93 Ala. 484 | Ala. | 1890
— The complaint contains ten counts. It was demurred to as a whole, for misjoinder of counts ex contractu and ex delicto ; and the 1st, 2d, 3d and 10th counts were separately demurred to, on the ground that the claim therein set forth was based on a verbal contract which, by its terms, was not to be performed within one year from the making thereof. All of the demurrers were sustained. Plaintiff thereupon obtained leave to amend, and did so only by striking out the words “and rent,” where they occur at one place in the 10th count. The amendment amounted to nothing. There is nothing in the record before us by which it can be determined at which place of the two, where the words “and rent” occur in the 10th count, they were stricken out. Moreover, had they been stricken out in both instances, the count would not have been, changed at all in legal effect. As thus changed in phraseology, and as thus remaining the same in legal contemplation, the same demurrers were again interposed to the whole complaint,,and to its 1st, 2d, 3d and 10th counts, and submitted to the court. Those which went to the complaint as a whole were overruled. Those confined to the four counts mentioned were sustained. This left counts 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, unaffected and before the court. But the plaintiff declined to amend the counts adjudged to be bad, and refused to proceed on the remaining counts; and thereupon judgment final was rendered for the defendant. The case may be considered as if the only action had on the demurrers was that overruling those for misjoinder, and sustaining those Avhich set up the statute of frauds against the 1st, 2d, 3d and 10th counts, since the complaint as last presented was, to all legal intents and purposes, the same as when originally filed; and if error Avas committed in sustaining the demurrers for misjoinder as first interposed, it Avas not prejudicial to plaintiff, as the only counts affected thereby, which were not also' reached bjr the demurrers predicated on the statute of frauds, were those which were before the court when final judgment was rendered. The questions to be considered, therefore, go.
There can be no misunderstanding of the 1st, 2d, 3d and 10th counts. They each claim the sum of two hundred dollars as an installment of rent due under a verbal contract entered into July, 1889, for the demise of certain land for a term of one year, to commence on November 1st, 1889, and to end on October 31st, 1890. Very clearly this was an agreement which, by its terms, was not to be performed within one year from its date, and which therefore, not having been reduced to writing, is obnoxious to the statute of frauds and void. Code, § 1732; Crommelin v. Thiess, 31 Ala. 412; Martin v. Blanchett 77 Ala. 288.
The invalidity of the contract sued on appearing from the complaint itself, the statute of frauds, as a defense to the action, was properly brought f&rward by demurrer. — Phillips v. Adams, 70 Ala. 374; Jonas v. Fields, 83 Ala. 445.
To admit the doctrine elaborated in argument, that defendant is estopped to set up the statute of frauds here, because, while his contract was not in writing, yet he did promise to occupy the premises as a tenant for the term commencing November 1st, 1889, and failed to notify plaintiff to the contrary, the consequence being that she lost opportunity to secure another tenant, would be to utterly destroy the statute. It is directed against just this class of promises, entailing in most instances just this character of detriment to the promisee. The position is wholly untenable. All that is said in the counts under consideration, involving the idea that the defendant should be held to a tenancy for 1889-90, or from year to year, for that he had leased the premises for several preceding years successively, and gave no notice that he would not hold longer than October 31st, 1889; and in argument with respect to contracts taken out of the statute' of frauds by part performance and the like, is of no importance whatever here. The verbal contract for the year in question was not, the complaint shows, performed in any particular, or to any extent, and the defendant did not hold over into the year 1889-90 for a single moment of time.
The demurrers were well sustained. After striking out those counts of the complaint, to which they were addressed, six other counts remained, as we have seen. The plaintiff declining to amend those stricken out, and refusing to proceed
Affirmed.