after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The statute of frauds of the State of Texas, reenacting, in-this particular, the English statute of 29 Car. II, c. 3, § 4, (1677) provides that no action shall be brought “upon any agreement which is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof,” unless-the “agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or by some person by him thereunto lawfully authorized.” ■ Texas Stat. January 18, 1840; 1 Paschal’s Digest, (4th ed.) art. 3S75; Rev. Stat. of 1879, art. 2464;
Bason v. Hughart,
This case has been so fully and ably argued, and the construction of this clause of the statute of frauds has so seldom *421 come before this court, that it will be useful, before considering the particular contract now in question, to refer to some of the principal decisions upon the subject in the courts of England, and of the several States.
In the earliest reported case in England upon this clause of the statute, regard seems to have been had to the time of actual performance, in deciding that an oral agreement that if the plaintiff would procure a marriage between the defendant and a certain lady, the defendant would pay him fifty, guineas, was not within the statute; Lord Holt saying: “ Though the promise depends upon a contingent, the which may not happen in a long time, yet if the contingent happen within a year, the action shall be maintainable, and is not within the statute.” Francam v. Foster, (1692) Skinner, 326 ; S. C. Holt, 25.
A year later, another case before Lord Holt presented the question whether the words “ agreement not to be performed within one year” should be construed as meaning every agreement which need not be performed within the year, or as meaning only an agreement which could not be performed within the year, and thus, according as the one or the other construction should be adopted, including or excluding an agreement which might or might not be performed within the year, without regard to the time of actual performance. The. latter was decided to be the true construction.
That was an action upon an oral agreement, by which the defendant promised, for one guinea paid, to pay the plaintiff so many at the day of his marriage; and the marriage did not happen within the year. The case was considered by all the judges. Lord Holt “was of opinion that it ought to have been in writing, because the design of the statute was, not to trust to the memory of witnesses for a longer time than one year.” But the great majority of the judges were of opinion that the statute included those agreements only that were impossible to be performed within the year, and that the case was not within the statute, because the marriage might have happened within a year after the agreement; and laid down this rule: “ Where the agreement is to be performed upon a *422 contingent, and it does not appear within the agreement, that it is to be performed after the year, then a note in writing is not necessary, for the contingent might happen within the year; but where it appears by the whole tenor of the agreement, that it is to be performed after the year, there a note is necessary.” Peter v. Compton, (1693) Skinner, 353; S. C. Holt, 326; S. C. cited by Lord Holt in Smith v. Westall, 1 Ld. Raym. 316, 317; Anon., Comyns, 49, 50; Comberbach, 463.
Accordingly, about the same time, all the judges held that a promise to pay so much money upon the return of a certain ship, which ship happened not to return within two years after the promise made, was not within the statute, “ for that • by possibility the ship might have returned within a year; and although by accident it happened not to return so soon; yet, they said, that clause of the statute extends only to such promises where, by the express appointment of the party, the thing is not to be performed within a year.” Anon., 1 Salk. 280.
Again, in a case in the King’s Bench in 1762, an agreement to leave money by will was held not to .be within the. statute, although uncertain as to the time of performance. Lord Mansfield said that the law was settled by the earlier cases. Mr. Justice Denison said: “The statute of frauds plainly means an agreement not to be performed within the space of a year, and expressly and specifically so agreed. A eontingenoy is not within it; nor any case that depends upon contingency. It does not extend to cases where the thing only may be performed within the year; and the act cannot be extended further than the words of it.” And Mr. Justice 'Wilmot said that the rule laid down in 1 Salk. 280, above quoted, was the true rule. Fenton v. Emblers, 3 Burrow, 1278; S. C. 1 W. Bl. 353.
It thus appears to have been the settled construction of this clause of the statute in England, before the Declaration of Independence, that an oral agreement which, according to the intention of the parties, as shown by the terms of the contract, might be fully performed within a year from the time it was made, was not within the statute, although the time.of *423 its performance was uncertain, and might probably extend, and be expected by the parties to extend, and did in fact extend,' beyond the year.
The several States of the Union, in reenacting this provision of the statute of frauds in its original words, must be taken to have adopted the known and settled construction which" it had received by judicial decisions in England.
Tucker
v.
