This action was brought to enforce the specific performance of a contract for the conveyance of land.
Under the findings, which are, as we think, supported by the evidence, it appears that the plaintiff, the vendee, took possession of the land, by her agents, with the consent of the vendor, and made valuable improvement thereon on the faith of the contract. This is sufficient part performance of the contract, it being oral, to take it out of the operation of the statute of frauds, under the rule announced in Calanchini v. Branstetter, 84 Cal. 258.
The most strenuous contention of the defendant for the reversal of the order refusing a new trial seems to be as to the rulings of the court upon the admission or rejection of proffered evidence.
The contention of the plaintiff is, that she traded her tract of land, about eight hundred acres in Colusa County, for a band of horses and the land of the defendant in Lassen County; that putting her land at $16,000 and the defendant’s horses at $8,000, the defendant agreed to assume a mortgage on her lands over $5,000, and make her a title to his land in Lassen, which was valued at $2,675; that as he could not, on account of certain litigation, give her at that time a perfect title to the land, he agreed to give her a note for the sum last above mentioned, which was not to be paid except in the event the defendant should find it impossible to make title to the Lassen County land to the plaintiff; and she now waives a good title, and asks simply for a conveyance of that land.
The contention of the defendant is, that he never did *422agree to sell the land in Lassen, but that the note represented a part of the purchase price which he was to pay for the land of plaintiff. As a part of his evidence, he stated that he was to assume the payment of but three thousand dollars of the mortgage debt on the plaintiff’s land, and that he was only to pay interest on that much of it, and that the plaintiff agreed to be responsible for the rest of the sum due by the mortgage, and to pay the interest on it.
The evidence of the defendant was intended to show that he did not agree to sell the land, but that his agreement was to sell his band of horses, then running on that land, and to take the plaintiff’s land at $16,000, to pay $8,000 in horses, $3,000 of the mortgage debt and interest then encumbering the land of plaintiff, and to give his note for $2,675 for the balance of the purchase price of plaintiff’s land.
The pleadings admit the ownership of her land by the plaintiff, and there is nothing set up in the answer as to any failure on the part of the plaintiff to perform her contract. The only matter at issue is, Did or did not the defendant, at the time the contract was entered into for the purchase or trade for the plaintiff’s land, agree to give in part consideration and payment therefor his land in Lassen County?
It follows, therefore, that all the evidence offered on the part of the defendant going to show that the land in Colusa County which he bought from the plaintiff was not hers in fact or equity, as against her father’s creditors, was entirely irrelevant and immaterial, and was properly ruled out by the trial court.
It is insisted that the proof offered to show a payment of the note for $2,675 ought to have been admitted, to show that the contract was as defendant asserts.
But the proof showed that the note was a joint one in favor of the plaintiff and one Meyers, and that she never authorized its assignment by Meyers to any one, and never received a cent upon it, and that Meyers transferred it without any authority from her, or knowl*423edge that he had done so. Besides, the defendant was permitted to say that he paid to the assignee of Meyers five hundred dollars; and it is plain, from the statement as made by defendant, that this sum was all he ever claimed to have paid on the note, and that the plaintiff never knew of it or authorized it. We see no error prejudicial to defendant in this.
The only reversible error which we perceive in the record is the ruling of the court which excluded from its consideration a written agreement, which reads thus: —
“ This agreement, made this twenty-sixth day of November, 1880, between J. Meyers and Lina Moulton, of the county of Colusa, state of California, the parties of the first part, and E. A. Harris, of said county and state, the party of the second part, witnesseth, that whereas a certain indenture of mortgage between E. A. Harris of the first part, and the Colusa County Bank of the second part, dated the twenty-sixth day of November, A. D. 1880, for the sum of $5,325, now, therefore, it is understood and agreed between the aforesaid parties that the said parties of the first part will pay, or cause to be paid, to the said party of the second part all the interest on said sum that may accrue on all amounts over and above $3,000.
“ Jacob Meyers.
“ Lina Moulton.”
The defendant, to show that he did not sell his land in Lassen, had testified previously that he was to give his horses at eight thousand dollars, to assume three thousand dollars of the mortgage on plaintiff’s land, and give his note for the balance of sixteen thousand dollars. And also, to corroborate this statement, he had shown, in some prior negotiations between himself and one Meyers, acting for the plaintiff, the execution of a written memorandum of agreement setting out these matters.
Now, if it could be made to appear that the plaintiff had signed an agreement at the time the transaction *424between herself and the defendant took place, in which she agreed to pay interest on all over $3,000 of the mortgage that the defendant had just executed, in satisfaction of the mortgage which existed on her land, to the Colusa County Bank, it would tend to show, as we think, that he was telling the truth when he said that the horses at $8,000, the assumption of $3,000 of the mortgage debt, and the $2,675 note were in consideration of the sale of plaintiff's land, worth $16,000, and that his land in Lassen was not part of the consideration.
He ought, as it seems to us, to have had considered by the court all facts and circumstances which went to throw light on the true nature of the contract he had made, as upon that depended the determination of the issue as to whether he had agreed to make title to his land in Lassen County as part consideration for the land of plaintiff. But upon no other ground could this evidence have been admissible under the pleadings as they stand, and which the court, as we think, properly refused to allow to be amended.
For the reasons stated, the order should be reversed, and we so advise.
Vancliee, C., and.Fitzgerald, C., concurred.
The Court.For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the order is reversed.
Hearing in Bank denied.