Fiers v. Jacobson

211 P.2d 968, 123 Mont. 242
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1949
DocketNo. 8896.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 211 P.2d 968 (Fiers v. Jacobson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fiers v. Jacobson, 211 P.2d 968, 123 Mont. 242 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

*244 MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN:

This is an action to compel specific performance of an agreement to convey real estate.

The agreement to convey was a written lease containing an option to purchase.

It was made between plaintiff and defendants Jacobsons on February 26, 1944. By its terms plaintiff leased the described land for a two-year period from and after March 1, 1944, at a stipulated rental payable in installments on the 1st of March and October of each year commencing March 1, 1944.

It contained this paragraph: “The parties of the first part [being defendants Jacobsons] hereby give to the party of the second part [being plaintiff] the privilege of purchasing all of the above described premises at any time before the expiration of this lease for the sum of Four Thousand Five Hundred Dollars ($4,500.00). In the event the party of the second part elects to exercise this option, he should give the parties of the first part written notice thereof before the expiration of this lease and at the time of giving such notice, shall pay them the sum of..... Terms agreeable to both parties at the time of sale.....Dollars ($ ) on said purchase price, the balance of said purchase price to be paid as follows, to-wit:-. ’ ’

It is this paragraph of the lease that gave rise to this controversy.

Plaintiff contends that he exercised the option to purchase by tendering the full amount of the purchase price. Defendants Jacobsons in their answer and defendant Pauline Power in her separate answer and” cross-complaint allege and the proof shows that some of the land in question after the lease and option was given to plaintiff was deeded by L. O. Jacobson to Ella Jacobson, and that she thereafter sold all of it to Pauline Power on March 1,1945, for $4,500, a part of which was paid on that date.

Defendants also pleaded that plaintiff is estopped from exercising the option to purchase and had waived his right to do so because he had repeatedly informed defendants by word of *245 mouth that he did not want to and would not exercise the option; that Pauline Power in reliance upon these representations purchased the land in question from defendant Ella Jacobson and paid part of the purchase price together with some taxes. The court expressly found that these representations were made by plaintiff to Pauline Power and Ella Jacobson, and they in reliance thereon made the agreement whereby Pauline Power purchased the land from Ella Jacobson, and that thereby plaintiff waived his right to exercise the option.

As conclusions the court found that plaintiff is estopped from asserting any right to exercise the option.

A decree was entered quieting title in defendant Pauline Power and Ella Jacobson and awarding them rental against the plaintiff in the sum of $150.00. From the decree plaintiff has appealed.

The principal question involved is the propriety of the court’s conclusion that plaintiff is estopped from claiming the right to exercise the option. It is the contention of plaintiff (and the point was saved by appropriate objection) that all evidence tending to support the estoppel was inadmissible as colliding head-on with section 7569, R. C. M. 1935. That section reads: “A contract in writing may be altered by a contract in writing, or by an executed oral agreement, and not otherwise.”

The lease in question here, being for two years, was required to be in writing. Sections 6859, 7519, 10611, R. C. M. 1935.

Section 7569 does not alone apply to such contracts as are required by the Statute of Frauds to be in writing but applies to all written contracts. 27 C. J., Statute of Frauds, sec. 416, page 327; 37 C. J. S., Statute of Frauds, sec. 232.

The effect of the statute is to say to parties entering into a contract, if .you choose to place it in writing you may not alter it by any subsequent oral agreement unless such agreement is fully executed. Here proof of the alteration in the written lease and option rested entirely in parol.

In Quong v. McEvoy, 70 Mont. 99, 224 Pac. 266, 268, this court said: “Upon the trial defendant sought to show that prior *246 to February 2, 1922, plaintiffs orally agreed to surrender tbe lease and to vacate the premises as soon as defendant could procure a new tenant, and they could wind up tbe business and remove their own property, and complaint is made of tbe rulings excluding this offered evidence. Tbe lease was in writing. It is not pretended that tbe oral agreement was executed * * Because of section 7569, this court held that tbe district court did not err in excluding tbe evidence.

The Supreme Court of Washington bad before it the question of altering an option contract in Woolen v. Sloan, 94 Wash. 551, 162 Pac. 985, 986. In that case plaintiff bad paid $1,000 for tbe option and sued to recover it. The court, in bolding that the option contract could not be altered by a subsequent oral agreement, said: "The appellant admits the execution of the contract and tbe note, as well as tbe payment of tbe note, but claims that, after tbe option contract was entered into, and during tbe 90-day period covered by tbe option, tbe parties thereto orally rescinded tbe contract, and that tbe respondent agreed that, if be subsequently sold tbe property, be would repay the option money, together with interest thereon. Tbe option contract, being for real estate, of course was required by tbe statute of frauds to be in writing. A contract which tbe statute requires to be in writing cannot be abrogated or rescinded by a subsequent oral contract, unless such oral contract is accompanied by acts of part performance sufficient to remove tbe requirement that it shall be in writing. ’

Here tbe evidence purporting to alter tbe writing fails to show an executed oral agreement so as to meet tbe requirements of section 7569 and in fact fails to show any agreement at all. There was no consideration for tbe alleged abandonment or waiver of tbe option, and hence no agreement at all.

Ordinarily to permit evidence of an oral statement that plaintiff did not intend to exercise tbe option is to open wide tbe door to abuses which section 7569 was designed to prevent.

Defendants take tbe view that there are exceptions to tbe general rule and that in a proper case a person may be estopped *247 from relying upon the Statute of Frauds and that plaintiff here is estopped because of statements made by him to now assert the right to exercise the option by virtue of section 10605, subdivision 3, R. C. M. 1935, reading: ‘ ‘ The following presumptions, and no others, are deemed conclusive: * * * (3) Whenever a party has, by his own declaration, act, or omission, intentionally and deliberately led another to believe a particular thing true, and to act upon such belief, he cannot, in any litigation arising out of such declaration, act, or omission, be permitted to falsify it.”

The evidence relied on to show an estoppel is the following: L. O. Jacobson testified that in the latter part of June or the first part of July 1944 he had a conversation with plaintiff in Wolf Creek.

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Bluebook (online)
211 P.2d 968, 123 Mont. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fiers-v-jacobson-mont-1949.