31 Miss. 17 | Miss. | 1856
delivered the opinion of the court.
It appears that the appellant and his wife, severally, were the owners of two-fifths of a tract of land, the residue of which was owned by the appellee; and that the appellee agreed with Johnson and wife to purchase their interests, and to pay for the same five dollars per acre, payable at a future day, and to pay annually ten per cent, upon the amount until the principal should be paid, and the appellee took possession. In accordance with the agreement, Johnson had- a deed of bargain and sale prepared, to be executed by himself and his wife, and it was signed and acknowledged by himself, and handed by him to a justice of the peace to obtain the signature and acknowledgment of his wife; but she refused to execute
The only question necessary to be considered is, whether the signing of the deed, under the circumstances, is a sufficient note or memorandum of the contract to satisfy the Statute of Frauds.
We have been able to find no case in which a writing signed by a party, and kept in his possession, without delivery to the other party, has been held to be a compliance with the statute; and it would appear strange that such a paper could have' that effect, when it is entirely within the power of the party to destroy it and prevent its being used as evidence of the contract. The cases cited to sustain this contract are not analogous to this. They are cases of memoranda made by auctioneers, and delivered to the purchaser, which are held to be sufficient, because the auctioneer is the agent of the vendor, who is bound by his acts; or cases of letters, or the like, written by the vendor, touching the purchase, and stating the particulars of it, and in the possession of the vendee. A case has been referred to in 6 Grattan, 78, as showing the sufficiency of the writing in this case. But we have not had access to the authority,: and being unable to perceive the reason upon which it proceeds, we cannot give our assent to it. It appears to us that when the paper has never been delivered, and cannot be produced by the party seeking the benefit of it, it could have no more effect, with reference to the Statute of Frauds, than if it had never existed;, because the vendee could not have the benefit of it without the aid of parol evidence to show its terms — and that would be to fall into.' the very mischief which the statute intended to prevent.
But there is another reason of much force why the deed in this case should not be considered as sufficient under the statute; and that is, that it does not appear that the contract, as intended, between the parties, is evidenced by the deed, or that the deed was intended as a complete memorandum of the contract. It appears that the contact was entire — that Johnson and wife should
We think, therefore, that the deed was insufficient as a memorandum under the Statute of Frauds, and that it was erroneous to decree a performance in virtue of it.
The decree is reversed and the bill dismissed.