Adams v. M'Millan

7 Port. 73
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 7 Port. 73 (Adams v. M'Millan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. M'Millan, 7 Port. 73 (Ala. 1838).

Opinion

ORMOND, J.

— The principal question arising in this case, on the statute of frauds, is one which demands, and has received from us, the most attentive consideration. Eminent judges, both in England and in this country, have lamented that the plain letter of the statute has ever been departed from. It is now, however, settled, that a writing, no matter what may be its particular form, will'be a sufficient memorandum or note in writing, as required by the statute; provided it contain the essential terms of the contract, expressed with such cer[81]*81tainty, that they may be understood from the instrument itself, or fro n some other wr.tiug to which it refers, without- recourse to parol proof, and be signed by the party to be charged thereby.

In examining this question, we will proceed in the order in which the case was considered by counsel; and

1st. A; to the bill of sales of the auctioneer of the lands, which was offered in evidence in the court below, as such a memorandum or note in writing, as the statute requires.

There was formerly considerable difference of opinion, whether auction sales of land were within the statute of frauds, and tv nether the signing of the name of the purchaser, by the auctioneer, was a sufficient signing within the statute. ■ It is now, however, well settled, both in E-ingland and the United States, that the auctioneer is the agent of the purchaser, either of lands or goods at auction, to sign a contract for him as the highest bidder; and his writing the name of the purchaser on the memorandum of sale, immediately on receiving the bid, and knocking down the hammer, is a sufficient signing of the contract within the statute of frauis (See 4 Johns. Ch. Rep. 659;) Cleaus vs Foss, 4 Greenleaf, 1.

The bill of exception states, “that the plaintiff offered in evidence, the bill of sales of the auction of the lands, in the deduration mentioned, which bill of sales was nos sin-usd by the auctionssr or his clerk, nor by either the ■plaintiff or ■ dsfend.v.it, to prove the terms of the sale, as well as to prove the conditions of the same, and. •the price at which .it sold..

[82]*82It is contender! by the counsel for the defendant in error, that this coart must understand the cxpicssions used in the bill of exception, to mean that the paper was not subscribed at the usual place of signing instruments, but that the name of the plaintiff in error may have been inserted by the auctioneer, opposite the entry of the land, and the price at which it was bid off. If the paper were in fact signed by the purchaser of the lands, (the plaintiff in error,) o'r by his agent,', in any part of it, it has' been repeatedly held that it would be a sufficient signing within the statute; but the bill of exception expressly states that it was not signed by cither the .plaintiff or defendant, the auctioneer or his clerk. The instrument is not sot out ia the bill of exceptions, and wc cannot therefore say, whether if it had been signed so as to charge the party under the statute of frauds, it contained the other qualities which would be necessary to make it such a memorandum or note in writing, as the statute requires. Net Icirg signed, it cannot, of itself, have any influence in the decision of the cause.

Wccomc next to the examination of the letter of the plaintiff in error, relied on as a memorandum-or note in writing, of the contract. This letter is signed by the party intended to be charged, and contains a full arad complete statement of the whole contract, for the purchase of the lands at auction, with the exception, that instead of describing the land by metes ancl bounds, or by its designation in the land office according to the survey of the United States, — it is described as “the land lying on the Alabama river, occupied by the above named James McMillan, at the time of his death; -con-[83]*83taming sis hundred and forty acres, more or leso and is entirely silent as to the price to be given for the land, or the amount for which it was bid off. This letter, admitting that it contains a sufficient description of the land intended to be purchased, is totally deficient, i'n net stating the price which was to be given for it. The purchase money is at least as important a part of the contract as any other. Perhaps there would te moro danger of perjury, from allowing parol proof to be given-of this, than any other constituent of the contract; yet the letter contains no statement of the price of the land, nor does it refer to any ether writing which' decs. I're-haps it might be said, that' the notes referred to in the letter, which had been executed by the plaintiff in error, and his sureties, would show the amount to.be given for the land. Admitting that to be so, it docs not appear from the hill of. exceptions, that they were offered in evidence, or relied on in the court below; and as they were not accepted by the defendant in error, the probability is, they were destroyed — at all events, they are not now before ns.

In Blagden vs Bradbear, (12 Vesey, 469,) Sir Wm. Grant says: “In opposition to the specific performance prayed by this bill, the statute of frauds is insisted on. The plaintiff endeavors to. repel that defence by contending in the alternative, either that the auctioneer’s receipt is a sufficient agreement in writing, or that an agreement in writing is not necessary, as the provisions of the statute do not affect sales by auction. The proposition, that the auctioneer’s receipt may be a note or memorandum of an agreement within the statute, is not denied; but for [84]*84that purpose, the receipt must contain in itself, or by reference to something else, must show whut ti.e agreement is. In this instance, one very material pa titular, the price, docs net appear on the receipt; for the amount of the deposit, unless we know the proportion it Lears to the price, does net show wl.at the price is; ana the receipt contains no reference to the conditions of the sale, to entitle us to look at them for terms.”

So in this case, the letter docs net contain the price to be given for the land, — nor dees it refer to any ether writing which does, unices it he the uctes, which arc r.ct before us. It is, therefore, net a euiScicnt memorandum or note in writing, to satisfy the statute—See also on this head, (11 East, 142;) Lrydell vs Drummond; Clerk vs Wright, (1 Atkin’s, 12;) Lose vs Cunningham, (11 Vesey, jr. 550;) Parkkurst vs Van Courtlandt, (1 John. Ch. Rep. 273;) Coles vs Trecothick, (9 Vesey, 235;) Vain vs Walters, (5 East R. 10;) Morley vs Drethley, (3 Dingham R. 107.)

We proceed to the examination of the bill in chancery, filed by the plaintiff in error, for a spccife performance of the alleged contract, for the calc and purchase of the lands. The bill recites, with great particularity, all the particulars of the sale, the time at which it took place, the description of the land, the price to be given for it, and the credit on which it was uold ; and demands a speciñe performance. It docs not appear from the till of exceptions, whether the defendant answered the bill, or what disposition was made of it: this, however, is unimportant, in the view we fake of this part of the case.. If the bill in chancery can be received in evi-[85]*85deuce, there can be no doubt that it will satisfy the demands of the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Port. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-mmillan-ala-1838.