Court Opinion

ID: 8019348
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:08:43.683665+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:44.389391
License: Public Domain

WOODSON, C. J.
(dissenting)- — I dissent from the majority opinion in this ease for the reason that in my judgment the suit is bottomed upon a written promise to pay money, and not to recover damages for a breach of contract or for fraud and deception.
The error counsel for defendant have fallen into, -as I view the record, is partially caused by not differentiating between a suit brought by the obligee, payee or vendee, based upon a written contract made by the obligor, payor, vendor, whereby he promises to pay to the former money or property, and a suit brought by the former against the latter for damages for a breach of a contract or for fraud or deception. The distinction between the two is broad and deep, and the rights and remedies of the respective parties thereto are equally different, as will be pointed out during the course of this opinion.
The petition contains but one count, and states but one cause of action, not two, as the majority opinion holds. That cause of action is based upon the written contract attached to the petition and made a part thereof, which reads as follows:
Contract “This Agreement, entered into this 9th day of May, 18-98, by and between The Parker-Washington Company, a corporation, and David and F. P. McCormick, parties of the first part, ■and James R. Mcllvried and James R. Dennison, parties of the second part, all of Kansas City, Missouri.
“Witnesseth: That, whereas the parties of the second part propose to engage in the building of .asphalt streets in Kansas City, Missouri, and desire to purchase asphalt and other materials for such purpose, and also to secure the use of an asphalt plant for the preparation of such material; and, whereas, the parties of the first part own much more than a sufficient amount of Trinidad Lake asphalt to lay forty thousand square yards of asphalt surface, some of which is in Kansas. City, Missouri, and some of *214■which is located in the State of New Tort, and also own a modern asphalt plant, located in Kansas City, Missouri, with certain tools and appliances used in and about the preparation of the material used in the laying and construction of the asphalt portion of street work.
“Now, therefore, in view of the promises, it is. hereby agreed by and between said parties as follows, that is to say:
“Said second parties hereby purchase from the first parties, and the first parties hereby sell to the second parties, a sufficient amount of Trinidad Lake asphalt to lay forty thousand square yards of asphalt paving, according to plans and specifications, in Kansas City, Missouri, and said second parties also agree to purchase such other asphalt as may be' legally used in the laying of said 40,000 square yards of pavements under this contract, provided that such asphalt other than the Trinidal Lake asphalt shall be furnished for cash at the market price, at such times as it shall be called for by said second parties, provided no such asphalt shall be used without consent of the board of public works.
“Said second parties shall pay for the Trinidad Lake asphalt the cost price to said parties, which shall include freight, handling, insurance enroute, interest, etc., to date of payment, which payments shall be made upon delivery of the asphalt where located, and satisfactory evidence furnished of the genuineness thereof, said first parties to give at least five-days’ notice before making any delivery, and such asphalt shall be shipped to Kansas City, Missouri, by-said second parties, upon such payments and delivery, and no expense for the extra handling for the purpose-of storing said asphalt at Kansas City, Missouri, shall be charged to the business.
“All asphalt sold to said second parties by first parties in pursuance of this. contract shall be used *215by said second parties in tbe laying of pavements in said city, and not otherwise, and the preparation of all material for the asphalt portion of such paving shall be prepared at the asphalt plant of said first parties and for such purpose said second parties shall have the possession and control of said plant for the preparation of Trinidad Lake asphalt for Kansas City, Missouri, to September 15, 1898, and in case the contracts for the 40,000 square yards of paving have not been confirmed by the council by September 15, 1808, then said second parties shall have the possession and control of said plant for the preparation of said Trinidad Lake asphalt for such time as may be* necessary, up to November 15, 1898, with the right of ingress and egress at all times, for the purposes of this contract. In case said contracts shall have been confirmed prior to November 15, 1898, but not fully executed, then said second parties shall have the necessary possession, control and use of said plant until such contracts shall have been fully executed. Said second parties to have the possession, control and use of said plant in its present condition, destruction by fire or otherwise excepted, with such employees as they may require in the preparation of the material to be used in the laying of such pavements and shall also have the use of the tools, and appliances of said first parties used in and about the laying of the asphalt portion of such pavements. The machinist and night watchmen of said first parties shall at all times be retained and shall be paid for their services, for the machinist not to exceed $3.50 per day, and for the night watchman not to exceed $1.50 per day, by said second parties, during the time said second parties shall have the use of said plant.
“Said second parties shall repair all damages to said plant, tools and appliances, sustained while in the 'use of said second parties, the usual wear and *216tear excepted, and damages by fire and the elements also excepted.
“Said second parties shall furnish such tools and appliances as are not furnished by said first parties, ■which may be necessary in and about said work, and charge the cost thereof to the expense account, and at the termination of this contract all such tools and appliances, including material on hand, except Trinidad Lake asphalt, shall be divided equally between said parties.
" Said second parties agree to give such time and efforts as may be necessary in promoting the business 'and carrying out contracts, and also agree not to engage in any other line of asphalt work or with other parties, either directly or indirectly other than those interested in this contract during the existence of this contract, and this contract shall be deemed to have been carried out and consummated upon the completion of the forty thousand square yards of asphalt paving by the second parties as herein indicated.
“The said second parties agree to bid on all Trinidad Lake asphalt paving contracts to be let hereafter by Kansas City, Missouri, up to forty thousand square yards, until they are awarded the forty thousand square yards, and said first parties will not bid, directly or indirectly, on any Trinidad Lake asphalt paving contracts in Kansas City, Missouri, before September 15, 1898, without consent of said second parties, unless said second parties have been awarded and have confirmed the contracts for forty thousand square yards before September 15, 1898. In case said amount has not been awarded and confirmed by September 15, 1898, then said first parties will not bid before November 15, 1898, unless said amount has been awarded and confirmed prior to November 15, 1898, except by agreement with said second parties.
“It is agreed that said second parties shall receive no compensation in- thé way of salary for any *217services which they or either of them render during the life of this contract, and no expense shall he incurred by said second parties in the procuring of contracts other than those approved by David and F. P. McCormick.
“It is agreed that David and F. P. McCormick shall have a voice as to the expense incurred in the purchasing of material and in the employment of all labor used in and about such work. It being understood that all material and labor shall be purchased and employed with the least expense consistent with good workmanship.
“Said David and F. P. McCormick will render, without compensation, any service that may be required by said second parties in and about the carrying out of the provisions of this contract, that does not interfere with the carrying on of the business of the Parker-Washington Company.
