111 Wash. 634 | Wash. | 1920
The appellant Martin sued the respondents Bateman and wife in the superior court of Lincoln county, seeking a decree of the court decreeing him to be the owner of a half interest in some four hundred and eighty acres of land situated in the county named, and requiring the respondents to convey such interest to him. In bis complaint be alleged that the respondent C. C. Bateman was formerly the owner of the land mentioned; that be had, while such owner,
The answer admitted the employment of the appellant as an attorney at law to perform legal services in the cases mentioned, hut denied the contract alleged, and further alleged a payment in full for the services performed.
On the trial of the cause, it developed from the appellant’s testimony that the agreement upon which he relied was oral, and that the respondents had parted with their title to the land prior to the commencement of the action, a fact known to the appellant, whereupon the court held that there could be no recovery either in specific performance or in damages. The appellant
On the complaint in the record, clearly there could be no recovery. In the first place, the contract was one to convey an interest in real property, and, being oral, was within the statute of frauds. In the second place, it was known to the appellant, at the time of commencing his suit, that the respondents had parted with their interests in-the property, and that specific performance could not be had even were the suit otherwise maintainable. The court was thus without jurisdiction to decree a specific performance, and this being known to the appellant at the time of the commencement of the suit, it would have been error to render an alternative judgment for damages. Morgan v. Bell, 3 Wash. 554, 28 Pac. 925, 16 L. R. A. 614; Peters v. Van Horn, 37 Wash. 550, 79 Pac. 1110; Wright v. Suydam, 59 Wash. 530, 108 Pac. 610, 110 Pac. 8; Smith v. Flathead River Coal Co., 64 Wash. 642, 117 Pac. 475.
The judgment is affirmed.