55 So. 102 | Ala. | 1911
Appellant sued appellee for breach of a contract by which appellant sold, or agreed to sell, and appellee to purchase, about 7,000 acres of land. The land was described as situated in the counties of Winston, Lawrence, Lamar, and Walker, state of Alabama, and as embracing “6,000 acres, more or less, in the north portion of Winston county, 600 acres, more or less, in Lawrence county, 188 acres, more or less, in Lamar county, 500 acres, more or less, in Walker county, aggregating 7,238 acres.” Among other things, the contract required the vendor (plaintiff) to furnish “a complete and guaranteed abstract of title” to the land, and stipulated that the contract should be “void until said guaranteed abstract of title is furnished”; also that defendant should pay $4 “for every acre of land mentioned in this contract and guaranteed as above set out, said abstract of title to be approved by the attorney at law” of defendant. The contract stipulated that the first payment should be made on July 1, 1907, but that, if on said date the abstract had not been approved, nothing should become due, “except as to 438 acres of above-mentioned, which is not now abstracted, but title to same to be approved by an attorney at law.”
The complaint contained 11 counts, each declaring as for breach of the contract to purhase. All counts, except those numbered 1, 9, 10 and 11, were eliminated at the request or by consent of plaintiff (appellant here). Demurrers were sustained as to each of the remaining counts as last amended; and plaintiff declined to plead further and suffered judgment final thereon. From that judgment, plaintiff appeals, assigning errors as for sustaining demurrers to counts, 1, 9, 10 and 11, as last amended.
There was a great number of separate causes of demurrer assigned as to each of the counts, and the judg
The contract which is set out in the complaint, and which is alleged in each count to have been breached by the defendant, is void on its face, as for uncertainty of description of the land sold or intended to be sold. Contracts of this class, to support an action as for breach thereof, or an action for specific performance, must be valid and binding upon both parties. The obligations must be mutual. Executory contracts wanting in mutuality are not enforceable. Contracts may be so uncertain as to parties or subject-matter as to be incapable of specific performance, or to support an action for damages for breach thereof.—Christie, Lowe & Heyworth v. Patton, 148 Ala. 324, 42 South. 614; Erwin v. Erwin, 25 Ala. 236; Howard v. E. T., V. & G. R. R. Co., 91 Ala. 268, 8 South. 868.
Contracts as to the sale of lands, which fail to comply with the statute of frauds upon that subject, cannot be enforced; nor will they support an action as for breach thereof, because the statute declares that they are void unless they conform to the statute. Code, 1907, § 4289. “The rule that parol evidence may be introduced to supply defects and omissions in written instruments, which do not vary or contradict its terms, applies only to contracts which are valid; but the parol evidence is not admissible to render valid undertakings which are void by reason of the statute of frauds. * * * To
Contracts for the sale of lands must describe the lands with such certainty that they can be identified without resorting to oral evidence. While the writing need not give a technical description of the lands contracted for, it must contain facts sufficient to identify them. If it is necessary to resort to oral evidence of the intention of the parties as to the lands bargained for, the writing is not sufficient, and the statute is not complied with. It is the exclusion of parol evidence as to these important matters that the statute is intended to accomplish.—Ala. Min. L. Co. v. Jackson, 121 Ala. 172, 25 South. 709, 77 Am. St. Rep. 46; Alba v. Strong, 94 Ala. 163, 10 South. 242; Page on Contracts, § 699; Phillips v. Adams, 70 Ala 376.
“The statute of frauds is matter of defense which must, generally, be insisted on by answer or by plea.—
While the above are chancery cases, the same rule has been extended to actions at law.—White v. Levy, 93 Ala. 487, 9 South 164; Strouse v. Eiting, 110 Ala. 139, 20 South 123.
The contract declared on being for the sale of lands, and it being set out in extenso in each count, and wholly failing to describe the lands contracted to he sold, each count, therefore, proclaimed it's own invalidity, and was rendered subject to demurrer on that account.
There are other insuperable objections to maintaining this.action; but it is unnecessary to discuss them, as the judgment of the lower court is final, and must be affirmed, for the reasons above .assigned.
Affirmed.