Cason v. Thomas Cheely & Co.

6 Ga. 554
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1849
DocketNo. 77
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 6 Ga. 554 (Cason v. Thomas Cheely & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cason v. Thomas Cheely & Co., 6 Ga. 554 (Ga. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

The contract in this case was for the whole of the crop of cotton of the defendant for the year 1846. The plaintiffs below stipulated to pay the defendant seven cents a pound for it, and he agreed to deliver it at their factory as soon as it could be gathered and prepared for market. The contract was entered into in the month of September of that year, and of course after the crop was planted.

The question is, whether it is within the 17th section of the Statute of Frauds, which is in the following words : “No contract for the sale of goods, wares and merchandise, for the price of ten pounds sterling or upwards, shall be allowed to be good, except the buyer shall accept part of the goods so sold, and actually receive the same, or give something in earnest to bind the bargain or in part of payment, or that some note or memorandum in writing of the said bargain be made and signed by the parties to be charged by such a contract, or their agent thereunto lawfully authorized.” Prince, 917. There was no part acceptance, or any thing given in earnest, or note or memorandum signed by the parties. In considering this question, it is well to bear in mind, that the object of the Statute is to prevent frauds, and the perjuries which are often resorted to, to sustain them. It was considered by the British.Farliament,_ that in contracts for the sale of goods, wares and merchandise, a wide field for fraud would be opened, and ample inducement and opportunity afforded for perjury, and subornation of peijury, if they were permitted to rest in parol, and to be dependant upon the memory of [556]*556men for their enforcement. Hence the requirement, that except in the excepted cases, they should he in writing. "What contracts are within this section of the Statute, has been very much controverted in England. The decisions are not uniform or consistent. In fact, they are contradictory. A careful study of them, however, will enable one to arrive at a satisfactory conclusion as to what is the law of England on this subject.

[1.] I state then, in the first place, that a contract is not excluded from the operation of the Act, because it is executory. The starting point of the decisions in England, may be assumed to be the case of Tower vs. Osborne, (Stra. R. 506.) That case was founded on a contract for a chariot, agreed to be constructed for the defendant by the plaintiff, at the instance of the defendant.

It was held not to be within the grasp of the Statute. The report of that case is very meagre, but from the case itself, and from the comments made upon it subsequently by Lori Kenyon and Lori Loughborough, and other eminent Judges, it is manifest Sthat it did not go upon the ground simply that the contract was executory. The contract was for a specific article — a chariot— ordered perhaps to please, in form and color, a capricious fancy— unlike any, it may be, of the kind ever seen or imagined, and, therefore, not saleable in market — a thing which no body would buy but him that ordered it, and if not paid for by him, would prove an entire loss to the maker. It was not a purchase of a chariot now made and to be delivered at a future day, but an order, by agreement, for the construction, and delivery when completed, of a chariot. The essential consideration of the contract was, work and labor to be performed, and material to be furnished, and upon that ground, beyond all question, the case went. Such was the view which Lord Kenyon took of it, for in Cooper vs. Liston, he, speaking of it, said, “ that was a mere contract "for work and labor.” 7 T. R. 16. See also, Rondeau vs. Wyatt, 2 H. Bl. 63.

The case of Clayton vs. Andrews, is the next in order of time, and out of that case has sprung the idea that executory contracts are not within the Statute. -It was determined upon the authority off Toioers vs. Osborne, and must be considered as resting upon the same basis with it. That was held not to be within the Statute, upon the ground that work and labor was the consideration of the contract, so this. In this, Lord Mansfield does not appear [557]*557to be desirous of extending the authority of that case, but simply to affirm it. The two cases may be said to be in pari materia. True, Lord Mansfield says, in Clayton vs. Andrews, that the Statute relates only to contracts for the sale of goods, where the buyer is immediately answerable, without time given him by special agreement, and the seller is to deliver the goods immediately, and from these words the idea started, that an executory contract is not within the Statute. Now, his Lordship’s words are in conflict with the case which he quotes as authority. If the view of the Statute which he presents, be considered as an exposition of the case of Towers vs. Oshorne, it is not too much to say, even of Lord Mansfield, that he misconceived that case. These two cases are anterior to our Declaration of Independence, and are the only cases directly on the question determined in England before that time. The case of Clayton vs. Andrews, I consider as going no farther than Towers vs. Oshorne, in its authority. Together, therefore, they only show that contracts, where work and labor are the essential consideration, are not within the Statute. They do not show that, up to that time, (to wit: our Declaration of Independence,) it was settled in England, that contracts are without the Statute, because they are executory. If, however, the case of Clayton v.s. Andrews be considered as going that length, (and I admit in the reported language of Lord Mansfield it does,) then I say, that it is the only case before that time which does go that length. And whilst we are bound to enforce the construction of the Statute of Frauds, as understood at the era of our independence, yet it must be a construction settled by a series of adjudications. One case — certainly one case of doubtful meaning, cannot be considered as settling the construction of a Statute ; particularly when that case (which is true as to the case of Clayton vs. Andrews) has been repeatedly denied by English Judges to have established a construction of the Statute, and was, very early after it occurred, overruled. (That it was overruled see Cooper vs. Elston, and Rondeau vs. Wyatt, supra.)

I consider it now as well settled in England and in our States, that the fact that a contract is executory does not of itself take a case out of the Statute. And why should it ? The reasons upon which the policy of the Statute rests, apply with greater force to executory than to executed contracts. In the former there is opened a wider field for fraud than in the latter, In the former, [558]*558by reason of time, there is more room for the uncertainty, and imperfection and failure of human recollection, and therefore increased chances for perjury. 4 Comparatively little litigation can grow out of an executed contract — the execution concludes in most cases the rights of parties; whereas, where contracts are to be consummated, misconstructions of what they are, imperfect compliance, or total failure to comply, are fruitful sources of litigation. U If this construction prevails, as said by Grose, J. in Cooper vs. Elston, it will be a repeal of the Statute.

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6 Ga. 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cason-v-thomas-cheely-co-ga-1849.