Hotel Candler Incorporated v. Candler
This text of 31 S.E.2d 693 (Hotel Candler Incorporated v. Candler) 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.
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In part one of the plaintiff in error’s brief, under the heading '“Statement of Facts,” is to be found the following: “The one issue, as we'understand it, before this court is whether or not there was such part performance of the oral agreement between plaintiff and defendant as would take the case out of the rule of the statute of frauds so as to become the basis of an action for specific performance.” On page 2 of the defendant in error’s brief may be found the following: “ On page 8 of plaintiff’s brief it is stated that there is only one issue involved, that is, whether the acts performed by plaintiff took the case out from under the statute of frauds. We admit that was the ground upon which the court decided the case; but we deny that plaintiff ever proved that a full, complete, specific agreement has been completed between the plaintiff and the defendant, and if that point was not established by indubitable evidence, then the judge was right in refusing specific performance, even though the reason is . . different [from the] one . . which the court gave.”
To be available as a defense, the statute of frauds must be pleaded. Tift v. Wight, 113 Ga. 681 (39 S. E. 503). Where suit is brought to compel specific performance of a parol contract which *347 under the statute must be in writing, and no facts are alleged to bring the case within any of the exceptions, to the statute of frauds, a demurrer on that ground raising such a defense is available to the defendant without filing a special plea to that effect. Edwards v. Trustees of the Baptist Church, 147 Ga. 15 (92 S. E. 531). In view of the foregoing statements quoted from the briefs, we will not critically examine that part of the defendant’s demurrer which is quoted in the foregoing statement of facts, but will treat it as counsel have treated it, to wit, as effectually presenting the defense of the statute of frauds. The evidence which forms the basis of the first exception is set forth in the foregoing statement of facts. If it illustrated or tended to illustrate any part performance of the contract, it was admissible. If it did not, the plaintiff in error has no right to complain. The sole purpose in offering it, we apprehend, was to show part performance of the contract. It was ruled in Graham v. Theis, 47 Ga. 479, that the part performance, making an exception, must be a part performance of the contract, and the doing by either party of some independent act, not a part of the contract, does not become a part performance because the doer was led so to act by his belief that the parol contract would be performed by the other party. To the same effect, see Giradot v. Giradot, 172 Ga. 230 (157 S. E. 282), and cit. Under the statute of frauds, contained in our Code, § 20-401, this contract is required to be in writing, since it purports to create the relation of landlord and tenant for a longer time than one year. Byrd v. Piha, 165 Ga. 397 (141 S. E. 48). Is it shown that there has been part performance? We pass over for the moment another question, as to whether, even had there been part performance, it was such as to render it a fraud by the party refusing to comply if the court did not compel a performance. We are met at the threshold with the contention raised by the demurrant that the petition shows no part performance of the contract, and the further insistence that the evidence relied on by the plaintiff in error to show part performance falls short of its accomplishment. If both of those positions be maintained, the judgment must be affirmed, without investigating the other question, raised by the pleadings, which the trial judge himself did not consider, to wit, whether, under the showing made, there had been any oral contract.
By reference to that part of the preceding statement of facts *348 wherein is set forth paragraph 6 of whát is denominated “special stipulations” in the contract, which the plaintiff says Candler agreed to, it will be seen, first, that the lessee, who is the plaintiff in error, is ‘“immediately upon the execution of this lease authorized to spend” certain amounts for certain things. The complaint of the petitioner is that the lease'was never executed. Secondly, the lessee “is hereby authorized to spend whatever in his opinion is reasonably needed to render the building and equipment reasonably usable and suitable for a hotel business.” There is no allegation in the petition that the items named in the latter part of paragraph 6 were those which, in the opinion of the lessee, were reasonably needed to render the building and equipment usable and suitable for a hotel business. Lastly, it will be noted further that, in paragraph G, it is stated that ‘“the immediate improvements contemplated are: the replacing or repairing of the heating-plant ; the redecorating of the lobby; the refurnishing or renovating of the furniture in the lobby; the redecorating of the dining room; the replacing or renovation of guest-room chairs where needed.” The evidence offered, and excluded, did not cover any of these specific items. The plaintiff’s purchase of the things set out in paragraph 9 of his petition are not the things mentioned in the clause next-above quoted, and as aforestated, there is no allegation in the petition which would bring them under the first clause of item 6, because there is no allegation that any or all of these specific things were, in the opinion of the lessee, reasonably needed.
In support of the contention of the plaintiff in error that the averments of the-petition allege, and the evidence excluded shows, such part performance of the contract as to take the ease without the statute, Bryan v. Southwestern Railroad Co., 37 Ga. 26, is relied on. As pointed out in the opinion in Brunswick Grocery Co. v. Lamar, 116 Ga. 1, 7 (42 S. E. 366), the petition in the Bryan case alleged acts which indisputably and as matter of law constituted part performance of the contract sued on, not merely independent acts done under the belief that the oral contract would be performed. There, the verbal agreement was to purchase 40,000 crossties at a named price, and it was averred that in pursuance of the contract some 40,000 crossties had already been cut and delivered. Rosser v. Harris, 48 Ga. 512, is also relied on. The oral contract there involved was made in November, 1865, for *349 the rent of a plantation for the year 1866 in consideration of the tenant’s paying the taxes on the land for the year last named. In pursuance of the contract, he went into possession and cultivated the place for the year 1866. Afterwards, the heirs of the owner-sought to repudiate the contract and to compel the tenant to pay the proved value of the rent of the land. It was held that this could not be done, because, the tenant having gone into possession and cultivated the land, as the two had orally agreed, this was such part performance as to take the contract without the operation of the statute of frauds. Counsel cite a number of other cases ■along the same line, all of which have been examined.
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31 S.E.2d 693, 198 Ga. 339, 1944 Ga. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotel-candler-incorporated-v-candler-ga-1944.