117 Ala. 445 | Ala. | 1897
Action by appellees against appellant for damages for breach of special contract for the construction, in part, of a building, etc.
The contract may be succinctly and substantially stated, most strongly for the plaintiffs, as follows : The defendant, Tillis, owned a vacant lot in the town of Geneva fronting on a named street. The plaintiffs purchased and acquired the lot adjoining it on the south, thirty feet in width. Eeally only one of the plaintiffs purchased and received the title to the lot, though he testifies he was acting for all, and for the purpose of this case, we will treat it as belonging to all. The subse
We remark, in justice to the defendant, that, as already intimated, the foregoing statement of the transaction is from the standpoint of the plaintiffs. The defendant plausibly explains his partin it, showing that he never made any contract at all to do this work, but only became surety for the plaintiff's to the contractor (a mechanic) for the payment of their part of the contract price of both buildings, and that the contractor declined to build an eighteen inch wall, at the price plaintiffs proposed to pay.
The defendant, among other pleas, interposed the following, upon which issue was joined : “For answer to the several counts of said complaint, defendant pleads that the various matters therein set up were not in writing signed by the parties to this action.”
A parol agreement for the sale of an interest in land not owned by the promisor, but the title to which resides in another, is within the statute.— Raub v. Smith, 61 Mich. 543, supra, and authorities cited.
It being impossible for the plaintiffs lawfully to recover, it is unnecessary to notice the other questions raised by the record.
Reversed and remanded.