Oxley,
The decision in Boydell v. Drummond, (1809) 11 East, 142, which has been sometimes supposed to have modified the rule, was really in exact accordance with it. In that case, the declaration alleged that the Boydells had proposed to publish by subscription a series of large prints from some of the scenes of Shakespeare’s plays, in eighteen numbers containing four plates each, at the price of three guineas a number, payable as each was issued; and one number, at least, to be annually published after the delivery of the first; and that the defendant became a subscriber for one set of prints, and accepted and paid for two numbers, but refused to accept or pay for the rest. The first prospectus issued by the publishers stated certain conditions, in substance as set out in the declaration, and others showing the magnitude of the undertaking, an.d that its completion would unavoidably take a considerable time. A second prospectus stated that one number at least should be published annually, and .the proprietors were confident that they should be enabled to produce two numbers within the course of every year. The book in which the defendant subscribed his name had only, for its title, “Shakespeare subscribers, their signatures,” without any reference to either prospectus. The contract was held to be within the statute of frauds, as one not to be performed within a year, because, as Was demonstrated in concurring opinions of Lord Ellenborough and Justices Grose, Le Blanc and Bayley, the *424 contract, according to the understanding and contemplation of the parties, as manifested by the terms of the contract, was not to be fully performed (by the completion of the whole work) within the year; and consequently, a full completion within the year, even if physically possible, would not have been according to the terms or the intent of the contract, and could not have entitled the publishers to demand immediate payment of the whole subscription.
In Wells v. Horton, (1826) 4 Bing. 40; S. C. 12 J. B. Moore, 177, it was held to be settled by the earlier authorities that an agreement by which a debtor, in consideration of his creditor’s agreeing to forbear to sue him during his lifetime, promised that his executor should pay the amount of the debt, was not within'the statute; and Chief Justice Best said: “The present case is clearly distinguishable from Boydell v. Drummond, where upon the face of the agreement it appeared that the contract was not to be executed within a year.”
In Souch v. Strawbridge, (1846) 2 C. B. 808, a contract to support a child, for a guinea a month, as long as the child’s father should think proper, was held not to be within the. statute, which, as Chief Justice Tindal said, “speaks of ‘any agreement that is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof ’; pointing to contracts the complete performance of which is of necessity extended beyond the space of a year. That appears clearly from the case of Boydell v. Drummond, the rule to be extracted from which is, that-, where the agreement distinctly shows, upon the face of it, that the parties contemplated its performance to extend over a greater space of time than one year, the case is within the statute; but that, where the contract is such that the whole may be performed within a year, and there' is no express stipulation to the contrary., the statute does not apply.”
In Murphy v. O'Sullivan, (18 66) 11 Irish Jurist (N. S.) 111, the Court of Exchequer Chamber in Ireland, in a series of careful opinions by Mr. Justice 0’IIagan (afterwards Lord Chancellor of Ireland), Baron Fitzgerald,- Chief Baron Pigot and Chief Justice Monahan, reviewing the English cases, held *425 that'under the Irish statute of frauds of Y Will. Ill, c. 12, (which followed in this respect the words of the English statute,) an agreement to maintain and clothe a man during his life was not required to be in writing.
In the recent case of McGregor v. McGregor, 21 Q. B. D. 424, (1888) the English Court of Appeal held that a lawful agreement made between husband and wife, in compromise of legal proceedings, by which they agreed to live apart, the husband agreeing to allow the wife a weekly sum for maintenance, and she agreeing to maintain herself and her children, and to indemnify him against any debts contracted by her, was not within the statute. Lord Esher, M. B., thought the true doctrine on the subject was that laid down by Chief Justice Tindal in the passage above quoted from Souch v. Strawbridge. Lord Justice Bindley said: “ The provisions'of the statute have been construed in a series of decisions from which we cannot depart. The effect .of these decisions is that, if the contract can by possibility be performed within the year, the statute does not apply.” Lord Justice Bowen said: “There has been a decision which for 200 years has been accepted as the leading case on the subject. In Peter v. Compton, it •was held that ‘an agreement that is not to be performed within the space of a year from the making thereof ’ means, in the statute of frauds, an agreement which appears from its terms to be incapable of performance within the year.” And each of the three judges took occasion to éxpress approval of the decision in Murphy v. O'Sullivan, above cited, and to disapprove the opposing decision of Hawkins, J., in Davey v. Shannon, 4 Ex. D. 81.
The cases on this subject in the courts of the several States are generally in accord with the English cases above cited. They are so numerous, and have been, so fully colleéted in ■Browne on the Statute of Frauds, (5th ed.) c. 13, that we shall refer to but few of them, other.than those cited by counsel in the case at bar.
In
Peters
v.
