70 Ala. 373 | Ala. | 1881
The bill in this case was filed by the appellees, to enforce a vendor’s lien for unpaid purchase-money. A bond for title, which is very in artificially drawn, was executed by the vendor, on the faith of which the purchaser went into possession. No part of the purchase-money is alleged to have been paid. The appellant' holds possession of the land in question as the privy in estate of the said vendee, being his sole devisee. As defendant in the suit below, she set up the defense of the statute of frauds,'by demwrrer to the bill; and this demurrer was overruled by the chancellor.
It may be that the more common practice is to specially urge the defense of the statute of frauds by formal plea, or by answer, in order to entitle the, defendant to rely upon it, as a defense, at the hearing. — Story’s Eq. Plead. (8th ed.), § 761 a. The recognized office of a demurrer, however, would seem, on the clearest principles, to have ample scope for the exercise of its appropriate functions in cases of this character, when the defect arises from the case made by the complainant, and is apparent on the face of the bill. And whatever the earlier English practice may have been,’ as indicated by some of the adjudications, the appropriateness of a demurrer, for such a purpose, has been settled by this court in various decisions, and is sustained by the current of modern authority,' in all cases where the bill avers the existence of a writing which affirmatively appears on the face of it to be so defective as not to conform to the requirements of the statute, or where it pre
There can be no doubt of the proposition, certainly under our own decisions, that, where a promise or agreement is of a character required by the statue of frauds to be in writing, it= is sufficient to allege in the pleadings a contract generally, without stating that it is in writing. The writing is matter of proof, and not of allegation, and the failure to aver its existence is not a legal cause for demurrer.—Martin v. Wharton, 38 Ala. 637; Browne Stat. Fr. § 505 ; Price v. Weaver, 13 Gray, 273. The rule, however, seems to be otherwise in the English Chancery Courts, where, in bills for specific performance of agreements relating to land, it is necessary to allege that the agreement is in writing, or the bill will be demurrable.—Daniel’s Ch. Prac. (5th Lond. Ed. 1871), p. 306.
The demurrer to the bill, we think, was well taken, and should not have been overruled. The instrument purporting to be a bond for title was defective, as failing to comply with the statute of frauds. Being a-contract for the sale of lands, the consideration, on price of the lands, should have been expressed in the writing. The bond contains no recital that any consideration whatever was to be paid. It was long a mooted question, under the English Statute of Frauds, whether it was necessary that such agreements, or the note or memorandum thereof required to be in writing,, should express the consideration ; and though settled affirmatively in the well known case of Wain v. Warlters, 5 East Rep. 10, the doctrine there declared was afterwards doubted by Lord Eldon, and has been the subject of much discussion in this country, accompanied by great contrariety of opinion.—Browne Stat. Frauds, §§ 390-1; Sears v. Brink, 3 Amer. Dec. 475.
The old statute, as found in Olay’s Digest, 254, § 1, contained no such requirement as the present one embodied in section 2121 of the Code of 1876, which is the same in phraseology with the sections contained in the Codes of 1852, and 1867.
The present statute is free from ambiguity of language, or doubtfulness of meaning. It declares that every contract or agreement for the sale of lands, or any interest therein, except leases for a term not longer than one year, shall be 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’’.(Code, §-2121); or
This was a .legislative adoption, in other words, of the doctrine declared in Wain v. Warlters, supra, with which the weight of authority in this country has always concurred.
Wherever the principle of this case has prevailed, it is well settled that an agreement for the sale of lands is void under the Statute of Frauds, unless th& price sad other terms ar¿ specified in the writing; or unless the given case is, for some reason, excepted from the operation of the statute; as, for example, where the purchaser has been put in possessson, having paid the whole or a part of the purchase-money. As said by Mr. Justice Bayley, in Saunders v. Wakefield, 4 Barn. & Ald. 601, “ it would be a very insufficient agreement to say, ‘ I agree to sell A. B. my lands, without specifying the terins or price.’ ” Browne St. Fr. §§ 381-4. The point was similarly ruled in Carter v. Shorter, 57 Ala. 253; and Adams v. McMillan, 7 Port. 73; and is based upon the well settled rule, that a written memorandum or agreement, to take a contract out of the Statute of Frauds, must express all the essential terms of the contract with such certainty as to render a resort to oral evidence unnecessary to ascertain the intention of the parties. Jenkins v. Harrison, 66 Ala. 345; Browne on Stat. Frauds, § 371; Holmes v. Evans, 12 Amer. Rep. 372; Sears v. Brink, 3 Amer. Dec. 475; 7 Wait’s Act. & Def. p. 36; 3 Parsons Contr. 17; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 268.
The other point raised by the demurrer is, that the bill fails to aver a written promise by the vendee to pay the purchase-money to the vendor, but shows that such promise was only oral. Whether the requirement of the statute, that the written agreement shall be “ subscribed by the pa/rty to be charged therewith,” does not mean a written signature by the defendant who is sought to be charged by suit, or against whom the writing is sought to be enforced, need not be here decided, as the determination of this point is not necessary to the decision of the case.
The bond for title described in the bill is of no legal validity, as being offensive to the Statute of Frauds on the ground above discussed. The chancellor erred in not sustaining the demurrer to the bill for this reason; and his decree is accordingly reversed, and the cause is' remanded.