25 S.D. 432 | S.D. | 1910
This action was commenced in- the justice court by service of a money demand summons followed by a complaint, alleging the delivery by plaintiff to defendant of 200 apple trees for which defendant 'promised -to pay plaintiff the sum of $50, which he has since neglected to- pay. The defendant, appearing in justice court, interposed a general denial. Upon trial in justice court the defendant cross-examined the plaintiff, but offered no evidence in his own behalf. The justice court entered judgment for the plaintiff, and defendant appealed to the circuit court, demanding therein a new trial -on both i-ssues of law and of
The assignments of error may well be condensed under the following contentions on the part of plaintiff, as stated in his brief: “ (i) That the contract was such as was not within the statute of frauds. (2) That, even if conceded that-the contract was within the statute, the defendant muist be held to- have waived the effect thereof (a) by his failure to plead the statute in defense; (b) by his failure to object to the proof of the oral contract at the trial in the justice’s court, though represented by his attorney who was present at and took active part in said trial; (c) by his failure to object to the evidence showing an oral contract and the evidence of the performance thereof by the plaintiff, upon the trial of the case in the circuit court.”
. In support of the first contention plaintiff insists that a sale of apple trees does not come under the statute of frauds of this state, but under an exception found in the laws of this state. The statute of frauds of South Dakota, as found in sections 1238 and 1309 of the Revised Civil Code, iso- far as same .pertains to this case, provides that a sale or agreement for sale of personal property for a price of $50 or more is invalid unless the agreement or some note or memorandum -thereof be in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged-or by'his agent, or the buyer accepts or receives part of the thing sold, or the buyer at the time of the sale pays part of the purchase price. Section 1310 of such Code, being the section- upon which plaintiff relies, provides: “An agreement to manufacture a thing from materials furnished by the manufacturer or by another is not within the provisions of the last section.” Plaintiff contends that, inasmuch as it was necessary for him to perform certain work in preparing these trees for delivery to defendant, the -statute of frauds does not appfy, and that the facts bring -the case under said section 1310. Plaintiff has cited several authorities, but to our mind they are very far from being analogous to the case at bar, even conceding plaintiff’s claim that work and labor had to be performed to prepare the trees for delivery. The evidence, however, wholly fails to show that
In considering the other questions raised by plaintiff, it is well first to note the difference between our statute and the English statute of fraud's, which statute is still found'in some of the states'. Under the old English statute .the contract was valid,' the statute declaring it to be not enforceable. Thus the statute went merely to the remedy, .prescribing the rules of evidence and declaring that without certain evidence the contract could not be enforced. Under our statute, however, the contract is invalid unless certain requisites for a valid contract exist. Pierce v. Clark, 71 Minn. 114, 73 N. W. 522; Brandeis v. Neustadtl, 13 Wis. 142. In this last case the court distinguishing between the two forms of statutes uses the following language: “Our statute is entirely silent as to the bringing or maintaining of actions upon 'such contracts, or the kind of evidence by which they shall be established; but the eighth section (chapter 106) declares that every contract for the leasing for a longer period than one year, or .for the sale of any lands, or any interest in lands, shall be void,, unless the contract, or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, be in writing, and be subscribed by the party by whom the lease or sale is to be made. By -the tenth section it is enacted that nothing therein contained shall be construed to abridge the powers of courts to compel -the specific performance of agreements, in cases of part performance of such agreements. * * * The statute of England, and those which are copied after it, do not touch the contracts embraced in them, nor declare that they shall be illegal
The state of Ohio has a statute similar to the English statute, and in a case before that court (Heaton v. Eldridge, 56 Ohio St. 87, 46 N. E. 638, 36 L. R. A. 817, 60 Am. St. Rep. 737), wherein the court was called upon to determine whether or not a contract entered into in one state and which was before the courts of another state for enforcement should be construed according to the laws of the state where the contract was entered into', or according to those of the jurisdiction of the court, the court among other things said: “The language of the statute under consideration, that no action shall be brought on any agreement therein mentioned unless it, or ‘some memorandum or note thereof, is in writing and signed by the party to be charged/ fairly imports that the agreement precedes the written memorandum, and may exist as a complete and valid agreement, independent of the writing. The memorandum, which is merely the evidence of the contract, may be made and signed after the completion of the agreement, and even a letter from the party to be charged, reciting the terms of the agreement, is sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the statute; but it cannot be said that the letter constitutes the agreement. That w-as made when the minds of the parties met with respect to its terms, and the letter furnishes the necessary evidence to prove the agreement in an action for its enforcement. And, generally, when parties reduce their contracts to writing, the writing becomes the evidence of the agreement which they had previously entered into; and, having adopted that mode of evidencing their agreement, the parties are not allowed to make proof of it by verbal testimony.
Considering now the difference between these two classes of statutes — that, under one the contract is valid but not enforceable without certain proof can be made, while under the other the contract itself never becomes valid until it is entered into in the manner prescribed by statute or unless certain part preformance prescribed by statute has taken place — we see that, upon the trial, if one is attempting to prove a state of facts which brings the particular case under the bar of a statute such as we have in South Dakota, it would be an attempt to prove an invalid contract by perfectly competent evidence; while in the other case it would be an attempt to enforce a contract which, under the law, was absolutely valid, but by means of incompetent evidence. Bearing this distinction in mind and applying the same to the case at bar, it must be readly seen that there was nothing incompetent in the proof offered by plaintiff. All that was necessary was for plaintiff to have offered further proof showing acceptance of the trees or payment of purchase price and a valid contract would have been established; but, as the evidence stood when the plaintiff rested his case, while such evidence was competent, it failed to establish
Under a statute such as ours, rendering the contract invalid, the defendant was not called upon to- plead the statute as a defense. In view of his general denial, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove the contract, and to prove one that 'was valid. Regarding the point made by appellant that the respondent waived his rights by offering no- evidence in the justice court, it is clear that the appellant is wrong in this contention. Under our statute, the defendant can defend or not in the justice court, without in any manner abridging his right to demand a new trial in the circuit court retaining, in the circuit court, all rights that he might have exercised in the justice court.
The judgment of the trial court and the order denying a new trial are affirmed.