“That said second parties shall keep a complete set of books, showing the cost of all labor and material used in and about the carrying out of this contract, including vouchers for all moneys paid out, and showing for what purpose, and such books and vouchers, shall be subject to the inspection of said David and F. P. McCormick, at all times, and upon the completion of each paving contract, a complete statement shall be rendered as to such work.
“Said second parties shall furnish all moneys necessary in and about the carrying out of their part of this contract, and no interest shall be charged upon such moneys as an item of expense.
“Said second parties shall pay said first parties five cents per square yard for all asphalt paving laid under this contract, said sum being in payment for the use of said plant and shall be paid by second parties without regard to either profit or loss in the laying *218of any pavement and in no event shall be charged as •an item of expense.
. “Upon the completion of any paving contract the actual cost and expenses shall be ascertained by said parties, and such amount shall be deducted from the price received in cash, bonds or tax bills at their face, •and the balance of such cash, bonds or tax bills shall be divided equally between the parties hereto, but in the event- of loss upon any contract such loss shall be borne by said second parties. The one-half received by said first parties is in consideration of said first parties selling said asphalt, use of tools and appliances and the services of said D'avid and F. P. McCormick as herein required. In pursuance of this agreement, said second parties shall couns-el with David and F. P. McCormick, and said second parties shall not bid less than two dollars per square yard upon •any asphalt paving contract, without the concurrence of said David and F. P. McCormick.
“The entering into this contract shall in no way ■conflict with the business of The’ Parker-Washington Company, except as such business is expressly limited by the terms of this contract, and said first parties agree in carrying on their business not to hinder ■or delay said second parties in the conduct or carrying out of their business under the terms of this agreement and this agreement shall never be construed as a partnership between said parties.
“It is further agreed by and between David and F. P. McCormick and said second parties, that said first parties will sell, if requested by said second parties, certain of the stock of said first parties, and will cause to be issued to said second parties, unissued stock of said first parties, to an amount, including such stock as said second parties shall purchase, equal to the stock held by other parties in said corporation. Said second parties shall pay par value for all stock" issued by first parties, provided they elect to take *219.such stock, and shall pay for such stock as they may purchase which has already been issued, such price as shall be agreed upon not to exceed one-twelfth of the amount of stock issued, to the end that said second parties shall hold one-half of the stock issued by said company at the time they become stockholders in said company.
“In case the said second parties take the stock in said company as herein indicated, then this contract shall be assumed by the Parker-Washington Company as of this date, and it shall bear all expenses and receive all profits arising out of this contract; and in case said second parties do not take the stock mentioned herein before the completion of this contract, then the net earnings of said first parties from the date hereof shall not be considered an asset of the Parker-Washington Company, but' shall inure to the benefit of the stockholders of said company.
“Said first parties do not intend that this offer for the sale of stock shall be an option, but in case first parties desire to make any other arrangement, it shall give said second parties fifteen days’ notice of such intention, and said second parties shall have the fifteen days within which to take said stock under this agreement; and in case said second parties do not take said stock under this agreement within the fifteen days, then said first parties shall be free to make any arrangement they deem wise as to the sale of stock or the enlargement of. their business, or the termination of this offer.
“The parties of the second part may desire to form a corporation in conjunction with at least one other person for the sole purpose of carrying out the requirements of this contract, and in case this Is done, the second parties have the right to assign their interest in this contract to such corporation, and thereupon this contract shall bind the said corporation! The said corporation shall have all of the rights *220and be substituted to all of tbe liabilities of tbe second parties as fully and with the same effect as though the name of said corporation had been stated in this contract as the party of the second part, and such corporation, if organized, shall'be dissolved upon the completion of this contract, but said second parties shall guarantee the payment for the asphalt sold them as herein set forth, and also the turning over to the first parties, the profits for all work as herein mentioned and the five cents per square yard for all pavements laid for use of plant.
“Witness the hands of said parties to duplicates hereof the day and year first above written.”
(Then follow the signatures and attestation.)
The legal effect of this contract was pleaded paragraph by paragraph, nothing more nor nothing less, and wound up with a prayer for a judgment for the $2000', for rent due for the use of the shop and tools, etc., and $20,000, mentioned in the petition, for its estimated share of the profits it would have received, had the defendant performed his part of the contract, which he fraudulently refused to do.
To the petition, the defendant filed a demurrer which, with' formal parts omitted, was as follows:
Demurrer. “1. That 'plaintiffs’ alleged, cause of action is not an action upon any writing for the payment of money or property, and that the said action was not commenced within five years after said alleged cause of action accrued, and that plaintiffs’ alleged cause of action became and was barred by the statute of this State within five years after the said alleged cause of action accrued, and was barred long prior to the institution of this suit.
“2. That it appears from the face of the said third amended petition that plaintiffs’ alleged cause of action accrued on or about November 16, 1898, and that the period within which such an action may be-*221commenced under the statutes of Missouri expired five years after the alleged cause of action accrued, to-wit, on or about November 16, 190.3, and that this suit was not commenced until July 5, 1905.”
This demurrer was sustained; and the question is, was that proper,in this case?
ses of Action. Before discussing the character of the written contract sued on and the liability of the defendant thereon, I wish to call attention, in passing, to the fact that my learned associate in writing the majority opinion, misconceives the character of this' suit, for in Paragraph Two thereof, it is stated: ‘ ‘ There are two causes of action alleged in the petition: The one for damages caused to plaintiff by the alleged fraudulent failure of defendants to procure and perform contracts for street ■paving, and thereafter to pay to plaintiffs five cents per square yard for forty thousand yards after that much street paving had been laid. Plaintiffs allege that these omissions prevented ‘a gain’ to them of $2000. The other for damages in the estimated sum of $20,000, as one-half of what would have been the earnings, if about one thousand tons of asphalt, sold to defendants by plaintiffs, had been properly prepared and laid in the form of street pavements under contracts let to defendants by Kansas City, which defendants fraudulently failed to obtain.!’
As previously stated, and as appears from the face of the petition, there is-but-one cause of action stated therein, and not two, as stated in the majority opinion; nor was the suit brought to recover damages from the defendant for a fraudulent breach of contract, as stated in that opinion. But the suit was brought, as appears from the petition and the contract sued on, for the recovery of money conditionally promised in writing, to be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff for the use of the shop and tools mentioned therein, and for one-half of the estimated prof*222its thereon promised to be paid, had the defendant performed the terms and conditions of said contract, as he agreed to do.
