147 N.Y. 402 | NY | 1895
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *404
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *405 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *407 It was assumed by both parties on the argument that under the case of Green v. Armstrong (1 Den. 550) the contract of April 1, 1885, for the sale by the plaintiff to the defendants of the bark on the hemlock trees on the "Harris" lot, to be peeled by the purchaser, was a contract for the sale of an interest in lands required by the Statute of Frauds to be in writing. We shall determine the case upon this assumption without examination of its correctness. (See Nettleton v. Sikes, 8 Met. 34.) The contract was in fact in writing, and its validity is not questioned. The stress of the argument at the bar related to the competency of the evidence offered by the defendants to prove the oral modification of the original contract, made in the fall of 1885, by which the plaintiff, on the request of the defendants, consented on the condition that it was made satisfactory to Wakeley, the contractor with the plaintiff to do the lumbering on the lot, to reduce the amount of bark to be peeled by the defendants during each of the years subsequent to 1885 to 500 cords per year. The plaintiff's counsel, in support of his objection to the competency of the evidence (which was ruled in his favor by the trial judge), relies upon the general principle that a written contract, falling within the Statute of Frauds, cannot be varied by any subsequent agreement of the parties unless such new agreement is also in writing. The further objection that a sealed contract, irrespective of its character, cannot be changed by a subsequent parol executory agreement under the maxim quodque dissolvitur eodem ligamine quo ligatur, and the objection that the consent of the plaintiff to reduce the quantity of the bark to be peeled in each year was conditional, will be referred to after considering the objection founded upon the Statute of Frauds.
In disposing of this objection it is important to notice that *408
the controversy in the present action relates solely to the performance of the contract of April 1, 1885, as respects the year 1886. By that contract the defendants were to peel in that year not less than 1,000 cords. In fact they peeled only 500 cords, and they allege as an excuse for not peeling the full 1,000 cords in that year, the oral agreement made in the fall of 1885. The effect of the oral agreement if made and valid as a contract was to change the terms of the original written agreement as to the time and manner of performance. It did not diminish the aggregate amount of bark to be peeled and taken by the defendants, but it extended the time within which it was to be peeled and taken to double the time fixed by the original contract and as a necessary incident extended the right of entry for the same period, and meanwhile during such extended period, by natural growth of the trees, bark might be brought within the sale, which otherwise would not come within the contract. If we were now required to decide the question whether a contract in writing within the Statute of Frauds can be altered as to the time of performance by a subsequent oral executory agreement made between the parties upon sufficient consideration, we should find the question under the authorities involved in distressing perplexity. It is now the settled doctrine of the English courts, contrary to the earlier rule declared in Cuff v. Penn (1 M.
S. 21), that such a contract cannot be changed as to the mode or time of performance by an oral executory contract. (Stead v.Dawber, 10 Ad. El. 57; Hickman v. Haynes, L.R., 10 C.P. 598.) In many of the states in this country the courts have adopted the rule laid down by Lord ELLENBOROUGH, in Cuff v.Penn (supra), and have held such proof admissible on the distinction between the contract which it was said the statute requires to be in writing and its performance, to which the statute does not apply. This is the rule in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, Ohio and Pennsylvania, and, perhaps, other states. The cases are referred to in a note in Wood on Frauds (p. 758). In this state the rule does not seem to be authoritatively settled. In Blood v. Goodrich (9 Wend. 68), *409
Ch. J. SAVAGE expressed the opinion that the time of performance of a written contract for the sale of land could not be enlarged by parol, but the case was decided on another ground. There are dicta in this court and some decisions in other courts of the state to the contrary. (Blanchard v. Trim,
The objection that a sealed contract can only be changed by a contract of equal solemnity according to the principle of the common law to which we have adverted (assuming that the principle has any longer any practical existence, see McCreery v. Day,
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.