Westborough,
In many other States, agreements to support a person for life have been held not to be within the statute.,. Browne on Statute of Frauds, § 276. The decision of the Supreme Court of Tennessee in Deaton v. Tennessee Coal Co., 12 Heiskell, 660, cited by the defendant in error, is opposed to the'weight of authority.
In
Roberts
v.
Rockbottom Co.,
In Blanding v. Sargent, 33 N. H. 239, the court stated the rule, as established by the authorities elsewhere, and therefore properly to be considered as adopted by the legislature of New Hampshire when reenacting the statute, to be that “the statute does not apply to any contract, unless by its express terms or by reasonable construction it is not to be performed, that is, incapable in any event of being performed, within one year from the time it is made ”; and that “ if by its terms, or by reasonable construction, the contract can be fully performed within a year, although it can only be done, by the occurrence of some contingency by no means likely to happen, such as the death of some party or person referred to in the contract, the statute has no application, and no writing is necessary ” ; and therefore that an agreement by a physician to sell out to another physician his business in a, certain town, and to do no more business there, in consideration of a certain sum to be paid in five years, was not within the statute, because “if the defendant had died within a year from the making of the contract, having kept his agreement while he lived, his contract would have been fully performed.” The decisions in other States are to the same effect. Browne on Statute of Frauds, § 277.
In Hinckley v. Southgate, 11 Vermont, 428, cited by the defendant in error, the contract held to be within the statute of- frauds was in express terms to carry on a mill for a year from a future day; and the suggestion in the opinion that if the time of perforinance depends upon a contingency, the test is .whéther the contingency will probably happen, or may reasonably be expected to happen, within the year, was not fiecessary to the decision of the case, and cannot stand with the other authorities. Browne on Statute of Frauds, § 279.
In Linscott v. McIntire, 15 Maine, 201, also cited by the dfefendant in error, an agreement to. sell a farm at the best advantage, and to pay to the plaintiff, any sum remaining after refunding the defendant’s advances and paying him for his trouble, was held not to be within the statute of frauds; *428 Chief Justice Weston saying: “The sale did not happen to be made until a year had expired; but it might have taken place at an earlier period, and there is nothing in the case from which it appears that, in the contemplation of the parties at the time, it was to be delayed beyond a year. This clause of the statute has been limited to cases where, by the express terms of the agreement, the contract was not to be performed within the space of a year. And it has been held to be no objection that it depended on a contingency, which might not and did not happen, until after that time.”
In Herrin v. Butters, 20 Maine, 119, likewise cited by the defendant in error, the contract held to be within the statute could not possibly have been performed within the year, for it was to clear eleven acres in three years, one acre to be seeded down the present spring, one acre the next spring, and one acre the spring following, and to receive in consideration thereof all the proceeds of the land, except the two acres first seeded down.
In
Broadwell
v.
Getman,
In
Pitkin
v.
Long Island
Railroad,
In
Kent
v. Kent,
In Saunders v. Kasterbine, 6 B. Monroe, 17, cited by the defendant in error, the contract proved, as stated in the opinion of the court, was to execute a bill of sale of a slave when the purchaser had paid the price of $400, in monthly instal-. ments of from $4 to $8 each, which would necessarily postpone performance, by either party, beyond the year.
In Railway Co. v. Whitley, 54 Arkansas, 199, a contract by which a railway company, in consideration of being permitted to build its road over a man’s land, agreed to construct and maintain cattle guards on each side of the road, was held not to be within the statute,, because it was contingent upon the continuance of the use of the land for a railroad, which might have ceased within a year. And a like decision was *430 made in Sweet v. Desha Lumber Co., 56 Arkansas, 629, upon facts almost éxactly like those in the case at bar.
The construction and application of this clause of the statute of frauds first came before this court at December term, 1866, in
Packet Co.
v.
Sickles,
That was an action upon an oral contract by which a steamboat company agreed to attach a patented contrivance, known as the Sickles cut-off, to one of its steamboats, and, if it should effect a saving in the consumption of fuel, to use it on that boat during the continuance of the patent, if the boat should last so long; and to pay to the plaintiffs weekly, for the use of the cutoff, three fourths of the value of the fuel saved, to be ascertained in a specified manner. At the date of the contract, the patent had twelve years to run. The court, in an opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Nelson, held the contract to be within the statute ; and said : “ The substance of the contract is that the defendants are to pay in money a certain proportion of the ascertained value of the fuel saved at stated intervals throughout the period of twelve years,- if the boat to which the cut-off is attached should last so long.”
“
It is a contract not to be performed within the year, subject to a defeasance by the happening of a certain event, which might or might not occur within that time.’-’
In
Packet Co.
v.
