46 So. 642 | Ala. | 1908
This is an action brought by the plaintiff, the appellant, to recover damages for breach of covenant in a lease contract of land. There are several assignments of error, based on rulings of the
The lease is in writing, and is signed, “James F. Johnson, by R. D. Johnson, Jr.,” and is also signed by the plaintiff. The contention of the defendant, appellee here, is that his name was not signed to the lease by one thereunto lawfully authorized in writing by him to do so. The statute (section 2152 of the Civil Code of 1896) is as follows: “In the following cases, every agreement is void, unless such agreement or some note or memorandum thereof, expressing the consideration, is in writing, and subscribed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person by him thereunto lawfully authorized in writing * * * (5) Every contract for the sale of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, or of any interest therein, except leases for a term not longer than one .year, unless the purchase money, of any portion thereof, he paid, and the purchaser be put in possession of the land by the seller.” In the case before us the contract is in writing, and subscribed by one purporting to be the agent of the defendant. The pivotal question presented for consideration is whether R. D. Johnston, Jr., who •signed the defendant’s name to the lease, was thereunto in writing by the defendant lawfully authorized to do so.
As to what may constitute a writing sufficient to take the transaction without the influence of the statute of frauds, we think there can be no' doubt that the principle is the same whether the question relates to a trans: ■action directly between the parties, or where the party •sought to he charged has acted through an agent; and upon the same principle that a compliance with the
It is not denied that R. D. Johnson, Jr., who executed the lease contract in the name of the defendant, James F. Johnson, was the agent of the latter for the purpose of renting out the defendant’s property and collecting the rents on the same. The defendant resided in Ashe-ville, N. 0., and the agent, R. D. Johnston, Jr., resided in the city of Birmingham, Ala. The correspondence between the defendant and the agent which was introduced in evidence unquestionably authorized the making of a. lease of the property in question to the plaintiff by the agent. But it is contended by the defendant that there was a limitation put upon the power and authority given the agent by him, which was exceeded by the agent in the execution of the lease contract, and therefore the contract sued on was not executed by one thereunto lawfully authorized in writing by him. The
There was authority in Avriting from the defendant to his agent, R. D. Johnston, Jr., to make the lease of the storehouse. This met the statute of frauds. That the agent exceeded the limitation put on his power in making the contract, in not at the same time taking security for the payment of the rents, does not, we think, involve the question of the statute of frauds, but a wholly different proposition, going to the insufficiency of the contract to' 'bind the defendant for the failure of the agent to take the required security at the date of its execution. This [failure to give the (required security would no doubt furnish the defendant a. just and reasonable excuse for repudiating the agent’s action. But the condition is such a one as may be expressly or impliedly waived. Moreover, as stated above, the kind or character of the security was not designated, the requirement only being that security for the payment of the rents should be given, and this the plaintiff offered to do long before the commencement of the term of the lease. No time being fixed for the giving of the security, the offer by the plaintiff to give, and his expressed readiness when the contract was executed to give it whenever the agent requested, was such a compliance on his part with the terms of the contract, as authorized by the defendant, as would bind the defendant. The proper measure of damages .in such .a case is, we think, the
The view we have taken of the case compels a reversal of the judgment appealed from, and what we have said will indicate the errors committed by the lower court on the trial of the cause, and will also serve to guide the court’s action on another trial.
Beversed and remanded.