39 Minn. 197 | Minn. | 1888
The parties stand in the relation of father and son. The defendant, the father, owned a large farm in the county of Dodge. On the 5th day of March, 1886, there were pending in the district court in said county five several actions or proceedings,— one an action by plaintiff against this defendant to recover about $15,000, for services rendered between June, 1879, and January, 1886; one an action by plaintiff against defendant to recover $850, the value of five shares of the capital stock of the First National Bank óf Kasson, claimed by plaintiff to have belonged to him, and to have been wrongfully converted to his own use by defendant, January 29, 1886; one against said bank, of which this defendant was the president, to recover $850, the value of five shares of the stock of the bank claimed by plaintiff to have belonged to him, and to have been converted and disposed of by the bank January 29, 1886, which stock was also claimed by this defendant to belong to him; one against said bank to recover $190, money deposited by plaintiff in the bank prior to January 30, 1886, and which money this defendant claimed belonged to him; and one a proceeding by mandamus, on the relation of this defendant, against the county auditor of Dodge county, to compel him to issue to the relator his warrant upon the
It is not found by the court below that plaintiff’s marriage, or that any agreement by him to marry, formed any part of the consideration for defendant’s agreement to convey. The marriage is therefore to be left out of account in considering the matter of part-performance. So is the matter of possession; for, although plaintiff worked on the farm under the direction of the defendant after the agreement, it is not found that such working was because of the agreement, and it is found that plaintiff never was at any time in the possession or control of the premises, or any part thereof, and never made any improvement thereon. The question, then, is, was the doing by the plaintiff of the things which we have mentioned,
The principle that must control the decision of the question is stated (in accordance with all the authorities) in Brown v. Hoag, 85 Minn. 373, (29 N. W. Rep. 135,) thus: “The doctrine of part-performance rests on the ground of fraud. The underlying principle is that where one of the contracting parties has been induced or allowed to alter his situation on the faith of an oral agreement within the statute, to such an extent that it would be a fraud on the part of the other party to set up its invalidity, equity will make the case an exception to the statute.” That is, equity will not permit the statute, the purpose of which was to prevent fraud, to be used as a means of committing it. The difficulty is in applying the principle to the facts of the particular case, and in determining whether a fraud will result unless the agreement be enforced. Acts of part-performance may be done which will not take the case out of the statute. Thus, though the purchasers pay a part or the whole of the purchase-money, it will not suffice; because (although some authorities give a different reason for it) a recovery may be had of the money paid, and that is, in law, deemed an adequate remedy to prevent fraud. And so where the consideration is paid in services of such a character that their value may be estimated and liquidated in money, so as measurably to make the vendee whole. And it may be stated, generally, that where the party has another remedy that will restore him substantially and adequately to the situation he was in before, the statute will avoid the agreement. In case of payment in services, if their character be such that it is impossible to estimate their value by any' pecuniary standard, and it is evident they were not intended to be measured by any such standard, the performance of them is a part-performance. Instances of that kind are furnished in Rhodes v. Rhodes, 3 Sandf. Ch. 305; Davison v. Davison, 13 N. J. Eq. 246; Gupton v. Gupton, 47 Mo. 37; Sutton v. Hayden, 62 Mo. 101; Hiatt v. Williams, 72 Mo. 214, in which the services agreed on were'the care and support during life of one of the parties.
In this case no remedy is apparent that will restore plaintiff to the situation he was in, or put him in as good a situation as he was in, at the time of making the agreement. If the actions and proceedings then pending could be reinstated by vacating the dismissals, still plaintiff irretrievably lost the opportunity to try them at the March term, 1886. An opportunity to try them a year or two years after that time, when, perhaps, plaintiff’s ability to present his claims, would not be the same, would not be an equivalent for the right to try them at that term. But they could not all be reinstated. The proceeding against the county auditor certainly could not be, nor could a new similar proceeding be instituted. If the bank, relying on the settlement between plaintiff and defendant, and the dismissals of the actions against it, changed its position, so that restoring the actions-would operate as a fraud upon it, those actions could not be reinstated ; and, for the same reason, new actions for the same causes could not be maintained against it. As to the actions against defendant, plaintiff might succeed in having them reinstated, or, if he did not succeed, might bring new actions; but, in the latter event, a part of the cause of action in one of them would, in the mean time, have become barred by the statute of limitations.
The only other suggestion of a remedy to plaintiff is that he might have brought an action for damages for the loss sustained by his dismissal of the former actions and proceedings. Such an action would be novel, though it might be maintained. The difficulties in the way of prosecuting it, so that the recovery would put him in as good position as he was in before, would be great. He would have to' show to what extent he had lost his original claims, and the value of what was so lost. Take the eases against the bank. He would have to show that his rights as against it were gone, and then show the value of his claims against it. And so with the other actions. The dismissals were not made on a money consideration, nor did the parties intend the value of the actions to be measured by a money standard. In no way could the loss of the advantage which the right to try the actions at the March term, 1886, gave him be estimated in
Order reversed, and new trial ordered.
Note. A motion ior reargument of this case was denied October 10, 1888.