Daniels v. Lewis

By the Court,

Paine, J.

The only question presented on this appeal is, whether the complaint sets forth sufficient to take the parol agreement for the sale of the land out of the statute of frauds. The facts alleged are substantially as follows : Lands which the plaintiff had sold by warranty deed, and the title to which he was bound to defend, had been sold for taxes, and tax deeds were issued and recorded, but they are averred to have been illegal and void. The law in force at the time these deeds were recorded, required the owner to bring his action for the recovery of the land within three years from the recording. But before the three years had expired, and while the matter, relating, as it did, to the remedy only, was subject to legislative control, the time was further extended for three years, by chapter 197, Gen. Laws of 1859. Before his right to bring an action was barred under this law, the plaintiff employed attorneys to commence a suit to recover the land and have the tax deeds declared invalid. At this time the defendant, Lewis, who was then the holder of the tax title, made a verbal agreement with the plaintiff, that if the latter would pay him seventy-five dollars and discontinue his legal proceedings, Lewis would convey the premises to the plaintiff. The plaintiff, in pursuance of this agreement, directed his attorneys to discontinue all legal proceedings, paid Lewis ten dollars down, and afterwards tendered him the remaining sixty-five dollars, as soon as by the agreement he was required to pay it. But before this tender was made, the plaintiff’s right of action was barred by the statute, and Lewis then refused to convey the land or abide by the agreement.

It seems clear, that to allow him thus to take advantage of a verbal agreement to convey, by which to induce the plaintiff *143not to sue while he might have done so, and then refuse to abide by it after the plaintiff’s action was barred, would operate as such a fraud upon the plaintiff as should take the case out of the statute; Equity enforces verbal agreements for the sale of lands where there has been such a part performance: that it must necessarily produce a wrong and an injury to one party, if the other is then allowed to repudiate it. Our statute of frauds expressly reserves this power, Sec. 10, chap. 106, R. S., 1858. And although payment of a part of the consideration is not considered such a part performance as to justify the application of this doctrine, for the reason that the money may be restored, yet the discontinuing of legal proceedings which the party was about to commence, and neglecting to sue until after the right was barred, in reliance upon such verbal agreement, must be so deemed, for the reason that the party cannot be restored to his former position, and, if the agreement is not enforced, may be greatly injured.

The order over-ruling the demurrer to the complaint, is affirmed, with costs. •