Sickles,
it appears to have been assumed, almost without discussion, that the contract, according to its true construction, was not to be performed in less than twelve years, but was defeasible by an event which might or
*431
might not happen within one year. It may well be doubted whether that view can be reconciled with the terms of the contract itself, or with the general current of the authorities. The contract, as stated in the fore part of the opinion, was to use and pay for the cut-off upon the boat “ during the continuance of the said patent, if the said boat should last so long.”
At October term, 1875, this court, speaking by Mr. Justice Miller, said: “ The statute of frauds applies only to contracts which, by their terms, are not to be performed within a year, and does not apply because they may not be performed within that time. In other words, to make a parol contract void, it must be apparent that it was the understanding of the parties that it was not to be performed within a year from the time it was made.” And it was therefore held, in one case, that a contract by the owner of a valuable estate, employing lawyers to avoid a lease thereof and to recover the property, and promising to pay them a certain sum out of- the proceeds of the land when recovered and sold, was not within the statute, because all this might have been done within a'year; and in another case, that a contract, made early in November, 1869, to furnish all the stone required to build and complete a lock and dam which the contractor with the State had agreed to complete by September 1, 1871, was not within the statute, because the contractor, by pushing the work, might have fully completed it before November, 1870.
*432
McPherson
v.
Cox,
In Texas, where the contract now in question was made, and this action upon it was tried, the decisions of the Supreme Court of the State are in accord with the current of decisions elsewhere.
In
Thouvenin
v.
Lea,
In the very recent case of
Weatherford &c. Railway
v. Wood,
In the case at bar, the contract between the railroad company and the plaintiff, as testified to by the plaintiff himself, who was the only witness upon the point, was that if he would furnish the ties and grade the ground for the switcNat *434 the place where he proposed to erect a saw-mill, the railroad company would “ put down the iron rails and maintain the switch for the plaintiff’s benefit for shipping purposes as long as he needed it.”
The parties may well have expected that the contract would continue.in force for more than one year; it may have been very improbable that it would not do so; and it did in fact continue in force for a much longer time. But they made no stipulation which in terms, or by reasonable inference, required that result. The question is not what the probable, or expected, or actual performance of the contract was; but whether the contract, according to the reasonable interpretation of its terms, required that it should not be performed within the year. No definite term of time for the performance of the contract appears to have been mentioned or contemplated by the parties ; nOr was there any agreement as to. the amount of lumber to be sawed or shipped by the plaintiff, or as to the time during which he should keep up his mill.
The contract of the railroad company was with, and for the' benefit of, the plaintiff personally. The plaintiff’s own testimony shows (although that is not essential) that he understood that the performance of the contract would end with his own life. The obligation of the railroad company to maintain the switch was in terms limited and restricted by the qualification “ for the plaintiff's, benefit for shipping purposes as long as he needed if1’; and no contingency wThich should put an end to the performance of the contract, other than his not needing the switch for the purpose of his business, appears to have been in the mouth, or in the mind, of either party. If, within a. year after the making of the contract, the plaintiff had died, or had abandoned his whole business at this place, or for any other reason had ceased to need the switch for the shipping of lumber, the railroad company would have been no longer under any obligation to maintain the switch, and the contract would have been brought to an end by having been fully performed.
The complete performance of the contract depending upon a contingency which might happen yvithin the year, the con *435 tract is not within the statute of frauds as an “agreement which is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof.”
Nor is it within the other clause of the statute of frauds, relied on in the answer, which requires certain conveyances of real estate to be in writing. The suggestion made in the argument for the defendant in error, that the contract was, in substance, a grant of an easement in real estate, and as such within the statute, overlooks the difference between the English and the Texan statutes in this particular. The existing statutes of Texas, while they substantially follow the English statute of frauds,- so far as to require a conveyance of any “ estate of inheritance or freehold, or for a term of more than one year, in lands and tenements,” as well as “ any contract for the sale of real estate, or the lease thereof for a longer term than one year,” to be in writing, omit to reenact the additional words of the English statute, in the clause concerning conveyances, “ or any uncertain interest of, in, to or out of ” lands or tenements, and, in the other clause, “ or any interest in or concerning them.” Stat. 29 Car. II, c. 3, §§ 1, 4; Texas Rev. Stat. of 1879, arts. 548, 2464; 1 Paschal’s Digest, arts. 997, 3875 ;
James
v.
Fulcrod,
Judgment "reversed, and case remanded to the Circuit Court, with directions to set aside the verdict and to order a new trial.
