79 P. 195 | Idaho | 1904
This action was commenced in the district court of Idaho county, to enforce the specific performance of a contract alleged to have been entered into on the seventeenth day of November, 1902, and by the terms of which it is alleged plaintiff — appellant here — was to pay to defendant — ■ respondent here — $2,000 for certain real estate described in the complaint as the community property of defendants. Plaintiff was to assume the payment of a certain mortgage of $800 and
. That on January 27, 1903, plaintiff tendered to .said Eogers the full amount due on said lands, $1,010, and demanded a deed for same, which was refused. Again, on February 17, 1903, a further tender was made which was refused. Plaintiff alleges readiness and willingness on his part to perform his contract. Plaintiff further alleges that on December 29, 1902, defendants, Eogers and wife, executed to Morgan F. Eogers a mortgage upon said lands in the sum of $500; that the defendants have conspired together and by fraud and collusion have refused to complete said contract; that Morgan F. Eogers is the father of defendant, Albert H. Eogers; that in further conspiracy and fraud defendants caused to be filed by defendant Iva Eogers, on the sixth day of February, 1903, a claim, or pretended claim, of homestead on said premises. This statement is taken from appellant’s brief. It is concurred in by counsel for respondent with the exception that they insist that the record shows that Albert H. Eogers and wife, with their family, resided upon the property as a homestead, and further that the complaint does not allege part performance, possession or valuable improvements upon said land or any part thereof by appellant. The facts disclosed by this statement seem to be borne out by the record. Defendants Albert H. and Iva Eogers demurred to the complaint jointly, and Morgan F. Eogers separately. If these demurrers were ever disposed of by the court it is not shown by the record. On the- day of September, answers were filed by the defendants, putting in issue all the material allegations of the complaint. On the
"Lowe, Idaho, Nov. 17, 1902.
"Received from S. C. Kurdy one hundred and ninety ($190.00) dollars on land sec. 25, Ts. 32, R. 2 E., 160 acres. "$190.00.
"IVA ROGERS.
"A. H. ROGERS.”
Appellant testified that Mrs. Rogers wrote the receipt — the written part of the receipt.
Plaintiff next introduced a letter from defendant A. H. Rogers, as follows:
PLAINTIFFS EXHIBIT "C.”
"Lowe, Idaho, Dec. 7th, 1902.
“Mr. S. C. Kurdy.
“Dear Sir: I received your letter yesterday. I have been studying over this deal lately. It puts me in a bad shape, and isn’t near enough for the place, and as we haven’t signed the deed yet, I will send you your money back, and Asker says he can’t pay the note yet. I will pay you back every cent you have paid me. I have got the money. You had better let me know how you want me to send it. I can’t make the deal I was aiming to, and it makes me in a bad shape if I let my place go, and as either of us have not signed the deed, we have decided to keep it. A., H. ROGERS.”
Plaintiff’s Exhibit “D” is as follows:
“Lowe, Idaho, Jan. 26, 1903.
"Mr. S. O. Kurdy.
' "Dear Sir: As I received your letter yesterday, in answer I -want to say in regard to your holding us to a contract you have mot got any contract to hold us to. That is only a receipt and*421 it is not paid. The note has not been paid. Iva says that she will not sign the deed for that price. She has never said she would sign the deed. The place is worth $3,000, and I will spend $1,000 before we will take that. Now, as it is the way it is, we will do this. She says she will sign the deed for $500, and as to suing us, I have got as much money to spend as you have, and you will have to stand good for the cost. I have as good lawyers as Mr. Fulton is. A. H. EOGERS.”
Exhibit “A” is a draft of a deed with usual covenants, which was never signed by either of the defendants. It will be seen that the only question presented to us is whether the receipt in evidence as plaintiff’s exhibit was sufficient to take the case out of the control of the statute of frauds. If it was, it was error to sustain the motion for a nonsuit; otherwise, the judgment must be affirmed.
Section 6007 says: “No estate or interest in real property, other than for leases for a term not exceeding one year, nor any trust or power over or concerning it, or in any manner relating thereto, can be created, granted, assigned, surrendered, or declared, otherwise than by operation of law or a conveyance or other instrument in writing subscribed by the party creating, granting, assigning, surrendering or declaring the same, or by his lawful agent thereunto authorized by writing.”
Section 2921 says: “No estate in the homestead of a married person, or any part of the community property occupied as a residence by a married person can be conveyed or encumbered by act of the party, unless both husband and wife join in the execution of the instrument by which it is so conveyed or encumbered, and it be acknowledged by the wife as provided in chapter 3 of this title.”
Subdivision 5 of section 6009 says: “An agreement for the sale of real estate must be in writing subscribed by the party sought to be charged.”
Is the receipt (Plaintiff’s Exhibit “B”), if it may be so* called, sufficient to satisfy these provisions of the statute ? Appellants insist that the receipt, together with the other exhibits, were at least sufficient to put the defendants on their proof, and hence the motion for nonsuit was erroneously sustained.
The case of Catterlin v. Bush, 39 Or. 496, 59 Pac. 706, 61 Pac. 1064, discusses a very similar question, and holds the following memorandum insufficient under the statute of frauds:
“Price $6,000. C. pays note for $200. Deed to be special warranty, and C. pays for cablegram, money to be paid on or before forty days. Possession when money paid and deed given to W. for 297 acres more or less as shown by deed. • Abstract furnished held insufficient.”
This is the holding of the courts generally and seems to be the accepted doctrine to govern all cases of this character.
The memorandum or receipt, Plaintiff’s Exhibit “B,” is deficient in many of the elements necessary to enforce specific performance. It does not state the consideration or any of the terms or conditions of the sale. It does not describe the land or even the county or state where situated. It is a well-settled
The judgment is affirmed with costs to respondent.