December 31, 1947, appellant, plaintiff below, brought suit to quiet title to a city lot in Kellogg, claiming by adverse possession and the payment of taxes “to own the same in fee against the whole world.” The court found that plaintiff’s title was good as against all except defendant E. W. Ryckman. As to him it found, substantially as alleged in his cross complaint, that in the month of November, 1938, the plaintiff and Ryckman entered into an agreement by the terms of which Ryckman (a plumber, then engaged in furnishing labor and materials to the plaintiff in various residential rental properties owned by plaintiff in Kellogg) agreed to furnish labor and materials, as re.quested by plaintiff, to the amount of $300, for which the plaintiff agreed to sell and convey the lot in question to Ryckman; that the price was fair and reasonable; that plaintiff gave defendant Ryckman possession of the lot and the defendant furnished labor and materials in the sum of $356.24; that in the months of June and July, 1939, the defendant constructed a plumbing shop on the property contracted for at a cost of $307.08; that defendant remained in continuous possession of the property until July, 1946, when, in his absence, the plaintiff took possession and rented the premises to another for use as a plumbing shop; that on several occasions between November, 1938, and July, 1946, the plaintiff advised the defendant that he would prepare the necessary papers to convey the property to *453 the defendant, and although requested to do so, never delivered any conveyance; that no accounting was ever had between the parties as to the amount of materials and services rendered by defendant, or of rent collected, or taxes paid, by plaintiff, and that there is no evidence to show that the plaintiff sustained any loss or damage in the transaction. Upon these facts the court concluded that the defendant Ryckman is entitled to a conveyance from the plaintiff and made and entered its decree accordingly.
The plaintiff first assigns the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings. In a case involving an oral contract to convey realty, this court has held that the evidence to sustain such a contract must be clear, convincing and certain, Johnson v. Albert,
67
Idaho 44,
The contract, though oral, having been fully performed by the purchaser and the purchaser having been given possession by the seller and having made valuable improvements on the property, the statute of frauds is satisfied and the purchaser is entitled to specific performance in equity. I.C. secs. 9-503 and 9-504. Chatterton v. Luker,
The appellant assigns as error the failure of the court to find that the lot was the community property of himself and ■his wife. No evidence was introduced by either party as to whether the property belonged to the community estate, except that appellant’s wife, Marie Wormward, while on the stand as a rebuttal witness for the plaintiff, testified that she and the plaintiff were married in 1910 and had since continuously lived together as husband and wife. This, of course, covered the period of time
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during which the property was acquired by the plaintiff. We assume this testimony would be sufficient to raise the presumption that the property belonged to the community. However, that question is not before us. The plaintiff alleged that he was the owner “in fee against the whole world”, thus taking the position that there was and is no outstanding interest, right or title in any other. Malone v. Peay,
Appellant cites Cooper v. Pena,
Decree affirmed. Costs to respondents.
