This was an action by Giles S. Donovan and Mary Ann, his wife, against the appellants. The complaint sets up, in substance, the following facts:
That on, etc., Barnabas Lamb, now deceased, who was the father of the defendants and the said Mary Ann, having purchased a piece of land of one Isaac M. Coen, but not having received a conveyance therefor, procured the said Coen to convey the said land to the defendants, in consideration of which the defendants agreed to support and maintain the •said Barnabas and his wife during their natural lives, and, after their death, to pay to the said Mary Ann the sum of one thousand dollars. The said Barnabas and his wife having died, this suit was brought for the recovery of the thousand dollars thus stipulated to be paid. The deed from Coen to the defendants is set out, the consideration therein expressed being four thousand dollars. There appear, also, *41among the pleadings, a mortgage executed by the defendants to Barnabas Lamb to secure the maintenance provided for, and also a mortgage executed by the defendants to Coen, to secure one thousand dollars of unpaid purchase money.
A demurrer to the complaint was overruled; issues were formed and tried, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.
Two objections are made to the proceedings: first, that the complaint was bad, and second, that the Court admitted parol evidence to prove the contract alleged. One objection to the complaint is, that it sets up no written agreement for the payment of the thousand dollars, nor does it aver expressly that it was by parol. There is nothing in this objection. It sufficiently appears that the agreement relied upon was by parol. Unless it appears, directly or inferentially, that a contract sued upon was in writing, it will be deemed to be an unwritten contract.
The main question in the case, arising on the demurrer, and on the admission of the evidence, is, whether the parol agreement for the payment of the thousand dollars, in view of the facts appearing, is valid; for if valid, it can, of course, be proven by parol. It is insisted that if this agreement is upheld, it will be a plain violation of the rule that makes a written contract between the parties the exclusive medium of determining to what the parties bound themselves. This rule, in our opinion, has no application to the case before us. The contract sued upon was, for aught that appears, entirely by parol. The causing of the deed to be made to the defendants by Coen, and the execution of the mortgages by the defendants, were but in part execution, of the parol contract that had already been made. These instruments do not constitute the agreement sued on, but were executed in part performance of that agreement. Had the agreement been that the defendants should pay to the grantor, Barnabas, one thousand dollars, and also to maintain him and *42his wife during life, he might, undoubtedly, have brought an action for the money, although he had taken a mortgage ■to secure the maintenance. An action will lie to recover the consideration for the conveyance of land, even though the deed recite that the consideration has been paid, or to recover a different consideration than that expressed in the deed, and not inconsistent therewith. Vide Emmons v. Littlefield, 13 Maine, 233. Bingham v. Weiderwax, 1 Comst. 509. Rockhill v. Spraggs, 9 Ind. 30.
Mallory and Birch, for the appellants. McDonald and Roach, for the appellees.The agreement having been made, so far as the one thousand dollars are concerned, for the benefit of said Mary Ann, she may sue thereon.
We think there is no error in the record, wherefore the judgment must be affirmed.
Per Curiam.The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.