26 Ga. 551 | Ga. | 1858
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
The defendant pleaded the statute of frauds, that the agreement upon which the action was brought was not to be performed within the space of a year from the making thereof, and that it was not in writing. The plea is not in precise form, but it is substantially correct. It was not excepted to, and had it been, it might have been amended in the Court below. On the trial, no writing was produced, but a witness testified that four or five days before Christmas, 1854, he had a conversation with the defendant’s intestate, who told him that he had employed plaintiff as his overseer for 1855. Afterwards, on the first Monday in January, said intestate informed him that he had discharged the plaintiff from his contract of serving him in 1855, and assigned as a reason, that he had written a letter to the plaintiff about his cotton, and he had not noticed it. The Court charged the jury that' if they believed from the evidence, that the contract was made, and the plaintiff discharged before the first day of January, 1855, they ought to find for the defendant, unless it appeared from the evidence that the contract was in writing. To this charge of the Court, the complainant’s counsel excepted. There is no other assignment of error in the record.
The statute of frauds is explicit on the subject of such contracts. It declares that no action shall be brought whereby to charge any person upon any agreement that is not to be performed' within the space of one year, from the making
Judgment affirmed.