Wildbahn v. Robidoux

11 Mo. 659 | Mo. | 1848

Scott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was a bill in chancery for a specific performance of a contract to convey a lot of ground. The bill in substance alledges, that the inhabitants of the town of St. Joseph being anxious to prevent a creek which flowed through their village from injuring their lots by its inundations, subscribed a paper by which they agreed to pay to the complainant, S. Wildbahn, the several sums opposite their names, for the purpose of putting two hundred feet of a trunk or race in said creek. The defendant, Robidoux, who was the chief proprietor of the town, to this paper made the following subscription:- “Joseph Robidoux, two in-lots, one corner lot, and one hundred dollars.” At the time Robidoux signed the paper, he promised to complainant that he would convey to him any two vacant in-lots and a corner lot to which he had a title, and that might be selected by the complainant. That when the work was nearly or quite completed, complainant selected an in-lot, No. 2, in block No. 3, and notified Robidoux thereof, who made no objection, but promised to convey the same to the complainant. That Robidoux afterwards refused to convey the lot selected. The prayer of the bill is, that the lot may be decreed to be conveyed by the defendant to the complainant.

There is an answer, in which most of the facts contained in the bill are admitted to be true, but it is denied that the defendant ever agreed to convey the lot mentioned. A replication was filed to the answer, and there was also a plea of the statute of frauds and perjuries, insisting that there was no note or memorandum in writing of the agreement to convey the lot in the bill described. On argument this plea was ajudged sufficient, and the truth of it was put in issue. There was evidence of a parol promise to convey the lot, butno contract in writing was produced or proved. The bill was dismissed, and the complainant appealed.

The answer covers the ground occupied by the plea, then the plea is H overruled. • Story’s Plead., sec. 688. It expressly denies that any pro- I mise was ever made to convey the lot. So that it is incongruous with the B plea. Why insist on the statute when no promise was ever made ?— ■ When an agreement is denied in the defendant’s answer, it is not neces- m sary for him to insist upon the statute as a bar. But the complainant in B| such case mustproduce legal evidence of the existence of the agreement, H which cannot be established by parol pooof. Ontario Bank vs. Root, 3 jB Paige, 481; Cozine vs. Graham, 2 Paige, 181. If an agreement is al-H ledged to have been made, it is not necessary to aver that it was in wri-ffl *661ting, for the law will presume thatit was a valid one. Formerly, an idea prevailed that a court of chancery was compelled to execute a parol contract admitted by the answer, although the statute was at the same time insisted on against the relief sought. But it is now well settled that a party may admit the agreement and insist on the statute as a defence, but if the agreement is admitted and the statute is not insisted on, a specific performance will be decreed, on the ground that the party has thereby renounced the benefit of the statute. Quilibet protest renunciare juri pro se introducto.

There being no matter charged in the bill which might avoid the bar created by a plea of the statute, such as acts of part performance or fraud, the plea proper in the case would have been one which is termed a pure plea, such a one as requires no answer to support it. Story’s PI., sec. 764. The answer having overruled the plea, and the agreement being denied, the complainant was bound to produce legal evidence of the existence of the contract soughtto.be performed. It could not have been established by parol evidence. Although no objection was made to the parol evidence, the matter in dispute on the trial not requiring it to be expressly stated, yet, as the court dismissed the bill, we must presume it was for the reason that the evidence was incompetent to establish the agreement, and to disprove the truth of the plea.

It is clear that the written contract, and the one sought to be enforced by the bill, are variant. By the one, the defendant is to convey such lots as he pleases, so that they are in-lots and an out lot; by the other he is to convey a lot selected by the complainant. Parol evidence, it is evident, was not admissible to vary the written contract. Brodie vs. St. Pauls, 1 Ves. jr., 326; Jordon vs. Sawkins, 3 Bro. Ch., 388; Parkhurst vs. Van Cortlandt, 1 John. Chan., 275.

The other Judges concurring,

the decree will be affirmed.