Court Opinion

ID: 7940429
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:14:16.305727+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:41.717689
License: Public Domain

Hooker, J.
Gersham Hallett and the plaintiff are husband and wife, and on March 23, 1897, the plaintiff owned the house.in which they dwelt, in the village of Howell. Being desirous of exchanging this property for a farm, they had a talk with one Allen about a farm occupied by him, and owned by a Mr. Newcomb, who lived in New York, and ascertained that Mr. Gordon was authorized to sell the same. They called upon Gordon, who looked at their dwelling, and expressed a willingness to exchange the farm for it, and an agreement was reached. The parties do not agree in all respects in r¿gard to this, but it appears that the dwelling was deeded to Gordon, who paid them #200, with which to buy a team and some other articles, and gave] them a land contract for the land in question, which he signed on behalf of Mr. Newcomb, the owner, and in a few days caused him to sign a duplicate of the same; both contracts being drawn at the same time, and both signed by plaintiff and *569her husband, — both of them being parties to it. It bound Newcomb to sell the farm for $800, and to deed and accept a mortgage when $400 should be paid. It seems to be conceded that there was a difference of $600 between the prices agreed upon for the places, which, with the $200 loaned, made $800, the price mentioned in the land contract. The plaintiff claims that this $200 was secured upon the horses, and should not be a portion of the consideration for the land, but we think this unimportant. The plaintiff and her husband took possession of the premises at once, and this action is brought upon an alleged breach' of warranty. The plaintiff claims that she was induced to make the exchange upon the representation by Gordon that a portion of the premises, at the time overflowed, was tillable, and that the place was worth $1,400, and that such representation was false. The defendant ■denies the alleged representation.
The defendant raises a number of questions. He says that the evidence shows conclusively that the contract was between Newcomb, on the one side, and Mr. and Mrs. Hallett, upon the other, and therefore there is a non joinder of a necessary party plaintiff, and that Newcomb, and not himself, should be the defendant. He asserts, also, that there is no warranty proved, and that the action, being assumpsit, will not support a recovery for deceit. The declaration is in assumpsit. The special counts, upon which the plaintiff elected to stand, are based upon an alleged breach of warranty. Hence, if the defendant is correct in saying that he was not a party to the contract, there is manifestly no liability for a breach of warranty, when he made no warranty. And, again, if it was a joint contract between the plaintiff and her husband, there is a nonjoinder of the latter, which is fatal upon the trial. 1 Saund. PL & Ev. (Am. Ed.) 10; Burgess v. Abbott, 1 Hill, 476; Hill v. Gibbs, 5 Hill, 56; Brown v. Fifield, 4 Mich. 322; Monaghan v. Insurance Co., 53 Mich. 252; Howe v. Hyde, 88 Mich. 91; 15 Enc. Pl. & *570Prac. 564. We must therefore ascertain whether the defendant is right in either of his contentions.
The negotiations between the parties were oral, and the writings do not of themselves show what the agreement was. All they show is that the plaintiff deeded the dwelling to Gordon for a consideration mentioned in the deed, and that a contract of purchase and sale was made between Newcomb, on the one side, and Mr. and Mrs. Hallett, upon the other. Unexplained, there is an implication of two transactions. It is shown, however, that these papers are merely the incidents of a verbal contract, and were executed and delivered to carry it out. And we find that, according to one party, Mrs. Hallett was making a.deal with Gordon, while the other says she and her husband were dealing with Newcomb. Either might be true. Mr. Gordon might have agreed t® make the exchange, relying on his ability to induce New-comb to make a deed or a land contract; and, on the other hand, Gordon and Mrs. Hallett may have made a contract in which it was agreed that the land contract should go to herself and husband. So far as that question is concerned, it could only be treated as a question of fact, and upon its determination would depend the questions of nonjoinder and misjoinder.
In either case the real contract was oral, and the two writings were given in the way of performance, merely. They were incidents of a contract, given at a later time in furtherance of it. They do not purport to contain the terms of the contract, and it is agreed by all concerned that they do not. Their existence shows performance in whole or in part, and they do not conclusively show which. If it were not for the statute of frauds, requiring the contract to be in writing, parol proof would be admissible, under Mouatv. Montague, ante, 334; but, as it is, it places the plaintiff in the attitude of suing upon the breach of a contract which, under the statute, is void because not in writing, or, if it could be contended that the writings do constitute the contract, proving by parol a warranty not *571contained in the written contract, which we have held in the case of McCray Refrigerator, etc., Co. v. Woods & Zent, 99 Mich. 269 (41 Am. St. Rep. 599), cannot be done.
It seems to have been contended in the original brief that, because the contract has been in part performed, the oral contract has become valid, and the door opened to a suit upon it, in which the warranty may be proved. It is true that part performance does take a case out of the statute to the extent of authorizing a court of equity to enforce a specific performance between the parties in cases where it can be equitably done. Equity takes jurisdiction because, although the contract is partly performed, the law cannot. It does not relieve in all cases, — e. g., when a party has put it out of his power to perform, or where one cannot be put in statu quo, or where the rights of third parties have intervened; and in such cases the contract cannot then be treated as valid, and damages awarded in an action at law. We are not cited to authorities that a parol contract becomes valid through part performance, so that it will support an action for its breach.
The plaintiff’s supplemental brief shows that it was her original claim in the case that the contract was void under the statute, of frauds, for the reason that it (i. e., the contract for the sale of the farm) was signed for and on behalf of Newcomb by Gordon, who had no written authority to do so. It states further that thereupon a copy of such agreement, signed by Newcomb (to whom, defendant claimed, it was sent by arrangement of the parties for such purpose), was introduced, and that then “the plaintiff accepted the theory of the defendant, that the contract was a valid one, and not within the statute of frauds, and announced that she would ask a verdict upon the special counts for a breach of warranty.” It states that “the theory of the defendant during the entire trial was that the contract was valid, and the plaintiff, by electing to ask a verdict upon the special counts, by so doing affirmed the contract.” It is claimed that, *572by signing the land contract, Newcomb ratified the entire original agreement. There is no doubt that, upon the defendant’s theory, Newcomb did ratify the contract, and that it was his contract, and not the defendant’s contract; and therefore there were no contract relations between the plaintiff and the defendant, who acted merely as an agent for Newcomb in the premises, and, there being no promise made by him, assumpsit would lie only against Newcomb, who did make such promises as were made.
But it is said that if this be Newcomb’s contract, and not Gordon’s, the plaintiff still has a right of action against Gordon, the agent, because of his fraud and deceit. Granting that, the declaration could not be assumpsit for the deceit. He should be sued in case, and might be sued separately, or jointly with participants in his fraud. See Weber v. Weber, 47 Mich. 569. When the action is brought against the contracting party, there may be cases where the action may be in tort for the fraud, or, by treating the fraudulent representations as warranties (when that can be done), assumpsit may be sustained. It is s.aid that the distinction between actions in assumpsit and on the case has, however, been largely done away with, and the present doctrine is that the buyer may have his remedy by an action on the warranty, sounding either in tort or in contract. But, if that be granted, it can hardly be supposed that an action of assumpsit will lie when there is no contract (i. e., no promise) between the parties. If we should say that the land contract was valid as to either, — -and there is little doubt that it is so, — we should have to say that it contains no contract of warranty. But it is evident that the plaintiff is not relying upon any such, but upon another contract, out of which the writing grew, and of which the giving of the writing by Newcomb was in part performance.
The judgment must be reversed, and no new trial will be ordered.
The other Justices concurred.