Fraud The fraud was riot pleaded as the basis of the suit, but for the purpose of showing the fraudulent breach of the promise, which would prevent the defendant from shielding his liability behind the conditions of the contract, and which, if they had not been performed by him, on account of inability, after exercising in good faith all proper efforts on his part, would have excused his non-performance thereof, and thereby have absolved him from all liability upon his conditional promise to pay money. But, if upon the other hand, as the petition shows to be true, the non-performance of the conditions was. the intentional design of the defendant, which had he-performed, would have made his promise absolute,, then the law will not permit him to rely upon his own wrong, and say he was not liable to pay the money promised, because the conditions stated in the contract had not been performed. [Knisely v. Leathe, 256 Mo. 341.]
contracts. I. Returning to the petition and contract sued on: By reading the contract sued on in this case, it. will be seen that it either contains in its °wn terms or provides in express terms that boohs and accounts shall be kept by the defendant, showing- each and every item of cost and expense entering into the construction of the 40,000 yards of asphalt pavement mentioned therein; and this court will take judicial notice of the fact that under the Charter of Kansas City all such work must be ordered by ordinance duly enacted, and that the contracts, plans and specifications therefor, must be-in writing.
So, if we consider the terms of the contract, with the records that it provided should be kept by the de*223fendant, in connection with the charter provisions of Kansas City and the ordinances and contracts mentioned, every element of the contract between the parties to its smallest detail, would have been in writing;, and the default of the defendant in the non-performance of his part of the written contract sued on, prevented the entire transactions from being in writing, and that non-performance constitutes his whole defense in this case.
That being true, then, in my opinion, the • well-known. rule of law applies, which is to the effect that when the written contract refers to books, records, documents or other written instruments, and are made a part thereof, and when all of them are read together, they embrace the entire contract, then, in legal effect, it is the same for all purposes as though said' books, records, etc., had been included in the contract proper. But it may be suggested that said ordinances, contracts, books and records, etc., were not in existence at the time the contract was executed, or at the date this suit was instituted, and, therefore, that rule is not applicable to this case. It is true they were not in existence at that time, and in the very nature of the case they could not have been in existence at the time of the execution of the contract sued on; they were matters that had to be performed after its execution, as a part of its performance. But there is a valid answer to that suggestion-in my opinion.
In answer to that suggestion: That suggestion,, in my opinion, is without merit, for the reason that the contract upon its face shows that they were to be made by the defendant and had he done so, then every element of the contract, including its performance, would have been in writing at the date of the institution of this suit; and had they been made by the de-' fendant — showing the matters and things the contract, provided they should contain — then I apprehend no-lawyer of sound judgment would, for a moment, con*224tend that the entire contract was not in writing, within the meaning of the ten-year Statute of Limitations. That must he true, for the reason that the acts of performance of a contract, cannot, in the very nature of the case, he included in the contract itself, nor does the Statute of Limitations require such an impossibility.
If that proposition is sound, and, in my opinion, it is, then, the fact that said books and accounts were not made and kept by the defendant, is unavailing to him, for the reason that neither law nor equity will permit him, or any other person, to take advantage of his own wrong, positive fraud and deception, knowingly and deliberately perpetrated upon the plaintiff, for the purpose of damaging and injuring it, if not to destroy its business.
of rwrittenee Contracts. II. In the foregoing observations I have, for argument’s sake, assumed that all of the terms of the contract sued on were npt embraced ^thin the written contract between the parties, which as I understand the majority opinion in effect holds; and, therefore, it was necessary to piece out the written contract in order to show the entire contract, which fact brought the case within the five-year Statute of Limitations.
But as a matter of fact, I deny that such was the case. What part of the contract sued On was not in writing, as indicated by the writing sued on, and where are the allegations in the petition so stating or even intimating anything of that kind? The answer is, where? They do not exist. If they do, neither the court nor counsel have pointed a finger thereto, nor have I been able to find any such provision in the written contract or statement in the petition after carefully reading them a number of times. But the majority opinion does hold that it was necessary for *225the plaintiff to resort to parol testimony in order to make out its ease, and that said fact destroyed the written contract as one for payment of money or property, within the meaning of the ten-year Statute of Limitations, and brings it within the purview of the five-year statute. For that reason, as previously stated, the majority opinion must in effect hold that all of the terms of the contract made between the plaintiff and the defendant were not' reduced to writing, and embraced in the written contract sued on; for otherwise, such' parol testimony would have been wholly immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent — not tending to prove any issue whatever in the case.
I adhere to that time-honored rule of law. which is to the effect that whenever a contract has been reduced to writing and signed by the parties, it cannot thereafter be varied, added to, subtracted from or altered by parol testimony, except where it appears from the face of the writing itself that all of the terms of the contract were not embraced therein; but where such fact does appear from the face of the writing, then the remainder of the contract may be shown by parol testimony, if properly pleaded, and provided, the contract is not one the Statute of Frauds requires to be in writing.
Clearly, as before stated, the writing sued on does not show upon its face that all of the terms of the contract actually' entered into between the parties were not reduced to writing; and for that reason there were no parts of the contract resting in parol, which could have been pleaded or proven by parol testimony. In other words, if a written contract shows upon its face, as this one does, that all of the terms of the contract were reduced to writing, then there was no element of it resting in parol which could have been pleaded, and consequently could not have been proven by parol evidence. ,
*226An additional observation regarding the necessity of the contract providing for the acts of its performance: As previously stated, the contract may provide what acts shall be done in its performance, and by whom they must be performed; but whether they have been performed or not, must of necessity be shown by parol testimony, for the obvious reason the performance of a contract must be subsequent to its execution.
In the case at bar, had the defendant performed his part of the contract, except as to paying plaintiff its $2000, and one-half of the profits, the only facts which the plaintiff would have been required to prove by parol evidence ifi order to have been entitled to a recovery, would, at most, have been that it sold and delivered to the defendant the asphalt mentioned, that it was of the kind and standard specified in the contract; that it turned over to the defendant,.the shops and tools also mentioned therein; and that the accounts of the cost of the labor and materials and other items of expense which entered into the street improvements were true or false, as the case may have been, and what balance, if any, there remained in favor of the contractors; One-half of which would have belonged to the plaintiff.
This is precisely what was done in the case of Knisely v. Leathe, 256 Mo. 341.
In that case the plaintiff had to show by parol testimony, that he had found á purchaser for the land, at the price stated, and that, he was able, ready and willing to pay for the same in the manner stated in the contract. All of those matters pertained to the performance of the contract, and not to the promise to pay money or property.
