35 N.J.L. 338 | N.J. | 1872
At the trial, and on the argument before this-court, the principal grounds for a non-suit were objections to the capacity of the plaintiffs to sue, and the validity of the contract to purchase, by reason of the statute of frauds.
But, although the formal objection to the plaintiffs’ capacity to sue in their own names is not sustained, their right to recover must depend upon the validity of the contract to purchase. The action, though prosecuted in the plaintiffs’ names, is really an action to recover part of the purchase money of the sale. If the agreement to purchase would, in an action to compel entire performance, be held invalid, it must be equally incapable of a partial enforcement in this suit. The contract to purchase was an entire contract, and if any part of it is within the statute of frauds, it is invalid in toto. Brown on Frauds, § 140; Irving v. Stone, 6 Cush. 508; Biddell v. Leader, 1 B. & C. 327.
Notwithstanding some of the earlier cases to the contrary, it is now well settled that sales by auction are within the statute of frauds. 3 Parsons on, Contracts 11, note s. The contract to purchase is therefore invalid, unless the plaintiffs show a memorandum thereof in writing, signed by the defendant or his agent. The sufficiency of the memorandum produced is disputed with respect to the authority of the clerk to make the defendant’s signature, and also for a non-compliance in substance with the requirements of the statute.
In sales of real, as well as personal property, the auctioneer, as between the vendor and purchaser, is the agent of both parties. In an action by either against the other, the signature of the defendant’s name made by the auctioneer at the time of the sale, is a sufficient signing within the statute.
The agent, to make the signature, must be some third person. Neither of the contracting parties can be agent for the other. A signature by the vendor or purchaser, of the name of the other, is not a sufficient signing. Wright v. Dannah, 2 Camp. 203; Raynor v. Lithorn, 2 C. & P. 120; Sharman v. Brandt, L. R., 6 Q. B. 720; Bent v. Copp, 9 Gray 397. Where the suit is brought by the auctioneer himself, for the purposes of that suit, he is regarded as a contracting party, and a signing by him of the name of the defendant is insufficient. Fairbrother v. Simons, 5 B. & Ald. 333. But the reason of this disqualification to be the agent of the purchaser, for the purpose of signing, does not apply to the clerk of the auctioneer. When the bids are announced, and the property struck off, the clerk is the agent of both parties to record the sales and affix the signature of the purchasers, although he is employed to act as clerk by the auctioneer. No reason for his disability to act as agent for the purpose of making the signature of the purchaser, as between the latter and the auctioneer, can be adduced, which -will not operate equally to exclude the auctioneer, where the -litigation is directly between the vendor and purchaser. The question, in every case, is one of fact, whether the person by whom the signature has been made was an agent lawfully authorized to make the same. Auctioneers and brokers, by virtue of their business, by the usages of trade, are assumed to have such authority; and where the auctioneer’s clerk, or a volunteer, acts openly at a sale in entering the successful bids, as they are publicly announced, his authority to act for the purchaser in the premises is established. Consequently, it has been held that, in a suit in the name of an auctioneer against a purchaser to recover the price of the goods, the signing of the purchaser’s name by the clerk of the auctioneer, upon the successful bid
The objection to the mode of signing is not well taken.
The objection to the substance of the memorandum is more-formidable. The memorandum must contain the full terms of the contract — that is, the names of the buyer and seller, the subject of sale, the price, and terms of credit, and the conditions of sale, if any there be. Story on Sales, § 467; McLean v. Nicoll, 7 H. & N. 1024; Fitzmaurice v. Bailey, 9 H. of L. Cas. 78. In this respect, the entries in the sales-book on which the defendant’s signature was made, are radically defective. They contain none of the conditions of sale or the terms of the contract. As they appear in the printed case, they do not express even the price to be paid. To supplement this memorandum, or supply the omission of any of the essential parts of the contract, parol testimony cannot be received. The policy of the statute is to exclude testimony of that uncertain character with respect to transactions within its provisions. It therefore requires the substantive parts of the contract to appear in the writing. To admit parol evidence of any of the terms of the contract with respect to which the memorandum is silent, would open the door to the very mischief the statute was intended to suppress.
Tiie plaintiffs’ counsel endeavored to remedy the defects ilithe memorandum in the sales-book, by recourse to the conditions of sale. Indeed their right to sue is derived exclusively from that source.
The difficulty in the way of resorting to the conditions in-aid of the plaintiffs’ case, lies in the fact that they cannot be connected with the signed memorandum without violating established principles of evidence with respect to transactions within the statute. The conditions were read at the sale, and contain internal evidence that they were intended for the sale in que-tion, but were not signed by (he defendant, and are in
It is not essential that the whole bargain be contained in one memorandum. It will be sufficient to satisfy the statute if its terms can be gathered from two or more detached papers, if the signed memorandum contains such reference to the other papers as to make the latter part of the former. The connection between the signed and the unsigned papers cannot be made by parol evidence that they were actually intended by the parties to be read together, or of facts and circumstances from which such intention may be inferred. The connection between them must appear by internal evidence derived from the signed memorandum. Parol testimony will be received only for the purpose of interpretation or explanation, where technical terms are employed, or to identify papers which, by a reference in the signed memorandum, are made parts of it. Benjamin on Sales 152; 3 Parsons on Contracts 17; 1 Smith’s Lead. Cas. 465, notes to Birkmyr v. Darnell; Boydell v. Drummond, 11 East 142; Coles v. Trecothick, 9 Ves. 250; Climan v. Cooke, 1 Sch. & Leffroy 22; Dobell v. Hutchinson, 3 A. & E. 355; Ridgeway v. Morton, 6 H. of L. Cas. 237; Parkhurst v. Van Cortlandt, 1 Johns. C. R. 273.
Conditions of sale read before the biddings commenced, but not annexed to the catalogue on which the purchasers’ names were entered, or referred to therein, cannot be used to supply the terms of sale omitted in the catalogue. Hinde v. Galen, 7 East 538; Kenworthy v. Schofield, 2 B. & C. 945. In Peek v. The North Staffordshire Railway Co, the subject of connecting separate papers, in order to make out a contract under a statute requiring the contract to be in writing, was fully considered by the English courts, in the construction of the railway and canal traffic act. 17 and 18 Vic., ch. 31. The act made void all notices by railway companies limiting their liability, and enacted that no special contract respecting the receiving and forwarding of goods should be binding, unless the same be signed by the owner or persons delivering the goods for carriage. The company had issued notices that
The principle thus stated applies to separate writings in transactions within the statute of frauds.
In this case, the signed memorandum in the sales-book is not a sufficient memorandum within the statute of frauds • and the conditions of sale not being referred to therein, were not admissible in evidence.
Let a judgment of non-suit be entered.
The Chief Justice and Justice Vast Syckel concurred.
Cited in Nelson v. Smith, 7 Vr. 158.