26 Wis. 637 | Wis. | 1870
The agreement set up in the answer was not within that branch of the statute of frauds relating to agreements not to be performed within one year, nor had the statute of limitations run upon it; and neither was it an agreement varying or contradicting the terms of the note. The agreement was not within the statute of frauds, for two reasons. In the first place, it was made upon an executed consideration. The services rendered by the defendant Levi P. Gilbert, and for which it is alleged the testatrix agreed to pay,, had been performed before the promise was made; and past services are a sufficient consideration to support a promise to pay for them. It is immaterial whether the promise be made before or after the services. Snyder v. Castor's Adm'rs, 4 Yeates, 353-358. The subsequent promise to pay implies that the services were rendered upon previous request. The consideration for the agreement having been thus fully executed on the part of the defendant with whom it was made, and before the making of it, the fact that the time of payment extended or might extend, even if it had been expressly so provided, beyond the year, would not bring the promise within the statute, as has just been decided in McClellan v. Sanford, ante p.
But more than this, the promise was not by its terms to be performed beyond the year, which is the other reason why it was not within the statute. “ The contract, to be within the statute,” say this court in White v. Hanchett, 21 Wis. 416, must be such that it cannot be performed within a year.” By this was not intended, of course, a natural or physical impossibility, but an impossibility by the terms of the con
Fenton v. Emblers was a case like the present, in that it was a promise to reward a party for services by a legacy, or provision to be made in a will. In that' case, the defendant’s testator had promised the plaintiff that if she would become his housekeeper, he would pay her wages after the rate of £6 per annum, and give her, by his last will and testament, a legacy or annuity of £16 by the year, to be paid yearly. The plaintiff, on this agreement, entered into the testator’s service, and became his housekeeper, and continued so for more than three years. The contract was by parol, and objection was taken to it that it was
And in Ridley v. Ridley, in the Rolls court, where the decision was by Sir John Romilly, M. R., who is certainly very high authority, the point is thus correctly stated in the note : “ That part of the fourth section .of the statute of frauds (29 Car. 2, c. 3), which requires agreements, not to he performed within a year, to be in writing and signed, does not apply to cases in which the performance may by possibility or accident he extended beyond that period; it is to be confined to cases where the agreement is not to he performed and cannot he carried into execution within that space of time. Therefore, where A. B. agreed by parol for valuable consideration to leave C. D. a certain amount by his will, and A. B. died fourteen years after the agreement: Held, that the'statute of frauds did not apply.”
And the same construction, if not expressly, is certainly impliedly, sustained by many other cases in which it has been held that services rendered under promise of compensation by will, create a good claim against the estate, if no will be made. Such was the recent case in this court, of Bayliss v. Estate of Pricture, 24 Wis. 651, where the agreement was made in March, 1857, and the plaintiff continued to serve under it from that time until November, 1863, and Pricture died in May, 1867, not having made compensation by a legacy, as he had agreed, and a recovery against the estate was sustained. And see also, Martin v. Wright’s Adm’rs, 13 Wend. 460; Jacobson v. Executors of Le Grange, 3
And the other objection, that-the agreement varied or was inconsistent with the terms of the note, seems equally untenable. It was no more than an agreement showing how the note had in fact been paid, and how upon the death of the holder it was to be surrendered. If evidence had been received under the answer, as offered by the witness Hickox, and the answer sustained, it would have been proof of payment, or of an accord and satisfaction, by which the principal sum due had been liquidated and the debt extinguished. The case differs somewhat in facts, but not at all in principle, from Jones v. Keyes, 16 Wis 562, and Peterson v. Johnson, 22 Wis. 21, and cases there cited. See also, Racine County Bank v. Keep, 13 Wis. 209. Or, if we view it in another light, and as an agreement to pay the defendant for his services in that particular way and at that time, it seems still less in conflict with the terms of the note, and the right of set-off is very obvious. It would be very strange were it to be held that the defendant must lose all right of compensation for his services, which the testatrix agreed to make, because such was the form of the agreement. Proof of the services and of the agreement, proves payment, and that this constitutes a valid defense to the action we think there can be no manner of doubt.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.