78 N.J.L. 54 | N.J. | 1909
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Action was brought by the appellee in the District Court lo recover the sum expended in repairing a cement sidewalk that had been badly laid by the appellant, who had agreed that the sidewalk should remain in good condition for five years. The making of this oral agreement was established to the satisfaction of the trial court. It was also proved without contradiction that within one year after the making of this agreement it was broken by the upheaval of the sidewalk and that the amount paid by the appellee in the repair of the sidewalk was $165, for which amount judgment was rendered. To reverse this judgment two sections of the statute of frauds are relied upon — first, that the agreement was one concerning an interest in land, and second, that it was not to be performed within one year from the making thereof.
The first ground is untirely untenable. It requires no argument to show that under an agreement to lay a sidewalk the contractor talcos no interest in the land and the circumstance relied upon in the present case, viz., that the contractor accepted a lower price upon condition that he might have the sand excavated in the course of the work, does not bring the agreement within the statute. This was a mere mode of payment, and the sand when excavated and applied to such, payment was persona] property and not land or any interest therein.
The second ground cannot avail the appellant for the reason that although his agreement covers five years it was not one that was not to be performed within one year and within
The judgment of the Second District Court of the city of Newark is affirmed.