The same is true in the case at bar. The matters mentioned in the majority opinion, which had to be proven by parol testimony, also pertained to the performance of the contract, and not to the promise of *227the defendant to pay the sums before mentioned. The promise in both cases was contained in other provisions of the contract.
The mere fact that the breach of the contract was brought about by fraud and deception on the part of the defendant is wholly immaterial in so far as the rights of the plaintiff to sue thereon are concerned. If the contract was, at the time of its execution, a promise to pay money, which clearly it was, then no subsequent act of the defendant, fraudulent or otherwise, could change the character of that promise, or have substituted one statute for another for its government.
Certainly the defendant stands in no better position for having broken his contract through means of fraud and deception, than he would have occupied had. he stood idly by without exerting an effort to perform-, his part thereof; and had the defendant breached the; contract in the manner last suggested, there could be no shadow of doubt in my opinion but that the suit, thereon would have been for a breach of a contract for the payment of money; and in that case all that the plaintiff would have heen required to prove in order to have entitled him to a recovery, was that the defendant made no effort to perform the contract; that the conditions therein stated could have been performed by him by the exercise of proper efforts; the contract price for laying the pavement and the cost and expenses for laying the same.
The apparent, not real, efforts of performance of the contract made by the defendant did not relieve him from his promise to pay the plaintiff the two sums of money mentioned in the contract; nor the fact that said promise was conditioned upon his ability to procure the contracts from the city for laying the pavement relieve him, when he made no effort to procure them or to have them confirmed when procured.
*228The conditions of the contract in this case are very much like those in the case of Knisely v. Leathe, snpra. Here the conditions are that the defendant was to nse his best efforts to secure contracts from the city to do the street paving mentioned in the contract; that he should construct the pavements according to the contracts, plans and specifications, and keep true and accurate accounts of the cost and expenses thereof, and pay, first, to plaintiff, $2000, for the use of shop and tools, regardless of the profit made or loss sustained in constructing the 40,000 yards of pavement mentioned in the contract, and, second, one-half of the net profits to be realized, if any, for constructing said pavements; while in the Knisely case the conditions of sale were that the real estate agent, Knisely, should find a purchaser for the land who was able, willing and ready to purchase the same upon the terms stated in the contract, and that the agent was to receive from Mr. Leathe, landowner, for his services, the sum of $107,500, payable in four installments, “the first one of $37,941.19, and each of the three additional payments of $23,186.27 each, at such time and place as the said Leathe should receive the principal payment on said real estate, as per the contract of sale entered into by him with Charles C. Wolcott of even date herewith.”
In the former case the plaintiff was to be paid the $2000 for the use of the shop and tools, and the one-half of the net profits, if any, realized out of the contracts, as soon as the defendant constructed the pavements. In the latter case, Knisely was to be paid his commission for selling the real estate by Leathe, in said four installments, out of the four installments of the purchase price of the land, as they were paid by Wolcott to him.
Knisely performed his part of the contract, but Leathe refused to sell the land to Wolcott, and, therefore, contended that Knisely was not entitled to his *229commissions because they were only payable out of tbe installments of tbe purchase money as they were paid to bim by Wolcott; and as tbe latter bad never paid bim any of tbe purchase money, Knisely was entitled to no commissions.
Tbe court in that case said, “That is true; but it was your own wrong which prevented Wolcott from paying tbe purchase price, and you will not therefore be beard to say tbe purchase price was not earned by Knisely.”
Tbe same is true in tbe case at.bar; it was tbe wrong of tbe defendant which prevented tbe plaintiff from receiving tbe $2000, for tbe use of tbe shop and tools and its portion of tbe estimated profits it would have been entitled to bad tbe work under tbe paving contracts been done by tbe defendant.
Tbe following parallel columns prepared by counsel for plaintiff, will show more clearly tbe analogy of tbe two cases and tbe applicability of rules of law laid down in that case, to tbe one at bar:

This Case.

In this case tbe promises sued on are as follows:
“Said second parties shall pay said first parties five cents per square yard for all asphalt paving laid under_ this contract, said sum being in payment for tbe use of said plant and shall be paid by second parties without regard to either profit or loss in tbe laying of any pavement and in no event shall be charged as an item of expense.
*230“Upon the completion of any paving contract the actual cost and expenses shall be ascertained by said parties, and such amount shall be deducted from the price received in cash, bonds or tax bills at their face, and the balance of such cash, bonds or tax bills shall be divided equally between the parties hereto, but in the event of loss upon any contract such loss shall be borne by said second parties.”
In this case it is said (Opinion, p. 180, ante):
“It (the contract) further provided that defendants should pay plaintiff five cents per square yard for all asphalt paying laid pursuant to said contract. ’ ’
Again (p. 183, ante):
“These clauses of the contract show on their face and by express terms, that the only promises to pay any money were: First, a promise to pay five cents per square yard for all asphalt paving laid under this contract; and, *231second, a promise to pay one-lialf of the profits of the paving work after its completion. ’ ’
Again (p. 183):
“It is clear, therefore, that neither of the conditional promises recited in the two above clauses ever became absolute obligations on the part of the defendant, for no promise based upon a condition can be enforced as such until the contingency upon which it depends has happened . . • . Such wrongful conduct [of the defendant] would constitute a legal basis for an implied assumpsit on their part to pay the damages caused thereby, but it could not alter the terms of the conditional promise to pay as used in the written contract.
Again (p. 184):
“They do not state a cause of action on a written contract to pay money upon certain conditions which never happened. . . . Under the contract referred to in the petition, if the defendants *232had laid the pavement or if defendants had obtained the laying of paving work from Kansas City and had performed sneh work and reaped a ■ profit therefrom ■ and had failed to pay the specific general snm agreed by them to be paid on said contingencies, these plaintiffs conld have sued defendants on the promises to pay contained in their contract and could have recovered in that action whatever amount the evidence showed was due.”
Again (p. 185):
“If the action had been predicated upon the simple averment of such promises, coupled with the further averment *233that no asphalt pavement had ever been laid and ho paving business had ever been carried on, then the petition would have been subject to a general demurrer, for the reason that it showed on its face two conditional promises which had never ripened into legal obligations.”

*229
The Knisely Case.

