I. The only evidence offered to prove the contract as to the erection of the wall was 1. Party Walls: contracts for: evidence: construction of statute. oral, and admitted against the objection of the defendant as incompetent. At the close oi the testimony the aerenaant moved the court to take the case from the jury, and render judgment for the defendant for costs, on the ground that there was no- legal evidence to support the plaintiff’s cause of action. The motion was overruled, and this action of the court was assigned as error. There is no question but that the wall in controversy is a wall in common, as recognized in the chapter of the Code, “Of Walls in Common.” The chapter provides that owners of contiguous lots may each build his wall on the line, and that the other may build thereto, and specifies the duties and rights of the owners as to such walls. After these provisions is the following: “Sec. 2030. This chapter shall not prevent adjoining proprietors from entering into special agreements about walls on the lines between them, but no evidence of such agreement shall be competent unless it be in writing, signed by the parties thereto, or their lawfully authorized agents; and, wherever such *592proprietor is a minor, the guardian of Ms estate shall have full authority to act in all matters relating to walls-in common.” It is because of this section that the appellant insists that the court is in error in the ■admission of oral evidence.
A contention arises as to whether or not the agreement in this case is a special agreement, as contemplated by the statute. The statute “Of Walls in Common” makes general provisions for the guidance of' parties in regard to such rights, and they may act thereon without other agreement. The statute in such, cases defines the duties and obligations of the parties, —makes a contract for them. It is general in its scope- and purpose. The parties may, however, make special agreements, by which is meant agreements other than those fixed by the law for general observance. This, thought has support in Wickersham v. Orr, 9 Iowa, 253, in the following language: “This section evidently refers to the special agreements therein specified, and not to such as in no manner differ from the contract which the law makes for the parties.” If then the-agreement in question is not such a one as the law, in the absence of the agreement, would have made, it is. special, and comes within the rule of the section. There is nothing in the law “Of Walls in Common” that requires an adjoining lot owner to unite with his. neighbor owner in the erection of a party wall, or to-pay for or use the same. The neighbor may, however, place his wall on the line, and the adjoining owner may thereafter, if he so elects, use the wall by paying for his. share of it, and it then becomes a “wall in common.” Hence it will be seen that an adjoining lot owner is not,, by the contract which the law makes for him, required to join in the construction of such a wall. The agreement in question differs from the law in this respect,, and is a requirement that he shall aid in the erection,, and for this reason it is a special agreement, and should, be proven only in the manner provided by the statute..
*593II. It is, however, urged that parol evidence oí the contract was admissible because there was a part 2. -: -: -: part performance. performance of the contract. This claim is made under the provisions of our statute of frauds, wherein certain exceptions are made to a law prohibiting oral evidence to establish certain classes of contracts. The prohibition is general and positive, barring the exceptions specified. The section making the exceptions (3665) refers in terms to the section and subdivisions thereof to which it applies, being section 3664 and subdivisions 1 and 4; the first being as to contracts for the sale of personal property, and the other ‘Those for the creation or transfer of any interest in lands.” The agreement in this case is not of either class. It was not an agreement for an easement or right in lands, for the law gave the necessary right to erect the wall, and there is nothing in the verbal agreement, as alleged, of such an import. Thus there is nothing in the statute of frauds to sustain the action of the court if we should hold the statute applicable to such cases. It must be that section 2030 of the Code controls, and the section seems to be of independent application so far as the statute of frauds is-concerned. The contracts provided and contemplated by the law of walls in common are not of the classes controlled by the statute of frauds. The legislative intent that agreements as to walls in common shall be those arising by operation of the statute, in the absence of those written and signed by the parties, seems quite apparent. See Crapo v. Cameron, 61 Iowa, 447. The case of Rindge v. Baker, 57 N. Y. 209, is not authority, because there is nothing to indicate that it was decided under statutes like ours. The inference is quite conclusive that it was not. The defendant’s motion should have been sustained. — Reversed.