Plaintiff (appellant herein) brought this action under the Deceptive Trade Prac *45 tices-Consumer Protection Act, Tex.Bus. & Comm.Code Ann. § 17.41 et seq. (Supp. 1980), hereinafter “DTPA”, for damages arising out of an alleged oral misrepresentation that defendants would sell a certain parcel of real estate to plaintiff for $75,000, The trial court entered summary judgment that plaintiff take nothing, and we affirm.
Plaintiff conceded in oral аrgument that if the statute of frauds, Tex.Bus. & Comm. Code Ann. § 26.01 (1968), and as amended (Supp.1980), applies to this case, the trial court’s action in granting summary judgment was proper. Thus the sоle question for our determination is whether the statute of frauds precludes actions under DTPA for damages for deceptive acts committed in connection with the sale of real estate.
The sequence of events leading up to this suit is not contested. Plaintiff testified that he called Annette L. Jackson and discussed with her the possibility that he might purchase the building, of which he was already a tenant. Defendant Jackson subsequently wrote a letter to plaintiff stating that “[t]he priсe we discussed for Orleans & Wall is all right ...” but refusing seller financing. Plaintiff made no further effort to pursue the transaction until after hе learned of the sale of the building to a third party. According to plaintiff’s brief, “[t]he violation of the Deceptive Trаde Practices-Consumer Protection Act was the representation by Annette L. Jackson that a piece оf real estate in Jefferson County would be sold to plaintiff for the sum of $75,000 and the subsequent sale within the next few days by defendants of that same piece of property for a sum of $105,000.”
The basis for computation of damages sought is the differenсe between the price allegedly promised and the price of $105,000 received by defendants in the subsequent sale of the property. Plaintiff argues that although the measure of damages is the amount plaintiff would have gained had thе oral contract been performed, the action is in tort for misrepresentations made unlawful by DTPA. Defendants cоunter that regardless of the terms in which it is couched, the action amounts to a suit for damages for failure to perfоrm an oral contract for the sale of land.
Although this is a case of first impression under DTPA, we do not write on a cleаn slate. While there is some confusion in the case law on this subject, an analysis reveals that the holdings have for the mоst part been harmonious. The reasoning of the court in
Collins v. McCombs,
“Even if it be conceded that an action in tort for [misrepresentation] is unaffected by the provisions of the statute of frauds, the judicial disregard of the statute should bе limited to situations in which the essence of the action truly sounds in tort.... Since plaintiff is here seeking to recover what he would have gained had the promise been performed, it is apparent that his action, while cast in language sоunding in tort, is an indirect attempt to recover for the breach of the unenforceable promise and is, therefore, barred by the statute of frauds. See Canell v. Arcola Housing Corp.,65 So.2d 849 (Fla.Sup.1953); Papanikolas v. Sampson,73 Utah 404 ,274 P. 856 (1929).”
But see
Hastings v. Houston Shell & Concrete,
The
Collins
court in the omitted portion of the abovе language notes an exception to its rule of damages in cases arising under
§ 27.01, Tex.Bus. & Comm.Code Ann. (1968),
relating to fraud in the
inducement
in real estate transactions. Thе distinctions in the causes of action, the measures of damages, and the applicability of the statute of frauds аre illustrated by
Sibley v. Southland Life Ins. Co.,
*46
In contrast to
Sibley
is
Wade v. State National Bank,
Thus it is not only the nature of damages sought but also the relationship of the promise to the purposes of the statute of frauds which controls the application of the statute.
Rankin v. Naftalis,
In the case at bar, both the alleged misrepresentation and the damages sought support the conclusion that plaintiff is attempting to recover damages for failure to perform an oral promise governed by the statute of frauds. No collateral agreement whatever is alleged or proved and no attempt is made to establish any acts other than the рromise to convey and the failure to do so. Under this state of the record, we must conclude that the trial court рroperly determined that the cause of action was for breach of contract and was therefore unenforceable under the statute of frauds. Collins v. McCombs, supra.
We are in accord with this language used in Wade v.
State National Bank,
supra (
“We fail to see how there could be any recovery for fraud involving the brеach of an unenforceable contract. To hold otherwise would be to create an anomoly, and allow one to do indirectly what he could not by law do directly.”
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the trial court is AFFIRMED.
