61 Miss. 105 | Miss. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant bound himself not to re-enter the drug business in the town of Edwards for five years, and during this period to buy all his own drugs ■ from the plaintiff, and to influence his friends to do the same, if goods could be obtained from the plaintiff on as good terms as elsewhere. The breach of contract relied on is that plaintiff was always ready and willing to sell all goods, and actually did sell them when called for, on as good terms as could be obtained elsewhere; but in violation of his contract the defendant and appellee was purchasing from other parties. Defendant pleaded that this contract was verbal, and therefore contrary to the Statute of Frauds, because by its terms it did not contemplate full performance within a year. To this plea plaintiff in effect demurred. He insists that the case is not within the statute for two reasons. 1st. He says that it was dependent upon the ability and willingness of defendant to furnish him the drugs upon as good terms as could be obtained elsewhere, and therefore it was upon “ a contingency,” to wit: defendant’s refusal to comply with its terms in this regard which might occur within less than a year; 2d, that it was dependent upon “ the contingency ” of death, which might occur within a year, and as the contract was purely personal and could not descend as an obligation resting upon the promisor’s administrator, it was not within the statute. It is undoubtedly true that a contract which is dependent upon a contingency that may occur within less than a year is not in violation of the statute, though it may, if the contingency does not occur, practically run on for a longer period than twelve months; but there is no such contingency here.
The first contingency set up by the plaintiff, as liable to occur
It is also true that a contract for an indefinite time, as, for instance, for life, or until the happening of some contingent, uncertain, and expected event is held not to be within the statute whore the contract is strictly personal and does not descend against the administrator of the promisor, because in such cases the parties are supposed to have contracted in view of the uncertainty of life, and with full knowledge that death might ensue within the year, and thus end the contract. In such cases, as the contract was purely personal, and must end with life, it is held to be fully performed by death, and the court cannot say from the terms of the agreement that such was not the contemplation of the parties; but where the agreement, as in this case, stipulates in terms for a longer period than twelve months, the court is bound to see that the deliberate attempt of the parties was to bind each other verbally in the teeth of the statute for a longer period than one year. -Where the time is indefinite, and supervening death may work completion
The test is usually to be found in the terms of the contract. Ifi in terms it stipulates for a greater period than one year it is voidable, f though it is possible that it may be completed within less than a; year. If, on the other hand, the time is not specified, the statute is not violated, though the probabilities are that it will require ; more than a year to completely perform the agreement. This rule will not solve all the cases, but it will perhaps' come as near doing so as any general one that can be laid down. Browne on the Statute of Frauds, § 274 to § 280, and cases cited. It is said, however, in many cases, that though a longer period than one year be named in the contract, the statute will not apply where the court can clearly see that it may be performed within the year and that the parties contracted on the basis and expectation that it would be. Browne on the Statute of Frauds, § 278, and cases cited. The mere physical possibility of performance is not sufficient, however, to take the case out of the statute, but such performance must clearly have been within the understanding and contemplation of the parties at the date of the contract. Browne on the Statute of Frauds, §§281, 281 a.
By none of these tests can the agreement in this case be sustained. There was an express agreement that the contract should last for five years, and it is evident that, so far from the parties contemplating full completion within a less period, the time specified was a material part of the contract. True, the contract was personal and necessarily would be ended by the death of the obligor, and this fact, it was held in Doyle v. Dixon, 97 Mass. 208, took it out of the operation of the statute; but the decision is censured by Mr. Browne and we think deservedly so. While it is true that the parties must know the uncertainty of life and the possibility of death within the year, yet where they deliberately and expressly contract for a longer period of time than the statute permits, it cannot ordinarily be said that the time named by them was