In tbe Knisely case tbe promise sued on was as follows (supra, p. 376):
“ ‘I hereby promise and agree to pay to' Charles II. Knisely, of St. Louis, Mo., trustee, or bis order, tbe sum of one hundred and seven thousand five hundred dollars out of tbe purchase price of $850,000; tbe payment of said $107,500, to be made by me to said Charles II. Knisely, trustee, or bis order, in four payments,, tbe first one of $37,941.19, *230and each of the three additional payments of $23,-186.27 each, at such time and place as I receive the principal payment for said real estate as per contract of sale entered into by me with Charles C. Wolcott of even date herewith.’ ”
In the Knisely case (p. 368), it is said:
“It is clear that counsel for respondent were urging that plaintiff could not recover because there had been no money paid by Wolcott to Leathe [as it is here contended and held that plaintiffs cannot recover because there had been no asphalt laid]. So that, from all standpoints the character of this written instrument between Leathe and Knisely is a vital question here in view of the fact that this case must go back for trial below. Not only so, *231but the very character of the suit is challenged and the court below, having sustained the demurrer as a whole, we must take the view here' that the trial court stood with respondent upon these contentions as to the character of the suit and the character of the contract. He could not have sustained the second ground of demurrer as he did without, saying that the written contract was not one ‘for the payment of money or property, ’ or without saying that the suit was not upon the written contract.’^
Again (p. 372) :
“The petition proceeds upon the theory, and rightfully so, that if Wolcott purchased the property and a completion of that purchase by exchange of deeds and trust deeds was prevented by *232the act of Leathe, then the money mentioned in the Leathe-Knisely contract at once became due, and this too without reference to the payment of any money by Wolcott. In other words, that Leathe conld not wilfully refuse to enforce the Wolcott contract and thereby defeat the promise to pay made in the Knisely contract. It follows that counsel for respondent are in error when they insist that the action is one sounding in damages for a breach of contract. It also follows that the circuit court was in error if it followed this bent of coun-, sel’s mind. It is further true that the court was in error when in sustaining the second ground of the demurrer that the petition stated no cause of action without the allegation that the money had been paid by Wolcott.”
Again (p. 376):
“This contract, at least when coupled with the allegation that Wolcótt or his assigns stood ready and willing to perform *233and Leathe refused and failed to perform the Leathe-Wolcott contract, rendered Leathe liable at once for the full amount agreed to he paid in the Knisely contract, as and of the date of such refusal, this too, in a suit upon the contract.”
Again (p. 377):
“The action is upon the contract, and at the very most it is only required to go outside of the contract to show that Wolcott was ready and willing to perform and Leathe refused to perform the Wolcott-Leathe contract.”
The same principles of law announced in the Knisely case are controlling in this. There, in discussing what constituted a written promise to pay money or property, within the meaning of the ten-year Statute of Limitations, this court, on page 361, said:
“It makes no difference, however, whether the suit he in debt for the amount due upon a contract, or in covenant to recover unliquidated damages for its breach. Both are alike on the contract; and if the contract is ‘for the payment of money or property’ it fills the requirement of the provisions of the Statute of Limitations we have quoted. The following cases are more or less in point on the same question: Rey*234burn v. Casey, 29 Mo. 129; Moorman v. Sharp, 35 Mo. 283; Henoch v. Chaney, 61 Mo. 129, 133; Miner v. Howard, 93 Mo. App. 569. We have no doubt that the ten-year limitation would apply in a suit of this character brought on a similar contract in the lifetime of the party.”
I have always understood the rule to be, that if the contract contains an express agreement, or one by necessary implication, to pay money or property, then the ten-year Statute of Limitations and not the five, governs the same. This is made clear by the mere statement of the fact, that it is the promise of the obligor which must be m writing, not the consideration he -received for entering into the same, nor what acts he agreed therein to perform in carrying the contract into execution.
Those matters have nothing whatever to do with the promise made, nor its character, except of course, in a proper case the promise might be shown to be void for a want of consideration or a failure thereof.
The contract sued on contains the following provisions or promises made by the defendant, viz.:

“Said second parties shall pay said first parties five cents per square yard for all asphalt paving laid under.this contract, said sum being in payment for the use of said plant, and shall be paid by second parties without regard to either profit or loss in the laying of any pavement, and in no event shall be charged as an item of expense.

“Upon the completion of any paving contract the actual cost and expenses shall be ascertained by said parties, and such amount shall be deducted from then price received in cash, bonds or tax bills at their face, and the balance of such cash, bonds or tax bills shall be divided equally between the parties hereto, but in the event of loss upon any contract such loss shall be borne by said second parties.’’

As well stated by counsel for plaintiff:
*235“The relief sought is:
“ (1) For the recovery of $2000, being five cents per square yard for 40',000 square yards of asphalt pavement, being the specific liquidated sum that at all events and in any event defendant, by the first of the foregoing provisions, agreed to pay; and,
“(2) For the recovery of $20,000 for failure to pay, as promised in the second of the above provisions.
“If either or both of these express written promises to pay are promises to pay money or property, the action was well brought within the ten-year period, and the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed and plaintiffs awarded a trial.”
Can there be any question but what the promise before quoted from the contract sued on, was for the payment of money — the $2000, and the one-half of the net profits of the street improvements, represented by the $20,000 mentioned? Clearly not, for the defendant never promised to pay anything else; but he did promise to pay the former sum, and one-half of the net profits to be derived from the street improvements to be constructed by him; which plaintiff estimates would have been $20,000, had the defendant complied with the other parts of the contract; and for that reason he sued for the $20,000.
In discussing a similar case the Court of Appeals in the case of Miner & Frees v. Howard, 93 Mo. App. 569, on page 572, said:
“By that instrument there arose a promise to pay for the labor and material; and it is therefore not true,, as contended by defendants, that the claim for the material in controversy was barred, because more than five years allowed for actions on accounts had elapsed. . . . The fact that the sum to be paid was not ascertained when the bond was executed and therefore not named therein, does not prevent the application of the statute. [Carr v. Thompson, 67 Mo. 472; Reyburn v. Casey, 29 Mo. 129; Moorman v. Sharp, 35 Mo. *236283.] Neither is it an objection to this view of the statute that the bond in suit is a collateral or indirect promise to pay money. [Martin v. Knapp, 45 Mo. 48; Rowsey v. Lynch, 61 Mo. 560.] Though indirect, the bond itself contains a promise and was a writing ‘for the payment of money,’ which would sustain the action within ten years.”
