This is a suit for a specific performance of a contract to sell land.
The defendant, in his answer, denies any such agreement * as is charged in the bill, and likewise insists upon the statute of frauds, as a defence against any parol agreement which might be made out.
The plaintiffs rely partly upon a parol agreement, and partly upon an agreement in writing, which is admitted to have been signed by the defendant. It is an agreement, or memorandum, dated the 7th of April, 1797, in which the defendant states, that the plaintiffs had applied to him for leave to possess lot No. 4. in the second allotment of the Oriskany patent, and that he had, accordingly, given them leave, and promised them, as soon as he could obtain a release from the heirs of Clark, of their interest in the lot, he would give the plaintiffs the preference, either to purchase or to take a lease for the lot,
1. The first question that properly arises in this case is, whether this memorandum contains, within itself, sufficient evidence of a valid agreement to take the case out of the statute, and to justify a decree for a specific performance.
The memorandum appears to be utterly defective. It ought to have stated the terms of the contract with reasonable certainty, so that the substance of it could be made to appear, and be understood from the writing itself, without having recourse to parol proof. This is the meaning of the *280statute, and without such the beneficial ends of it would be entirely defeated.
If the memorandum is to be understood as promising to S®11or lease to the plaintiffs at their election, yet the terms such sale, or leasing, are omitted, and it is altogether uncertain to what extent, on what condition, or for what price, the parties meant to contract. Unless the essential terms of the bargain and sale can be ascertained from the writing itself, or by a reference contained in it, to something else, the writing is not a compliance with the'statute. The cases to this point are decisive. In Blagden v. Bradbear, (12 Ves. 466.,) there was a bill for specific performance of an agreement for the purchase of land, and the Master of the Rolls observed, that an auctioneer’s receipt may be a note or memorandum within the act; but then the receipt must contain, in itself, or, by Reference to something else, must show what the agreement was; that one material particular did not appear in the receipt, viz. the price ; and the defendant, by insisting on the statute, had thrown it on the plaintiffs to show a complete written agreement, and the bill was dismissed. The omission to mention the price in a letter, acknowledging the contract to sell, was held by Lord Hardwicke, in Clerk v. Wright, (1 Atk. 12.,) to be a fatal omission, rendering the written evidence of the contract too defective to take it out of the statute. So, in Clinton v. Cook, (1 Schoales & Lefroy, 22.,) the bill was for specific performance of an agreement for a lease for three lives, and the written memorandum of the defendant omitted to mention the terms, or any term or time of duration of the lease, though it was made in consequence, of an advertisement of the defendant, offering to lease the land for three lives» Lord Redesdale held, that the defendant was not bound to perform the contract, there being no evidence in writing of the terms to be devised, and there being no releí er.ce in the agreement to the advertisement. Again, in Seagood v. Meale & Leonard, (Prec. in Ck. 560.,) on a like bill, the *281agreement in writing did not specify the terms of the purchase. It did not mention the sum, nor the way of disposal, nor to whom; and all the danger of perjury would have been , . ' ’ . , b , , , let m, to ascertain the agreement; the bill was consequently dismissed. The same doctrine is contained in many other cases, as well at law as in equity;' (Boydell v. Drummond, 11 East, 142. Tawney v. Crowther, 3 Bro. 318. Bailey & Bogert v. Ogden, 3 Johns. Rep. 419. Symondson v. Tweed, Prec. in Ch. 374. Gilb. Eq. Cas. 35. Bromley v. Jefferies, 2 Vern. 415. Underwood v. Hithcox, 1 Ves. 279.;) and I am warranted in considering it as a settled principle, that, if the court cannot ascertain, with reason»able certainty, the terms of the agreement, from the writing, or from some other paper to which it refers, the writing does not take the case out of the statute.
It appears to be equally well settled, that, when the agreement is thus defective, it cannot be supplied by parol proof, for that would be at once to open the door to perjury, and to introduce all the mischiefs which the statute of frauds and perjuries was intended to prevent. The observations of the court, in the cases of Clinan v. Cook, and of Boydell v. Drummond, already cited or referred to, and the strong opinion of Mr. J. Buller, who presided for the Lord Chancellor, in Brodie v. St. Paul, (1 Vesey, jun. 326.,) are very conclusive upon this point, as far as authority might be wanting, in support of a principle so very clear and expedient, and which appears to have been uniformly admitted by the courts. (Binstead v. Coleman, Bunb. 65. Lord H., in 2 Atk. 383.)
I consider, then, that the agreement of April, 1797, is too uncertain and too defective, as to the essential terms of the purchase, to authorize a decree for a specific peformance. The court cannot, and ought not, to make bargains for parties, or to determine, in the case of a purchase, what one party ought to give and the other to take; and, in the case of - a lease, whether it ought to be for years, or for life or lives, *282or in fee, and the amount of the rent, and whether payable ire money or in produce, and in what periods. All this I must determine, if I undertake to carry this agreement into effect. It is not necessary, here, to insist on another material defect in the agreement, and that is, the want of mutuality ; for if the defendant were bound to sell or lease, at the election of the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs were not bound to elect or to take either. It would be difficult to deduce any such obligation from the memorandum; and it seems to be very generally, and very properly, laid down in the books,, that a court of equity will never decree performance where the remedy is not mutual, or one party only is bound by the agreement. (Armiger v. Clarke, Bunb. 111. Troughton v. Troughton, 1 Ves. 86. Lawrenson v. Butler, 1 Schoale & Lefroy, 13. Bromley v. Jefferies, 2 Vern. 415.)
