Bird v. Bilby

215 S.W. 900, 202 Mo. App. 212, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 109
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 900 (Bird v. Bilby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird v. Bilby, 215 S.W. 900, 202 Mo. App. 212, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 109 (Mo. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

Tliis is a suit for damages for breach of an oral contract. Plaintiff’s husband, William Bird, was foreman on one of defendant’s ranches, and on September 27, 1910, was engaged in the digging of a ditch thereon. While so.doing, the sides of the ditch caved in and killed him. He left his widow, the plaintiff, and several minor children the youngest of whom was six months old. Plaintiff intended and was about io bring a suit for damages against defendant on the ground that her husband’s death was caused by defend *213 ant’s negligence. Defendant, knowing this, went to plaintiff some two weeks after her husband’s death and proposed to her a settlement, offering and agreeing that, if she would not bring a suit or cause him any trouble, he would pay her $20 per month until her youngest child became eighteen years of age, a period of seventeen and one-half years. He told her such an arrangement Avould be all right and it AA'ould be better for her to get the money in installments this way than to haAm all the money paid into her hands at once. After making certain that he would “'always”' pay it to her, that is, that he AATould pay during the aforesaid time whether the child lived or died, she accepted the offer and they separated with the clear understanding and agreement that she would not bring her contemplated suit and he Avould pay her $20 monthly throughout the time above mentioned, a period of 210 months.

Defendant at once began paying her the monthly sums of $20 and continued to do so down to and including the month of February, 1914, a period of 41 months. In the meantime she had married her deceased husband’s brother and moved to Minnesota and defendant sent her the monthly cheeks for $20 while there and also for a time after their return from that State. Her husband finally went back to Minnesota and when she got ready to follow him, defendant refused to continue making the payments, unless, so she ’ says, she would leave her husband, wThom defendant considered worthless.

The defendant concedes that he paid her monthly payments down to February, 1914, hut denies that there AAras any agreement betwefen them or settlement of her cause of action, insisting that the payments he made were in the nature of a voluntary - “pension” paid by him to help her because she \vas in need. He also concedes that he refused to continue the payments if she Avent back to her husband.

At the close of plaintiff’s case and at the close of all the evidence, defendant' demurred but Avas overruled. The jury found a verdict for plaintiff, upon *214 which judgment was rendered and defendant has appealed.

The main contention is over the question whether the alleged agreement, upon which plaintiff grounds her suit, is within or without that clause of the Statute of Frauds forbidding an action upon any oral agreement “that is not to be performed within one year from the making thereof.” [Section 2783, R. S. 1909.]

An oral contract which neither party can periorm Avithin the year is within the statute; and, eAmn though full performance has been made by the complaining par-after the expiration of said year, no action can be maintained on the contract. Defendant insists that the contract herein is of this character. Pie says plaintiff’s agreement not to sue for the death of her husband could be fully performed only by refraining from suit throughout the full period of the general Statute of Limitations which, of course, is more than a year, and that, therefore, the contract is one Avhich neither party could perform the within year. But plaintiff’s cause of action for the death of her husband arose under sections 5426 and 5427, chapter 38, Revised Statutes 1909, and was, therefore, governed by the limitation contained in that chapter, which gives the widoAV, in case there are minor-children, only six months in which to sue, and in no event could a suit be maintained by anyone unless brought Avithin a year after the cause of action accrued. [Section 5429.] Hence the contract in this case clearly contemplated that plaintiff’s part thereof would be performed Avithin the year from the date of such contract which AATas two weeks subsequent to the date of her husband’s death, and this last date was when her cause of action accrued. Manifestly, therefore, the contract herein is one which contemplated that the plaintiff should perform within the year and which the plaintiff did perform in full before the expiration of that time.

Under these circumstances the question arises, does full performance by the plaintiff Avithin the year take the case out of the statute and allow her to maintain the *215 suit? This is a question on which the courts of the different jurisdictions do not entirely agree. .The great majority of them, however, uphold the doctrine 'that in such case the statute does not apply. [29 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 Ed.), 825; 20 Cyc. 291.] Such is the English rule, and is the one followed by most of the American States. See cases cited in support of the text in the above authorities, a few of which are: Donnelan v. Read, 3 B. & Add. 899, 110 English Reports, 330; Johnson v. Watson, 1 Ga. 348; McDonald v. Crosby, 192 Ill. 283; Curtis v. Sage, 35 Ill. 22; Haugh v. Blythe’s Exr., 20 Ind. 24; Saum v. Saum, 49 Iowa, 704; Ellicott v. Turner, 4 Md. 476; McClellan v. Sanford, 26 Wis. 595; Washburn v. Dosch, 68 Wis. 436; Dant v. Head, 90 Ky. 255; Berry v. Doremus, 30 N. J. L. 399; Langan v. Iverson, 78 Minn. 299. [See, also, City of Tyler v. Southwestern R. Co., 99 Tex. 491, 13 Ann. Cases, 911.] Some courts seem to require, that, after full performances within the year by one party, nothing more must remain to be done by the other party except the payment of money. Whether this applies only to cases wherein such other party might, upon performance, have paid the money within the year, and not to cases where the money could not have been so paid, does not always seem to have been made clear. It may be well to note that in the contract now under consideration plaintiff fully performed within the year and nothing remained for defendant to do except to continue that which he had been doing from the making of the contract, namely, the payment of the installments at the time and throughout the period called for in the contract. But without regard to whether the rulings of some of the courts apply to one’or both of the situations above referred to, it is certain that the great majority of them hold that where it is the intention of the parties that one of them should perform within the year, and such party has fully performed‘within that time, then the other party cannot escape even though he is not to perform, and cannot perform, within the year. A number of States, however, hold to the contrary doctrine, namely, that if the contract is not to be performed by *216 one party within the year, recovery cannot be had against him by the other even though such other party has fully performed and has done so within the year. [29 Ana. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 836; Frary v. Sterling, 99 Mass. 461; Dietrich v. Hofelmeir, 128 Mich. 145; Broadwell v. Getman, 2 Denio, 87; Lockwood v. Barnes, 3 Hill (N.Y.) 128; Pierce v. Paine, 28 Vt. 34. See, also, cases cited under Minority Rule in 13 Ann. cases 918. j

In Blanton v. Knox, 3 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 900, 202 Mo. App. 212, 1919 Mo. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-v-bilby-moctapp-1919.