delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an action of ejectment, brought by John Fleming, against Heman Carter, wherein judgment was rendered in favor of the latter, and the former appealed.
The case, as attempted to be established by the evidence on the part of the defendant, was this: Fleming, being the owner of the premises in controversy, which composed a part of a farm of 300 acres of land, some time in 1863 made a contract for the sale of the 300 acres to one Wilcox, and executed to the latter a bond for the conveyance to him of the whole land, upon the payment of $7500, in ten equal annual payments, the first commencing January 1, 1866, with interest to be paid annually, under which bond Wilcox went into possession in 1863.
The premises in controversy, comprising some 32 acres, were separated from the rest of the farm by the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, which ran through it from east to west.
Some time in 1866, Wilcox, by the consent of Fleming, sold the 32 acres to Samuel Carter, for his son, Heman Carter, for $475, to be paid in two short payments, and Fleming expressly promised Samuel Carter that he would convey the premises to him, or any one he might name, on payment of the money. By arrangement between Fleming and Wilcox, at the time the former consented to the sale by Wilcox, the latter was to give the money derived from the sale to Fleming. Carter made his payments for the land in full to Wilcox, as agreed, and the latter paid them over to Fleming, informing him they came from Carter, and they were indorsed on Wilcox’s contract with Fleming.
In the fall of 1866, Heman Carter, the appellee, and defendant below, for whom the land was purchased from Wilcox, went into the possession of it, and has remained in possession ever since, and has made valuable improvements thereon and paid all taxes. The above contract between Wilcox and Carter, and Fleming’s assent to it, and promise to make the deed under it, were only verbal. Some two months after Carter had made the last payment for the land, on the 14th day of January, 1867, Wilcox and his brother, Samuel B., executed to Heman Carter their bond to give to the latter a good and sufficient deed in fee simple of the premises, within ten years, acknowledging full payment of the consideration money, $475.
Admitting the claim of appellee to its full extent, it constitutes no defense to an action of ejectment. Appellant exhibits a complete legal title to the premises. As against him, whatever interest appellee has in the land, is under and by virtue of a verbal contract. By the Statute of Frauds, such a contract for the sale of any interest in land, for a longer term than one year, is void.
In a court of law, part performance does not take a case out of the operation of the statute. It is otherwise in a court of equity, where the part performance has been to the extent here claimed. Appellee’s recourse for relief must be in that court, where he may have his bill for an injunction to restrain the prosecution of this ejectment suit, and for a specific performance of the contract.
The case of Stow v. Russell, 36 Ill. 18, referred to by appellee’s counsel, where a similar state of facts to that here set up was held to amount to a legal defense in an action of ejectment, differs from the one at bar, in the important particular that there, the contract was in writing.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.