In the case of Shinn v. Wooderson, 95 Mo. App. 6, the plaintiff made an agreement with the trustees of the church to furnish moneys for the construction, the trustees agreeing to reimburse him and to give him a lien or mortgage on the church property for such sum as they did not repay him when the improvements were completed. Shinn claimed a balance for which he had not been paid and brought suit for it after five years. The court says (p. 13):
“The rendition, of the account by items will be treated merely as evidence offered, upon the part of the plaintiff, to show that in good faith he did pay out the amount he agreed with the defendants to advance. The petition sets out that he furnished that amount to the trustees upon the understanding that if he Was not repaid he was to have his lien upon the lot. The amount that he was to let the trustees have was agreed upon and fixed at the sum stated. It follows, then, that his is not a suit upon an account, but a suit upon an agTeement.”
The court held the ten-year statute applied.
In Howe v. Mittelberg, 96 Mo. App. 490, the court says (p. 493):
“If we test the application of the Statute of Limitations, as appellant claims we should, by asking whether the contract shows on its face a promise to pay or requires evidence aliunde to show a promise (Carr v. Thompson, 67 Mo. 472), the cause of action falls within the ten-year limitation, because the contract carries on its face a promise to pay money.”
*237In the Martin v. Knapp case, 45 Mo. 48, the suit was on an administrator’s bond, and the five-year statute was pleaded in bar. The court pointed out in the opinion that the Statute of Limitation of 1849 was amended in the revision of 1855 by omitting the word “direct” in describing actions on written instruments for the payment of money and that the Legislature did so with the object of including in the ten-year limitation all actions founded on such instruments, whether the promised payment was to be certain or contingent. That statute has never been amended since 1855.
In Bridges v. Stephens, 132 Mo. l. c. 552, the court said:
“The result of these decisions is that if the writing in question contains enough to raise the promise (to pay money or property) sued on, the ten-year limitation applies to an action for its breach. If the obligation is clearly apparent from the writing, a breach of it may be exhibited by facts outside the writing.”
In Carr v. Thompson, 67 Mo. 472, referred to in Howe v. Mittelberg, supra, Thompson’s written promise was that he “ ‘should pay the said Carr the amount for which he may be liable as security on the bond of one J. Henry Chiles as guardian of his-daughter, Sally Chiles, as soon as the same is ascertained and known —say in twelve months from this date (September 11, 1866) by note and security, with interest from this date.’ ” The court, on page 476, said:
“The promise to pay was in writing and, though the sum to be paid was not expressed in the writing but was by the terms thereof to be thereafter ascertained, that fact would not take it from under the operation of the ten-year statute. Were the writing of such a character that evidence aliunde would be required in order to show a promise to pay, the limitation of five years would apply.”
*238In Curtis v. Sexton, 201 Mo. 217, the court says (p. 230):
“Defendant also contends that the cause of action falls within the five-year Statute of Limitations and is therefore barred. The argument is that when evidence beyond the written document must be resorted to in order to make out the case it is not an action upon ‘a writing . . .for the payment of money or property’ within the meaning of section 4272, Revised Statutes 1899 (which is the ten-year limitation), and several cases are cited as supporting that argument, among them Menefee v. Arnold, 51 Mo. 536; Brady & Kerby v. St. Joseph, 84 Mo. App. 399, and others. But that is a misconception of those cases; they only mean to say that where the promise or agreement to pay on which the action is based is not found in express terms or by fair implication in the writing, but the cause of action arises out of facts collateral to the instrument, it does not fall within the provision of that section of the Statute of Limitations.
'“In the case at bar there is an express agreement to pay the amounts the plaintiff paid on account of his purchase and interest thereon, the only necessity for going beyond the paper writing to make out the case is to show the performance of the contract on the part of the plaintiff and the breach on the part of the defendant. The action is founded on the written contract and falls within the ten-year section of the Statute of Limitations.”
To the same effect is the case of Ball v. Cotton Press Co., 141 Mo. App. 26. That was an action to recover a dividend on stock held in the defendant company and was bottomed on a minute record of the board of directors which recited that a certain sum should “ ‘be paid pro rata according to the number of shares held by them [the stockholders].’” It was contended that the action was barred by the five-year Statute of Limitations. The court says (p. 42):
*239“In order for a writing to be a promise to pay money in the sense of the ten-year limitation section, the writing must contain words which either express & promise to pay or from which a promise may be implied. [Reyburn v. Casey, 29 Mo. 129; Carr v. Thompson, 67 Mo. 472; Howe v. Mittelberg, 96 Mo. App. 490.] What was written in the record of the meeting of the directors of the P'eper Company imported a promise to pay plaintiff $1500 as his part of the dividend . . . The present action was instituted about nine years after the declaration of the dividend and is not barred.”
In the supplemental opinion of Judge Graves, in the case of Knisely v. Leathe, supra, the point is ably and thoroughly discussed. In that case the obligation to pay the plaintiff was to pay him out of moneys thereafter to be paid to the defendant under a contract which he had with one Wolcott. The court, on page 368, said:
“He [the trial judge] could not have sustained the second ground of demurrer as he did without saying that the written contract was not one ‘for the payment of money or property’,or without saying that the suit was not upon a written contract, but was one for damages of which the written contract might be purely evidentiary.”
Again (p. 372):
“The petition proceeds upon the theory, and rightfully so, that if Wolcott purchased the property and a completion of that purchase by exchange of deeds and trust deeds was prevented by the act of Leathe, then the money mentioned in the Leathe-Knisely contract at once became due, and this too, without reference to the payment of any money by Wolcott. In other words, that Leathe could not wilfully refuse to enforce the Wolcott contract, and thereby defeat the promise to pay made in the Knisely contract. It follows that counsel for respondent are *240in error when they insist that the action is one sounding in damages for a breach of contract. ' It also follows that the circuit court was in error if it followed this bent of counsel’s mind. It is further true that the court was in error, when in sustaining the second ground of the demurrer, that the petition stated no cause of action without the allegation that the money had been paid by Wolcott. That one having an enforceable contract of sale with another person, induced. and procured by an agent, cannot defeat the agent’s commission by refusing to enforce the contract, is well-settled law. His refusal to carry out the contract, or, in the event he himself has signed .the contract of sale with the purchaser, his refusal afterwards to enforce such contract renders him liable for commission in the sum agreed upon.”
I state without fear of ■ refutation, that the consensus of the authorities is to the’ effect just stated, and that the contract sued on is a promise to pay money, and, therefore, is governed by the ten-year Statute of limitation.
I will now carefully review the authorities cited and relied upon by counsel for defendant in support of their contention that the five-year statute controls in this case.
