65 W. Va. 506 | W. Va. | 1909
James M. Robinson made two written agreements with M. Low Parriott selling to Parriott the coal in two tracts of land. Bach agreement contains the following clause: “But it is further agreed by and between the parties hereto that the'payment of the first installment of one of the purchase money on or before the 8th day of August, 1905, is the essence of this agreement, and in the failure to pay the same in the time specified is to render this contract null and1 void, and the parties of the first part and second parts are to stand relieved from all damages and responsibility for the non-execution and non-fulfillment of this contract, but a compliance in making said payment is to render this contract unconditional, absolute and binding to all intents and purposes on the parties hereto of the first and second parts.” Parriott assigned the contracts to Josiah V. Thompson. Robinson refusing to convey, Thompson filed a bill in Marshall county circuit court to enforce a conveyance, which the court dismissed without relief.
I say that the plaintiff has not proven any waiver of this vital condition before the expiration of the contract. 20 Cyc. 233 tells, what in reason ought to be and is law: “Where a written contract for the sale of land has ceased to be operative in accordance with its terms, either by lapse of time or occurrence of specified conditions, an oral agreement reviving the contract is within the statute.” The text of 29 Am. & Eng. Ency. L. 1101 is: “A new agreement altering the terms of a written contract which was within the statute of frauds, or required by any law to be in writing, or discharging or waiving such contract in part only, must also be in writing, in order to be binding or admissible in evidence, inasmuch as a verbal waiver would be to substitute a verbal contract for one required to be in writing. This is true even though the agreement of waiver may be in such terms that, taken alone, it would not require to be in writing. The onty ground upon which a party will be bound by such waiver is that the other party has so governed his conduct, retying upon the attempted waiver or alteration, that it would be aiding a fraud to permit him' to deny its validity.” On page 897 is the text: “Where a written contract for the sale of land has ceased and terminated by its own terms upon the happening of a contingency, or by the action of the parties under it, it cannot be revived by parol and have its original force and effect.” In McConihay v. Lanham, (Ky.) 76 S. W. 535, was a written sale of minerals, with clause that if consideration should not be paid by a date, agreement to be void. Eailure to pay. Parol contract to extend time. Held, that as contract was terminated by failure to pay, parol extension was
Decree affirmed.
Affirmed.