used for any of the purposes set up in the complaint, which verbal agreement was obnoxious to the statute of frauds because it attempted orally to place a negative restriction for the period of five years on the defendant's premises, and thereby attempted to create an interest in the plaintiff in the premises of the defendant, and also because it was a mere verbal contract not to be performed within one year, and could not be performed in less than five years, and placed a restriction on the property for that period of time. The court sustained the objection on the second ground and excluded the evidence. The plaintiff then offered to present testimony to show complete performance on the part of the plaintiff of the verbal agreement with the defendant, but the court ruled that "assuming that all the things have been done and all the acts and payments and performances as claimed in the complaint," they still are not sufficient to take the case out of the *247 statute of frauds on the ground of performance. No further offer of evidence was made by the plaintiff, whereupon the court adjudged that defendant recover his costs of the plaintiff.
We will first consider whether the acts alleged in the complaint and which plaintiff offered evidence to prove, constitute a sufficient performance to take the case out of the statute of frauds. The principle is clear. "`A party who has permitted another to perform acts on the faith of an agreement, shall not insist that the agreement is bad, and that he is entitled to treat these acts as if it had never existed. That is the principle; but the acts must be referable to the contract.'"Eaton v. Whitaker,
This rule requires that it must first appear that these acts are of such a character as to be naturally and reasonably accounted for in no other way than by the existence of some contract in relation to the subject-matter in dispute before parol evidence of the terms of the contract becomes admissible. Van Epps
v. Redfield,
The situation assumed by the trial court to have been established is that the defendant, owning property in a residential neighborhood, agreed through a broker to sell his property and receive $1,000 down on the option or agreement; that the prospective *248 purchaser hired an architect who drew plans whereby this residential property was to be turned into stores, and took out a building permit to do the work; that the plaintiff, owning neighboring residential and private club property, arranged with the prospective purchasers to release the defendant from his liability to sell to them, and for the defendant to keep the $1,000 payment, procured a release from the broker of his claim against the defendant for commission, repaid the prospective purchasers $1,090 retained by the defendant, and paid for the building permit and the architect's services. These acts we think point unmistakably to an agreement and can be accounted for in no other way than as having been done in the performance of an agreement. It clearly appears from these acts that there must have been some agreement between the parties upon the strength of which, and in pursuance of which, the plaintiff has acted in a part performance which would be to its injury if the defendant was not compelled to perform. The acts of performance in this case point not only to an agreement, but to one having to do with a restriction of the use of this property for business purposes. It satisfies not only our liberal rule, but also would probably fulfil the requirement of the stricter rule to which we have alluded.
The purpose of the rule is clear. Such acts of performance as occur in this case, for instance, done with the obvious consent and knowledge of the defendant, resulting in his enrichment and in injury to the plaintiff, change the situation contemplated by the statute. The defendant should not be allowed to say that although it is clearly shown by the acts themselves that there was an agreement, he will nevertheless treat the acts as if the agreement never existed, accept the benefits, and make the plaintiff shoulder the loss. He would thus practice a palpable and substantial fraud upon *249 the plaintiff, and would do it in the name of and by the use of a statute whose whole purpose is to prevent fraud.
The doctrine of part performance arose from the necessity of preventing the statute against frauds from becoming an engine of fraud. There is danger, however, that it be invoked in a loose form to reach what is believed to be an equitable result in a specific case, and therefore our decisions have carefully limited it so that it shall not unduly restrict, infringe upon, or lessen the salutary effect of the statute against frauds. This limitation placed on the doctrine of part performance results in the requirement that the plaintiff in such an action must first prove acts and facts which point unmistakably to a contract between himself and the defendant which cannot be accounted for, and are inexplicable, unless done in pursuance of a contract and which would not have been done without an existing contract. Upon such proof being made, parol evidence of an existing contract to which these acts and facts are referable, is admissible. A situation of this character is not within the mischief of the statute of frauds. This procedure does not permit the plaintiff to first offer proof of a verbal contract and then offer proof that it has been partly performed.
We think the trial court should have admitted the evidence of the acts of performance because they are clearly referable to some contract between the parties within the meaning of the rule which we have just stated. The acts in this case amount to much more than the mere payment of the consideration, which is held in McMahon v. Plumb,
This conclusion makes a new trial necessary and we therefore do not decide the other questions raised by the appeal, since it does not appear that they will be of any great importance in the retrial of the case.
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.