The main cases cited by counsel for the defendant in support of his contention that this is not a suit upon a written contract or promise for the payment of money or property and therefore the action is barred by the five-year Statute of Limitations, are: Brady & Kerby v. St. Joseph, 84 Mo. App. 399; St. Louis Gas Light Co. v. St. Louis, 11 Mo. App. 55, 84 Mo. 202; Ash & Gentry v. Independence, 103 Mo. App. 299; Thomas v. Pacific Beach Co., 115 Cal. 136.
The first case mentioned is that of Brady & Kerby v. St. Joseph, 84 Mo. App. 399.
In that case defendant, a city of the second class, in proper form and legal manner awarded to plain*241tiffs ’ assignor a contract to grade certain streets therein according to the plans and specifications then on file in the office of the city engineer, showing among other things the grade lines of the streets to which the grading had to conform, for and in consideration of -dollars. The contract also provided that after the grading should he completed according to-contract, the city would issue to the contractor special tax bills against the abutting property in payment of the contract price therefor; also that in conformity to the provisions of the city charter, the city should not he liable in any manner for the cost of grading said streets, but that he should collect the cost thereof through the means of said tax hills out of the abutting property and not otherwise. That after the grading had progressed to a certain stage the city, by ordinance, changed the grade lines of some of said streets, which rendered it physically impossible for the contractor to complete the grading according to the contract and plans and specifications. Some eight or nine years after the grade lines of the streets had been so changed and the grading thereby having been prevented, that suit was brought, not on the contract for the payment of money or property the city had promised to pay the plaintiff, because no such promise was contained in the contract, hut for damages sustained by him because the city had wrongfully rendered it impossible for the contractor to complete the grading according to contract and plans and specifications, which, under the law, was absolutely necessary for him to do before he was entitled to the tax bills creating a lien upon the abutting property, out of which alone he had to look to collect his money for doing the work.
In all such cases the city acts more in the nature of an agent for both parties, the property owners and the contractors; ordering the improvements made for the benefit of the property which must pay the cost *242thereof and issuing the special tax bills to the contractor in payment.
From the foregoing it is clearly seen that the contract mentioned was not a promise made by the city for the payment of money or property to the contractor for doing the grading, but upon the contrary, it in specific terms provided that the city should not be liable for the cost of the improvements, and that the contractor should look alone to the abutting property for his pay. In other words, what did the city promise the contractor to do upon his completion of the grading according to contract? To pay him money •or property? No; but to issue to him special tax bills •creating a lien upon the abutting property in his favor, which alone the law provided, and he by the contract agreed to accept, as full compensation for doing the work. Did the contractor complete the grading? No. Did the city issue the tax bills? No. Why? Because the work was not completed according to contract, which alone would have benefited the abutting property and legally authorized the issuance of the tax bills. What effect did the change of the grades of the streets, by the city, have upon the contract of the plaintiff for doing the grading? It impaired the obligation of a valid contract,, and therefore violated the contract clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions. Then what was the suit for in that case? To recover the special damages from the city the plaintiff had sustained by reason of the breach of said contract, and not on a written promise to pay money or property.
Moreover, suppose the city had not interfered with the grading, and the plaintiff had completed the same according to contract, but the city had wrongfully refused to issue the tax bills, would the city in that case have been liable under the law and the contract for the payment of money or property? Certainly not. The only agreement the city made was to *243issue the tax bills, and its. failure to so do would not have metamorphosed that agreement into a contract to pay money or property and thereby have rendered it liable for the payment of money or property, instead of its duty to issue the tax bills.
In such a case, the city could have been compelled by mandamus to have issued and delivered the tax bills to the contractor. This court has so held in numerous cases.
That was an action against the city of St. Joseph, as the Court of Appeals stated in the opinion, to recover special damages because of its wrongful act in preventing the plaintiff from completing the grading according to the contract. Upon that performance depended the contractor’s right to have the tax bills issued and delivered to him, through which alone he could have collected the contract price for the work. In other words, the abutting property-to street improvements cannot be compelled to pay the cost thereof, without they have been constructed in conformity to the terms of the contract which alone adds the benefits to the property — for which it must respond. No excuse will or can be accepted for a non-compliance with the terms of the contract — not even the acts of God or man; but if the completion of the work is wrongfully prevented by the city, then it may be compelled to respond for the ensuing damages; but the property or property owner, never. For the reasons stated the Court of Appeals-correctly held that that suit was not based upon a written promise to pay money.and that the five and not the ten-year Statute of Limitations governed. Clearly that case has nothing in common with the case at bar, which was based upon a written promise to pay money; and it is equally clear that the five-year statute has no application to this case.
The second case cited by counsel is that of the St. Louis Gas. Co. v. City of St. Louis, 11 Mo. App. 55, *244affirmed in 84 Mo. 202. In that case the plaintiff in 1846 made a contract with the city of St. Louis, to sell to the city its gas plant in the year 1870, upon certain conditions named therein. For years subsequent to the last-named date, the company had furnished the city with gas for illuminating purposes, for, which the latter refused to pay. Thereupon the company sued the city for the sum of $545,670.48, the price of said gas so used. The city in its answer, by way of a counterclaim, set up the terms of the contract of 1846, whereby the company agreed to sell the plant to it in the year 1870, upon certain conditions named, and that it had performed those conditions, but nevertheless, the company had refused to sell and turn over the possession of the same to the city; and that in consequence of said refusal, the city had been damaged in the sum of $3,000,000, etc.
In that cáse it should be observed that there was no provision in the contract on the part of the company to pay to the city said $3,000,000, or any other sum. It simply agreed to sell to the city the gas plant; and the contract contained no promise to pay the city money or property in case it refused to sell and transfer the plant. But, as before stated, the company did agree to sell the plant to the city; and in the case of City of St. Louis v. St. Louis Gas Light Co., 70 Mo. 69, the former brought suit against the latter to specifically enforce the same contract which this court held was proper, but denied the city’s right to the remedy prayed, because it had waived its right to insist upon the performance of the contract of sale. It is thus seen that the city in the case reported was not again suing for the enforcement of the contract of sale, but was suing for damages for its breach in not selling the plant to it. It is therefore perfectly clear the company never in writing or otherwise ■agreed to pay the city $3,000,000, or any other sum of money in case it refused to make.the sale; and there*245fore said contract was not a written promise to pay to the city money or property. The suit was for damages, the law imposes for the breach of the contract. That is made clear by the case of City of St. Louis v. St. Louis Gas Light Co., supra, where the city brought suit to compel the company to sell and convey the gas plant to it. That suit was based upon the company’s promise to sell and convey — the only promise it made to the city; and the city knowing that fact, brought that suit for its specific performance. But as before stated,, the Gas Company never agreed in writing or otherwise, to pay to the city $3,000,000, or any other sum, in case it should refuse to make the conveyance; and therefore the counterclaim of the city was not and could not have been based upon a promise of the company to pay it money. That counterclaim was based upon a breach of contract for the sale of the plant to the city, and nothing more. That case is totally foreign to the case at bar; and the principles of law announced therein regarding the Statute of Limitations have no application to this case.
