310 Mass. 774 | Mass. | 1942
The plaintiff has brought this bill in equity for the specific performance of an oral contract of the defendants to convey to her a parcel of land with a dwelling house and a garage thereon. The case was tried before a judge of the Superior Court, and the evidence is reported. The judge made a finding of facts, and ordered the entry of a final decree which required the defendants to convey the premises in question to the plaintiff.
Following the meeting of Drake and the plaintiff on the premises, an oral contract of purchase and sale was made, and thereafter Drake gave to the plaintiff a writing, signed by him, which read as follows: “$200.00 Newton, Mass., Sept. 17, ’40 Received of Harriet S. Michelson, Tr. check for $200.00 as a deposit on acct. of agreed cash price of $3,500. for Sherman property with 11,000 or more sq. feet of land on Eliot Memorial Drive and numbered 15 Eliot Memorial Drive, Newton.”
However plain and complete the terms of an oral contract for the sale and purchase of real estate, it cannot be enforced against a party thereto unless, as required by the statute of frauds, he, or his agent, has signed a written memorandum which recites the essential elements of the contract with reasonable certainty. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 259, § 1, Fourth. Riley v. Farnsworth, 116 Mass. 223, 225. Gardner v. Hazelton, 121 Mass. 494, 495. Des Brisay v.
When a seller of land owns only one estate which answers the description given in a memorandum, that must be taken to be the estate to which the memorandum refers, and a memorandum that contains only a slight description of such an estate will satisfy the requirements of the statute of frauds. Hurley v. Brown, 98 Mass. 545, 548. Mead v. Parker, 115 Mass. 413, 414. Scanlan v. Geddes, 112 Mass. 15, 17. The description in a memorandum by the name by which an estate is commonly known in the community where it is located may meet the purposes of the statute. Ryder v. Loomis, 161 Mass. 161. Bradley v. Haven, 208 Mass. 300, 302. Noyes v. Bragg, 220 Mass. 106, 110. Where the words of a memorandum show on their face that they may be applicable either to one estate only, or to more than one estate, if, “on the existing facts, they apply only to one, then the document identifies the land; if not, it fails to do so. In every case, the words used must be translated into things and facts by paroi evidence. But if, when so translated, they do not ‘identify the estate intended, as the only one which would satisfy the description,’ they do not satisfy the statute.” Doherty v. Hill, 144 Mass. 465, 468. Miller v. Burt, 196 Mass. 395, 396. Harrigan v. Dodge, 200 Mass. 357, 359.
The judge found that the parties in their oral contract agreed as to the location of the boundary line between the land sold and the land retained by the defendants. The vital question here presented is not what the parties agreed to in their oral contract, but whether the content of the memorandum, signed by the defendants’ agent, satisfies the requirements of the statute of frauds. Resort cannot be had to the terms of an oral contract for the sale of land to supply deficiencies in a memorandum. Whelan v. Sullivan, 102 Mass. 204, 206. The policy of the statute is that the essentials of an oral contract for the sale of land must be stated with reasonable certainty in a written memorandum. Dutton v. Bennett, 256 Mass. 397, 403. Oral evidence is admissible but only to interpret and apply the language of the memorandum in order to ascertain the meaning of the words there used. Harrigan v. Dodge, 200 Mass. 357, 359. Mead v. Parker, 115 Mass. 413, 415.
The location of the boundary line between the land sold and the land kept by the defendants was an essential element of the oral contract. But no reference whatever to the location of the boundary line appears in the memoran
Decree reversed.
Bill dismissed with costs.