The plaintiffs have gone into parol proof of negotiations and conversations prior to, and at the time of, the date of the agreement, to remove the ambiguity on the face of it, as to the meaning of the preference which was to be given, and also to ascertain, with some convenient certainty, the sense of the parties as to the terms of the purchase or lease. But I apprehend the rule to be too reasonable, and too well settled, to be now disturbed, that when an agreement is reduced to writing, all previous negotiations are resolved into the writing, as being the best evidence of the certaintyof the agreement. Every thing before resting in parol, becomes thereby extinguished or discharged. (Pasch. 22 Car. I. K. B. cited in 5 Viner, 515. pl. 18. Christmass v. Christmass, Trin. 11 G. I .in Ch. cited in 5 Viner, 517 pl. 26. Vandervoort v. Col. Ins. Com. 2 Caines, 155. Mumford v. M Pherson, 1 Johns. Rep. 414.) It has been already observed, that parol proof cannot be resorted to, to supply what may be uncertain and defective in the writing; The note or memorandum, of April, 1797, is then to be laid out of. the case, as being no compliance with the statute, and as forming, of itself, no ground for a specific performance.
*2832. But the plaintiffs setup part performance to take the ease out of the statute, and allege that this part performance consisted in delivery of possession, and in the beneficial improvements which the defendant encouraged the plaintiffs to make.
In the first place, it is very questionable whether the plaintiffs are to be permitted, even in the case of part performance, to resort to parol proof, in explanation of, or as a substitute for, an existing written agreement. It would be against the principle which has just been stated. A contract cannot rest partly in writing, and partly in parol. The writing is the highest evidence of the agreement, and does away the necessity and the effect of parol evidence. To this purpose it was observed by Lord Thurlow, in Irnham v. Child, (1 Bro. 92.,) that the rule was perfectly clear, that, where there was a deed in writing, it will admit of no contract that is not part of the deed ; and that, whether it adds to, or deducts from the deed, it is impossible to introduce it on parol evidence. The point appeared to Lord Redesdale so repugnant to general principles, that he declared, in Clinan v. Cook, that, if there were part performance, he should have had great difficulty in letting in parol proof in aid of a written agreement.
But if the parol proof is to be let in, the same difficulty occurs that arose upon the memorandum, as to the uncertainty of the essential terms of the contract. There is no evidence of any price agreed on in case of a sale, or of any certain term, or rent, if a lease was to be preferred. And, if the court cannot execute the agreement even when in writing, if the terms of it be uncertain, the same reason and the same authorities apply, when the agreement, resting on parol evidence, is likewise uncertain. It is impossible to decree a specific performance in this case, whether we take the agreement from the writing, or from the parol proof, or from a combined view of both, without determining for the parties, if the plaintiffs elect to buy, the price, the credit, and the *284times of payment 5 and, if the plaintiffs elect to lease, the. duration of the lease, the amount of rent, and when, where, and in what, payable. This would be going further thaw any of the cases will warrant. It would be taking from the parties their inherent and valuable right to make their own bargains, and we should appear to have forgotten the express words of the statute, that no contract or sale of lands, or any interest therein, shall be valid, unless the agreement, or some note or memorandum thereof, be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged.
The general language of the books is, that part performance will not take a parol agreement out of the statute, unless the terms of the agreement distinctly appear, or are made out to the satisfaction of the court. (Amb. 586. 1 Ves. 221. 2 Schoale & Lefroy 1. & 459. 3 Atk. 503. 6 Ves. 470-1., and the cases already cited.). I had occasion lately to consider this very point in the case of Philips v. Thompson and others ;* and it is, undoubtedly, the sound doctrine, though there may be, sometimes, a case or. dictum which seems to impair it. The ground of the relief in chancery, is the fraud in permitting a parol agreement to be partly . executed, and in leading on a party to expend money in the melioration of the estate, and then to withdraw from the performance of the contract. (1 Ves. 221. 1 Bro. 417. 6 Ves. 27.) The courts of equity, in their anxiety to guard the party from the effects of fraud, have been led to some fluctuating decisions on this point of part performance; but the current of cases, both ancient and modern, is pretty uniform and consistent with the principle I have stated, and the tendency of the latter cases is to prefer giving the party compensation in damages, instead of a specific performance. Wherever damages will answer the purpose of indemnity, this alternative is to be preferred, as it will equally satisfy justice, and will be in coincidence with the provisions, and in support of the authority, of the statute. It was the observation of the Master of the Rolls, afterwards Lord Alvanley, *285m the case of Froster v. Hale, (3 Ves. 713.,) that “the court had gone rather too far in permitting part performance, and other circumstances, to take a case out of the statute, Part performance may be evidence of some agreement, but of what, must be left to parol proof. The court ought no<to have held it evidence of an unknown agreement, but to have had the money laid out, repaid. It ought to have been a compensation. It was very right to say the statute should not be an engine of fraud; therefore, compensation would have been very proper.”
