1 A.2d 146 | Conn. | 1938
Under the substituted complaint as amended and as tried, this case was one at law for damages for breach of the oral agreement alleged for the conveyance of land. Upon a previous appeal, reported in
In support of the substituted complaint the plaintiffs offered evidence to prove that the plaintiff Ernestine G. Wolfe is the administratrix of her deceased husband's estate, and the other plaintiffs are their living children and the children of a deceased daughter; that in 1930 Mrs. Wolfe as administratrix mortgaged to the defendant for $2500 real estate of the decedent; that in 1933, at the instance of the defendant, the acquiesced in a foreclosure by it of the mortgage, under an oral agreement that after obtaining title the defendant would convey it to her individually to hold for herself and the other plaintiffs, she to give the defendant a mortgage for the amount *510 of the original mortgage and to pay the accrued interest and costs of the foreclosure when the defendant delivered the title deeds and a statement of the interest and costs to her; that the defendant, pursuant thereto, secured title by foreclosure in March 1934, but, instead of conveying to Mrs. Wolfe, sold the real estate to other parties for prices much less than its real value; that the plaintiffs continued to occupy the premises until November, 1935, and after the foreclosure, with the knowledge, consent and approval of the defendant, made extensive improvements, including the installation of a new water system serving the house and the store on the premises, new plumbing, electric pumps, repairs to the house foundation, and interior painting and papering, which were of considerable value and added substantially to the value of the real estate. The complaint as amended further alleged besides the estoppel of the defendant to take advantage of the Statute of Frauds, that by violation by the defendant of its agreement the plaintiffs lost the value of their equity in the property, and claimed $8000 damages.
The errors assigned in the denial of the motion in arrest of judgment and in the overruling of the defendant's demurrer to the amendment to the complaint alleging an estoppel, are without merit. By this amendment the plaintiff attempted to plead an estoppel in pais against the defendant's taking advantage of the Statute of Frauds as a defense. "That was unnecessary: such estoppel could be proved without being pleaded. Bernhard v. Rochester German Ins. Co.,
A ground of error claimed by the defendant in the denial of its motion to set aside the verdict, is that the evidence is insufficient to prove performance by the plaintiffs of their part of the claimed contract essential to charge the defendant with liability. No error is assigned in the court's charge to the jury and the charge is not printed in the record. It is to be presumed that the court properly charged the jury as to the law upon this issue and the facts necessary to be found in support thereof which its verdict indicates it did find. In view of Mrs. Wolfe's testimony, among other evidence, that the agreement was that she was to pay the accrued interest, taxes, and cost of the foreclosure "after the title was turned back, but it never was turned back so I never found out just how much it would be"; that she asked the defendant's president "a number of times when it was I could straighten out things as he agreed to do, but he didn't seem to want to say much about it"; and that she had arranged to raise enough money to pay the accrued interest and the expenses of the foreclosure, we cannot say that there was not sufficient evidence to support the verdict in this particular. No time for performance was agreed upon but performance by both parties in these particulars was evidently intended to be simultaneous; upon proof of a demand for performance by Mrs. Wolfe and refusal of the defendant to perform or to set a time for performance her right to recover for a breach of the contract was complete if she was willing, able and ready to perform, and no actual tender on her part was necessary. Stierle v. Rayner,
The defendant further claims that the evidence is insufficient to prove that the plaintiffs, in making the improvements) acted in reliance on the defendant's promise to reconvey. More specifically the contention is that this must be so since Mrs. Wolfe's testimony shows that the improvements were made during the period from September of 1934 to the spring of 1935, and that in October 1934 she was told by the defendant's president that one piece of the farm upon which were no buildings had been sold and that the defendant was going to sell the rest of it, which he reiterated in June, 1935. It being presumed that the court's charge was also correct upon this issue, we are unable to say that in view of her protests and other pertinent facts in evidence, the jury were unwarranted in concluding that the plaintiffs refused to believe that the defendant would violate its promise and relied thereon in making the improvements. Neither can it be said, therefore, that in this particular the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict.
