111 P. 385 | Or. | 1911
Opinion by
“Evidence of an oral agreement altering the terms of a written contract within the statute of frauds, while not evidence of an enforceable agreement, is admissible to establish a waiver of the terms of the written contract, where it appears that the contract, as altered, has been acted upon by the party offering the evidence.”
Other cases arrive at the same result, but place it on the ground of an equitable estoppel, that he who causes anything to be done, or prevents it from being done, shall not avail himself of the performance or nonperformance which he himself has occasioned. Others hold that the statute of frauds may not be invoked to perpetrate a fraud. This is upon the theory that it would be a fraud upon the vendee—he having been induced to let the time of payment go by, by oral promise of extension of the time —to permit the statute of frauds thereafter to be invoked. But, where the situation of the parties is not altered in reliance upon a subsequent oral agreement, such agreement is within the statute, and must be in writing.
There was considerable testimony introduced as to subsequent attempts to renew or reinstate the option on new conditions, but it does not convince us that there was any new agreement made, but if made it was not in writing, and therefore void under the statute of frauds.
The matter urged by the defendants, to the effect that plaintiff was not able to perform his part of the contract, and therefore could not forfeit the agreement of sale, is based upon the theory that the agreement was an executory contract of sale. But it was not such, and could only have been made such by the payment of $18,000 on the 15th of April.
*177 “The reason why the party out of possession cannot maintain such a bill is that he may bring an action at law, to test his title, which ordinarily a party in possession cannot do. Such a bill is only entertained by a court of equity because the party is not in a position to force the holder of, or one claiming to defend under, the adverse title into a court of law to contest its validity; and this, as a general rule, is a test to which a court of equity will look to determine whether the necessity of the case requires its interference.”
And this statement of the reason for the rule is quoted with approval in Comstock v. Henneberry, 66 Ill. 214, and Apperson & Co. v. Ford, 23 Ark. 746, 757. Any possession the United Railways may have, whether by way of an easement or wrongfully, cannot be determined in an ejectment action against defendants, nor can ejectment against the United Railways 'determine the rights of the defendants, and therefore the plaintiff has no legal remedy against the defendants, and equity has jurisdiction in this form of suit.
The judgment and decree of the lower court is affirmed.
Affirmed.