The next case is that of Ash & Gentry v. Independence, 103 Mo. App. 299.
The facts of that case are very similar to those in the case of Brady & Kerby v. St. Joseph, supra, save in this one particular: In the former, the negligence and delay of the city of Independence prevented the contractor from completing his contract within the time prescribed therein; and in consequence thereof he was denied a recovery on the tax bills which were properly issued, but not in proper time; while in the latter case the change of grade prevented the contractor from completing the work. The legal proposition in both is identically the same; and the Brady case is cited and chiefly relied upon in support of the Ash-Independence case.
It is clear from this statement that the latter case was not a suit upon a contract for the payment of *246money or property nor a mandamus proceeding to compel the city to issue the tax bills — it had previously fulfilled that promise, the only one it had made to the contractor, but it was a suit predicated upon the negligence and delay of the city of Independence, which prevented the contractor from completing the work within the specified time. The court held, and properly so, that the five-year Statute of Limitations applied. That ruling was proper, but it has no application to the case at bar, where the suit is upon the written contract to pay money and not for the recovery of damages for its breach, as was true in all of the cases cited by counsel for defendant.
The last of said cases cited is that of Thomas v. Pacific Beach Co., 115 Cal. 136.
In that case the facts were substantially these: On December 12, 1887, the defendant entered into a written contract with the plaintiff to sell him certain lots of ground belonging to it, for the sum of $500, with interest, on deferred payments. The contract provided that the purchase price thereof should be paid in three equal installments, the first on the date of the contract, and the other two in one and two years thereafter, and that upon the payment of the deferred installments, the contract provided that the defendant should execute ta the plaintiff a proper deed conveying-the lots to him. That .in due time the plaintiff paid the full purchase price of the lots to the defendant, and in September, 1891, he demanded from it a deed conveying the lots to him, which was by the defendant, refused; and on October 7, 1893, that suit was instituted by the plaintiff to recover back from the defendant the purchase price paid by him to it for the lots. To that suit the defendant interposed the one-year Statute of Limitations of California, as a bar to the action, which is similar to our five-year statute. In opposition to that position the plaintiff contended that the suit was based upon a written contract for the pay*247ment of money, etc., and that the fonr-year statute of that State applied, which is similar to our ten-year statute. The court, in that case held, and properly so, in my opinion, that the one-year statute governed and that the demurrer was properly sustained.
In that case it should be borne in mind what was the real character of the contract sued on. In short, the defendant agreed to sell to the plaintiff certain lots for the sum of $500, and the plaintiff agreed to pay that sum to the defendant for the same; and nothing was said in the contract about the defendant repaying the purchase price of the lots to the plaintiff in case the former declined to execute the deed conveying the lots to him. Under that state of facts, what were the plaintiff’s remedies? First: He could have brought suit on the contract for specific performance (which expressly promised to convey the lots to him). That, suit could have been brought at any time within four years, for the reason that the promise was in writing and was governed by the four-year statute. And second: He could have waived his right to the specific performance of the contract and have sued for damges sustained, if any (which was not in writing) for defendant’s refusal to convey the lots to him, which would not have been for the purchase price paid, with interest, but for damages sustained, which was the difference between the contract price and the value of the lots, if that exceeded the contract price, but if less than the contract price, then he could have recovered nothing, because, in that case, he would not have been damaged. In short, what was the promise the defendant made to the plaintiff in that case? To convey to him certain lots. Rid the defendant promise or agree in the contract to repay to the plaintiff the $500 with interest in case the lots should not be conveyed to him according to the terms of the contract? No. It only promised to convey the lots — nothing was said regarding a repayment of the purchase price.
*248Upon that state of facts, the plaintiff could have, as he did, waived his right to sue for specific performance of the written contract, and have sued for damages for its breach, which could have been done in one year; or he could have sued for specific performance of the written contract, which could have been done in four years.
The four cases mentioned are the principal, if not the' sole, cases relied upon to show that the five-year statute governs this case, which in my opinion, have no application to it whatever.
So it is seen that those cases have no bearing whatever upon a suit based upon a written contract, •as this one is; and that the contention of counsel for defendant has no legal foundation upon which to rest.
Moreover, and independent of all that I have stated regarding the character of the contract and promises made by the defendant in this case, if the contract sued on is not a promise in writing made by the defendant to pay the plaintiff the $2000 for the use of the shop and tools mentioned and the $20,000, ■or so much of it as the evidence might show was due the plaintiff as the estimated share of its profits, then I feel perfectly confident in stating that it would be both a legal and physical impossibility to draw and ■execute such a contract as this, that is, one which promises to pay certain estimated profits upon conditions therein stated, to be performed by the promisor, •and at the same time bring it within the ten-year Statute of Limitations. This must be true in the very nature of things. The performance of the terms and conditions of any and all contracts, must of necessity, as previously stated, be performed subsequent to the execution of the contract, and for that reason the acts of performance must also rest in parol, and be proven by that character of evidence. It would also be true, that such a contract could not be legally drawn and executed, whereby one person could promise to pay to *249another an unliquidated sum of money to be realized put of any business enterprise, and at the same time bring the contract within the ten-year statute. This seems to me to be a novel and startling proposition; and if that is true, then it must also be true that all of the terms of such a contract cannot be reduced to writing and embraced in the same contract, but part of it must rest in parol and be proven by that treacherous class of evidence.
There is much more that might be Said regarding the law and facts of this case in confirmation of the position that this is a suit based upon a written promise to pay money, and, therefore, not barred by the five-year Statute of Limitations; but I believe I have sufficiently stated the law and facts of the case to show that the majority opinion is based upon a misconception of the facts, which renders the legal propositions therein stated (which, as abstract propositions of law, are correct) inapplicable to the real facts of the case.
For the reasons stated, I dissent from the majority opinion, and am of the opinion that the judgment of the circuit court should be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.