The most important question presented by this appeal, involved in the court's rulings upon evidence and upon the motion to set aside the verdict which are assigned as error, is whether the defendant's promise to reconvey affords a basis for the estoppel claimed by the plaintiffs. The Statute of Frauds, 5982 of the General Statutes, providing that "no civil action shall be maintained upon any agreement . . . for the sale of real estate or any interest in or concerning it . . . unless such agreements or some memorandum thereof, be made in writings and signed by the party to be charged therewith," does not make void the contract to which the limitation applies, but affects only the remedy. Downer v. Chesebrough,
While there is a conflict of authority, a number of well considered cases hold that where a plaintiff has acted solely in reliance on an oral agreement an estoppel may be raised to defeat the statute. Among these are Vogel v. Shaw,
In reaching this conclusion, however, that there is an estoppel effective against the defense of the statute, we strictly limit its scope to the particular situation before us. Upon the previous appeal as above suggested, we held that this being an action at law the *515
plaintiff was not entitled to the benefit of the equitable doctrine of partial performance to take the case out of the statute. The question of estoppel now before us was not presented in the original proceeding either upon the trial or appeal. Patently the plaintiffs' failure to assert it then in no way limits their rights thereunder now. We refer to that, however, since the determination of the case as now presented requires no recognition of a right in the plaintiffs to relief by estoppel beyond one coextensive with that available to her under the doctrine of partial performance had she proceeded in equity instead of law, and our decision is restricted accordingly. As is clearly demonstrated in a note, 75 A. L. R. 650, amply supported by the authorities therein cited, part performance in its essence rests upon the ground of estoppel. It is there well stated (p. 651) as essential to it that "The plaintiff, in reliance on the contract and on the acts or acquiescence of the defendant, must have changed his position or prejudiced himself," and further, quoting eminent authority, that "`nothing is to be considered as a part performance which does not put the party into a situation which is a fraud upon him unless the agreement is fully performed'"; 2 Story, Equity Jurisprudence (14th Ed.) 1045; 4 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (4th Ed.) 1409; and it is also pointed out that the weight of authority recognizes the rule to be based upon estoppel or fraud, citing Browne, Statute of Frauds (5th Ed.) 456; Glass v. Hulbert, supra; Halligan v. Frey, supra. This court has repeatedly used language in recognition of these principles. Eaton v. Whitaker,
While many of our own decisions and those of other jurisdictions in dealing with this question stress the *516 importance of the relationship between acts relied upon and contract, this requirement, as is pointed out at page 651 of the A. L. R. note referred to above, "is primarily intended not to assure the probative integrity of the acts in question, but to show that the plaintiff relied upon the agreement and upon the defendant's inducement or acquiescence, such reliance being a prerequisite element of estoppel." The true basis of the doctrine of partial performance is estoppel, and we are satisfied that the evidence in this case was sufficient to have established partial performance had that doctrine been available to the plaintiffs. We further conclude, however, that for the reasons already indicated, it was likewise sufficient to support the jury's finding that the defendant was estopped from relying upon the statute, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to the benefit thereof. Unfortunate though it may seem that the case as presented on the former appeal did not lead to this fuller consideration of this relationship between partial performance and estoppel, it may properly be observed that the content of the record suggests that the larger award to the plaintiffs upon the retrial more closely approximates real justice than did the original verdict.
Our conclusion above does not involve adoption of the rule that estoppel against the defense of the statute may be effective to pass title to the land in question, for which there is authority. 25 R.C.L. 700, 343. The plaintiffs here were not seeking a reconveyance but damages only. Our conclusion is fortified, however, by the fact that there are decisions of this court, which though not involving the precise question before us, do hold that a promise acted upon by the other party may create an interest in the promissor's land through estoppel. Brown v. Wheeler,
Two other claims of the defendant require but brief mention. One is that an actual design or intent to deceive or defraud must exist in the maker at the time of his representation or promise, to afford the basis of an estoppel. The law is not so. "In this connection the meaning given to fraud or fraudulent is virtually synonymous with unconscientious or inequitable. The fraud may and generally does consist in the subsequent attempt to controvert the representation and to get rid of its effects, and thus to injure the one who has relied on it, or, as it has been stated, *518
equitable estoppel arises when the conduct of the party estopped is fraudulent in its purpose or unjust in its results." 10 R.C.L. 691, 20; Seymour v. Oelrichs,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.