81 N.J. Eq. 271 | New York Court of Chancery | 1913
(after statement).
The amended bill having set tip new facts and prayed a relief not within the scope of the original bill, a demurrer may. be filed thereto, notwithstanding defendant’s answer to the original bill. 1 Dan. Gh. Pr. (6th ed.) *409. ’'The statute of frauds (Gen. Stat. p. 4603 ¶ 5; Comp. Stat. p. 2612) provides that
“no -action shall be brought upon any contract or sale of lands unless the agreement upon which the action is brought or some memorandum or note thereof shall be in writing,”
and inasmuch as the lack of such writing appears on the face of the bill, the defence- of the statute may be made by demurrer. Van Duyne v. Vreelmd (Chancellor Williamson, 1857), 11 N. J. Eq. (3 Stock.) 370, 378; 1 Dan. Ch. Pr. (6th ed.) *365, *561. This provision of the statute, covers actions in equity as well as at law, but while the decisions of courts of law upon matters of legal title and right are absolutely'controlled by the terms of the statute, courts of equity, acting by personal decrees baséd on obligations equitably arising on the circumstances of the case, have deprived the defendants of -the protection of the statute in cases where the effect of giving such protection would be to allow the defendant to- perpetrate a -fraud. The principle acted on by the courts of equity in these cases is that a fraudulent use shall not. he made of the statute. Fry Spec. Perf. (4th ed.) § 567'. Upon the same principle the court of equity has, from a very early period, dealt with the statute of wills as well as tire statute of frauds, and by its decrees imposed personal obligations on defendants setting up the statute for the purpose of accomplishing' a fraud. 1 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 431; McCormick v. Grogan, L. R. 4 H. L.
Story’s authority^ which is also cited as excepting from the statute cases of mistake as well as fraud, appears to. base the right to protection on the intolerable mischief worked contrary to the intention; of the parties. “It would be intolerable,” he says^-Z Story Eq. Jur. § 155)j “to allow an act, originating in innocence, to operate ultimately as a fraud, by enabling the party, who receives the benefit of a mistake, to resist the claims of justice, under the shelter of a rule to promote it. It would be a great defect in the moral jurisdiction of the court, if under such circumstances it were incapable of administering relief.” This language applies where the party setting up the statute has received the benefit of the mistake (that is, to executed' contracts which give him the benefit), and by insisting on its retention because of the statute, works the intolerable mischief of making the statute operate as a fraud. ItfcToes not reach, in my judgment, to executory contracts, within the terms of the statute, where there has been no part performance and the party who sets up the statute has not received and does-not retain any benefit derived by him from the mistake, but merely denies the right to bring an action on the parol contract because of the statute.
The question whether the agreement, of which reformation is sought is executory or has been executed, is the vital matter as to denying the protection of the statute. If by mutual mistake the executed agreement is contrary to the previous parol agreement of the parties, the party who had received the benefit of the mistake and insists upon holding this benefit under the executed.
TOn this bill the complainant shows a case where, if the statute prevails, she may possibly be deprived of the benefit of a bargain, but where airy bargain relating to lands is oral the statute by its terms gives such protection, if invoked, and its' enforcement in this case accomplishes no fraud, for defendants have not received and do not retain ahy benefit derived from the mistake. This distinction between executory and executed agreements in reference to the enforcement of parol valuations on application of the plaintiff, is clearly brought out in'several decisions. Macomber v. Peckham (Rhode Island, 1889), 17 Atl. Rep. 910; Safe Deposit Co. v. Diamond, C. & C. Co. (January, 1912), 83 Atl. Rep. 54, 59. The rule as stated (Ad. Eq. (5th Am. ed.) 171) is approved in the latter case: “Where land is the subject of the erroneous instrument, the reformation of an executed conveyance on parol evidence is uot precluded by the statute of frauds, for otherwise it would be impossible to give relief. And where a mistake in an executory agreement relating to land is alleged, parol evidence may be admitted in opposition to the equity for specific performance. But it does not appear that where the defendant has insisted on the benefit, of the statute, the court has ever reformed such an executory agreement on parol evidence and specifically enforced it with the variation.” Prof. Pomeroy (2 Bq. Jur. 866) states that executory as well as executed contracts may be reformed, on the application of the complainant and then specifically enforced where such relief was given, but the cases he refers to are (including Hendrickson v. Ivins, supra), so far as I have examined them, all cases of executed contracts. His statement by way of argument (Ibid.) is, that
*281 “if the doctrine [of reformation] can be applied to deeds which have actually conveyed the title, then a fortiori may it be applied to mere executory contracts which do not disturb the legal title.”
. The statute in terms applies to all contracts or sales of lands, to equitable as well as legal titles, and the withdrawal of its protection in equity in certain cases involving a title which may be either legal or equitable, is no basis for extending, a fortiori, the exception sustained in a case involving legal title,- to a class of equitable interests not within the reason of the exception. If I have correctly apprehended the real equitable ground for reforming executed contracts, as being -the one stated by Chancellor ICent in the leading case (Gillespie v. Moon) viz., the prevention of fraud by the setting up of the statute,- this argument of the learned writer wholly fails.
Vice-Chancellor Pitney, in Lindley v. Keim, 54 N. J. Eq. (9 Dick.) 418, on a bill by the purchaser against vendor for specific’ performance of an executory contract, reviewed to some extent the decisions upon the general question of proof of parol variations and specific performance of the reformed contract on behalf of the complainant, and this opinion is relied on extending relief to executory contracts. But the learned vice-chancellor seems to disclaim, extending his decision to cases like -the present, for he says (at p. 1081) that in the case before him “the statute of frauds was not infringed; that it was not a case of introducing parol evidence to add to the thing agreed by the written contract to be conveyed and then asking the court to decree performance of it so amended as against a vendor who would be injuriously affected by the addition, but it was the showing by parol that something was included in the written description of the thing to be convejred which does not properly belong there and asking the court to eliminate it and to perform the contract without the improper addition.” The decree was reversed — 54 N. J. Eq. (9 Dick.) 41-8 (1896) — upon the ground that the contract.in question was made by an agent without authority, and the construction of the statute on the point now involved was not reached. In Miller v. Chetwood (Chancellor Pennington, 1839), 2 N. J. Eq. (1 Gr. Ch.) 199, where a vendee set up the .defence, it was said that parol evidence, although admissible in defence, was not
In another class of cases, where complainant set up a parol contract, or a parol variation of a written contract in suits for specific performance, and. defendant denied the contracts as alleged, but admitted in his answer contracts which he offered to perform, the court has allowed the complainant the option of taking decree for performance on the .contract as admitted. Wallace v. Brown (Chancellor Williamson, 1855), 1.0 N. J. Eq. (2 Stock.) 308, 312; Ryno v. Darby (Chancellor Zabriskie, 1869), 20 N. J. Eq. (5 C. E. Gr.) 231. These cases all involve questions arising under the statute different from those arising on this .demurrer. There is no decision in our courts which controls the present case or which brings the ease presented by the bill within the settled exceptions to the operation of the statute, and on principle I find no reason for so extending the exception. The demurrer to the amended bill will be sustained, and I will hear counsel as to the order or decree to be made on the original bill.