Other judges have felt and expressed the same sense of the inconvenient extent to which this doctrine of part performance has been carried. Under pretence of part execution, as Lord Redesdale observed, in Lindsay v. Lynch, (2 Schoale & Lefroy, 1.,) if possession is had in any way whatever, means are frequently found to oblige a court of equity • to break through the statute of frauds ; and he said it was a common expression at the Irish bar, that it had become a practice to improve gentlemen out of their estates. This same distinguished Chancellor was led to remark, in another case, Harnett v. Yielding, (2 Schoale & Lefroy, 549.,) that decrees for specific performance had been carried to an extent which tended to injustice. The original foundation of these decrees was, that damages at law were not an adequate compensation ; and, if damages at law be commensurate with the injury, the court will not interfere. This was the doctrine as early as 1683, soon after the passing of the statute of frauds, in the cases of Dean v. Izard, and Hollis v. Edwards, (1 Vern. 159.) Those were bills for the execution of a parol agreement for a lease, and in confidence of which, the plaintiff had expended large sums on the premises.' The statute of frauds was pleaded, and the Lord Keeper said, that the plaintiff, in each case, bad a clear equity to be restored to the money expended for improvements, and he thought the bill would hold so far, as to be restored to the expenditures, and he directed an issue at law, to ascertain the damages.
*286The uncertainty of the terms of the agreement is, then, of itself, an insuperable objection to the specific execution sought by the bill; and the compensation for improvements, which can be awarded under the authority of the court, affords to the - party an adequate and a more suitable relief. Not only the case last cited, but the reasons and authorities contained in the recent decision, in Phillips v. Thompson and others, show that the court possesses ample jurisdiction over this question of compensation, and that, though other relief cannot be granted, the bill may be sustained for that purpose.
I have hitherto considered the case in the most favourable light for the plaintiffs, in respect to the evidence of a parol agreement; but there are written documents which tend strongly to overturn or destroy the weight of the parol proof, as to the existence of any agreement on the part of the defendant to sell, or permanently lease, the premises. I refer to the lease for three years, which the plaintiffs accepted, as late as the 1st April, 1803, and to the letter of G. W. F. Parkhürst, the principal plaintiff, of the date of 3d April, 1806, in which he offers to lease or purchase the land, on such terms as the defendant can afford, and admits the right to sell or lease, and the terms of either, to rest wholly in the discretion of the defendant. It is difficult to resist the impression which these documents are calculated to produce ; and the letter of the 27th February, 1803, from the defendant to Mr. Platt, as mentioned in the pleadings, does not weaken that impression. That letter had no particular allusion to the parties in question, but to the Oriskany lots in general: and it is evidence, as far as it goes, that the defendant intended to reserve to himself the right to determine, whether to sell or lease, and upon what terms.
The most that can be said in favour of the plaintiffs’ case is, that as the defendant, by his memorandum, in 1797, encouraged the plaintiffs to possess and improve the lot, under some vague assurance that he would, eventually, lease or sell to them, he ought not now to avail himself of the bene*287fit of their improvements, without making them compensafr°n-
The uncultivated state of most part of the land, when the defendant first gave sanction to the possession of the plaintiffs, and the uncertainty, at least, of any redress at law for their improvements, are additional considerations for retaining the bill; and in this view, perfect justice can be done to both parties, consistent with the principles of equity and law.
I shall accordingly correct the decree heretofore pronounced in this case, and shall direct a reference to a master, to take and state an account between the parties; and that, in taking the same, he charge the plaintiffs with the rent, if any, in arrear, and with what shall appear to be a reasonable rent for the time the same was not agreed on by the parties; and that he make to the plaintiffs a reasonable allowance for beneficial and lasting improvements made by them upon the land; (a) and that he take the necessary proofs for that purpose, and report with convenient speed ; and that all other questions be, in the mean time, reserved.
“ It is ordered, that the former order made in this cause, on the 20th of December last, and the other orders and decree made in the cause, subsequent to the day last aforesaid, and previous to the order for rehearing, be set aside. And it is further ordered, that it be referred to Walter King, Esq., one of the masters of this court, residing in Oneida county, to take and state an account between the parties; and that, in taking the same, he be directed to charge the plaintiffs with the rent, if any, in arrear, and for such time as the rent was not agreed on by the parties, that he charge the plaintiffs with what shall appear to be a reasonable rent; and that he be directed to make the plaintiffs a Treasonable allowance for beneficial and lasting improvements *288made by them upon the premises; and that, in taking such account, the depositions and exhibits in the cause may he * i — used by the parties ; and that they be at liberty to produce 0(-|ler proof; which the master, in that case, is to return with his report. And all further questions to be reserved, until the coming in of the report.”
Ante p.131.
See a similar order. 2 Schoale & Lefroy. 513,