71 Me. 530 | Me. | 1880
This is an action of assumpsit by a son. against his father, for work and labor, materials furnished and on. the money counts.
It appears in evidence, that the plaintiff, residing in California,, received a letter from his brother, Wesley Segars, dated January 14, 1872, containing these words : "I wish you would come home' and take care of the old folks. We are entirely spoiled for' anything of that kind, indeed we are, and I expected as much-before I came from the West. We have had our own way so long, that it has become second nature, and it is so hard to take-a new course, and so entirely different from the one you have
"Upon the evidence relating to the letter, the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that if they find from the •evidence that the proposition of Wesley Segars, contained in his letter was ratified and agreed to by the defendant as his own, : and as such accepted by the plaintiff, the writing is a valid contract binding the defendant to a conveyance of an undivided half of the farm.” This instruction was refused and it is insisted that it should have been given.
By B. S., c. Ill, § 1, "No action shall be brought and main- ■ tained in any of the following cases : . . Fourthly, upon any contract for the sale of lands, tenements or hereditaments, or of • any interest in or concerning them . . unless the promise, contract or agreement, upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing, and be •signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by some person '.thereto lawfully authorized.”
By B. S., c. 73, § 10, no estate or interests in lands, unless -created by some writing and signed by the grantor or his attorney, ¡ shall have any greater force or effect than an estate or tenancy ; at will.
The requested instruction refers "to the evidence relating to 'the letter.” That evidence is properly to be considered as bear'ing upon the requested instruction.
The letter is not signed by the defendant. The writer testifies 'that it was written without the knowledge or authority of the •defendant. Indeed, that is apparent from the context. Here is no promise, contract or memorandum. There does not purport to be any. It was not written for, or at the instance of the •defendant. It does not bind him. It does not purport to bind
Here then is no promise, contract or agreement, no memorandum nor note thereof signed by the party to be charged or by any person thereto fully authorized. There was none intended.
If there had been, there was no sufficient ratification. The defendant testifies that he does "not recollect any conversation with him in respect to his staying with us” . . that he "never at any time promised to give him a deed of the property or any part of it.” This negatives all pretence of a ratification, if true.
But, disregarding the defendant’s testimony on this most essential point, his learned counsel relies on that of the plaintiff, who testified that shortly after his return, he had a talk with his father and mother about his expectations if he remained with them, and the understanding was that he was to have half of the farm — that he spoke to his father about the letters sent him, saying he should have if he came home, one half of the place, giving him security for the other half, and that he wanted the matter attended to, and that he shew him the letter of January 14, 1872, — that his father said that was all right and he intended to carry it out just as it was all written there.
But this is not evidence that the letter was written by the defendant’s authority, or that he ratified or intended to ratify it as the act of an agent, an act then first brought to his knowledge. As was remarked by Bramwell, B., in Murphy v. Boes, 10 L. R. Ex. Cases, 126 : "If he was the defendant’s agent, when did the agency commence? Was he agent at the time he wrote ? This will hardly be suggested. Did he become agent afterwards by ratification ? If so, you would come to this difficulty, that when the agent wrote the paper, he did not profess to act for the defendant.”
It will hardly be pretended that at the time of this conversation with his son, he supposed or understood that he was making a new contract or ratifying an old one, or one made by one acting as agent without authority. "I think,” remarks Bramwell, B., in the ease last cited : "that the common understanding is a good.
2. The farm of the defendant was deeded to his son, Wesley Segars, to whom as a witness the following question was proposed by defendant’s counsel: "At whose instigation was the farm deeded to you? Answer. — "My father’s instigation.” What was said between you and your father.” The answer to this question was properly excluded. It was to make the defendant’s declaration evidence in his own behalf.
3. The answer to the inquiry of the defendant as to — "What brought about the making of the deed to Wesley?” was properly excluded. The inducements to the making of that deed, had nothing to do with the contract between the parties to this litigation.
4. There was an agreement of some sort between these parties in relation to real estate. It was not in writing. It was void by the statute of frauds. In such case, the law is well settled that the party who has fully complied with its terms, is entitled to recover back the payments made, whether in labor or money, if the other party has incapacitated himself from its performance, or has refused to perform. Jellison v. Jordan, 68 Maine, 373; Cook v. Doggett, 2 Allen, 439; Crawford v. Parsons, 18 N. H. 293.
There are no exceptions to any rulings of the court, except those already considered. Those given must be regarded as satisfactory. The evidence as to the various facts in dispute is contradictory. The jury saw and heard the witnesses. They are the recognized judges of its weight, and after a careful examination of the able and ingenious argument of the learned counsel for the defendant, we perceive no sufficient reason for interfering with their conclusion.
Motion and exception overruled.