Loughran v. . Giles

14 S.E. 966, 110 N.C. 423
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 14 S.E. 966 (Loughran v. . Giles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loughran v. . Giles, 14 S.E. 966, 110 N.C. 423 (N.C. 1892).

Opinion

Avery, J.:

The plaintiff declares in terms upon both a verbal and a written contract, as it was competent for him to do. Harris v. Sneeden, 104 N. C., 369; Knight v. Houghtalling, 85 N. C , 17; Dail v. Freeman, 92 N. C., 351; Johnson v. Finch, 93 N. C., 205. A verbal contract is not absolutely void, but voidable at the option of the party “to be charged therewith,” when an action is brought to enforce it. Foust v. Shoffner, Phil. Eq., 242; Syme v. Smith, 92 N. C., 338. If, in answer to the demand for its enforcement, he denies the alleged agreement, or sets up another and a different contract, or pleads specially the statute of frauds, the action cannot be maintained. Holler v. Richards, 102 N. C., 545; Cox v. Ward, 107 N. C., 507; Browning v. Berry, 107 N. C , 231. On the other hand, if he admits the allegation that he entered into it, and raises no question as to its validity, but is content to rest his defence upon other grounds entirely consistent with its existence and binding force, the Courts cannot ex mero mota annul an agreement which a party has already, *426 by his pleading, ratified, or may hereafter elect to affirm. Syme v. Smith, supra.

By filing the demurrer, the defendant has admitted that a contract was made, both verbally and in writmg. The voidable contract must, from its very character, remain subject to affirmation or repudiation, till the party to be charged shall, by his language or conduct, manifest a positive purpose to pursue the one course or the other. Conceding, for the sake of argument merely, that there is not in the complaint a sufficient allegation of a written contract, still we must interpret its language as meaning that there was a verbal understanding between the parties, that the land mentioned in the complaint on which plaintiff’s bar-room was located, should be conveyed by defendant to plaintiff upon the payment of the price mentioned. By setting up the statute in a demurrer the defendant seeks to get the benefit of it without specially pleading it, and without expressly denying that he entered verbally into the very agreement set forth in the complaint. The statute of frauds (said Justice Ruffin in McCracken v. McCracken, 88 N. C., 276) was intended to “close the door upon temptations to commit perjury, and the assertion of feigned titles to property.” The evil intended to be guarded against in the enactment of the statute, was the attempt to enforce pretended verbal agreements by resorting to perjury, and though it became necessary in attaining this end to put it in the power of a party to avoid, at his election, his own verbal promise to convey land, the statute was not construed as a declaration that all such contracts not in writing and signed by the party to be charged, were to be treated ipso facto, as null* and void. Wilkie v. Womble, 90 N. C., 254; Green v. Railroad, 77 N. C., 95; Davis v. Inscoe, 84 N. C., 396.

“A verbal contract for the sale of land, tenements or heredi-taments, or any interest in or concerning them (said the Court, in Thigpen v. Staton, 104 N. C., 40) is good between *427 the parties to it, and will be enforced,'if they agree upon its terms, and the party to he charged does not plead the statute.” It is settled, as is said in Baker v. Garris, 108 N. C., 218, that the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, may be made by demurrer or cretenus, and cannot be waived; but this rule is evidently intended to apply in cases where it appears upon the face of the complaint that plaintiff is not entitled to recover, no matter what defence may be set up, or whether any answer may be filed. Until the party to be charged manifests his election by pleading specially, it does not appear that he may not be willing to abide by the verbal promise. Wilkie v. Womble, supra; Thigpen v. Staton, supra. A demurrer cannot, from its nature, be the proper pleading by which to make and express the election to repudiate the contract. In Conant v. Barnard, 103 N. C., 315, it was held that where all of the defendants united in a demurrer upon the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, the demurrer would be overruled if the complaint set forth a good cause of action as to any one of the defendants. In a case, in other respects, like that at bar, but where several defendants are joined with the party to be charged by the verbal agreement, it would follow that none of the others could venture to demur, on account of the nature of the contract, until he should make his election to ratify or repudiate it. Davis v. Inscoe, supra. A different rule prevails, however, where the complaint sets forth facts showing a repudiation of the verbal contract by the party to be charged, and the action is one to recover possession on the strength of the title so repudiated, because, when the fact that the contract relied upon to show title has been repudiated and has become thereby void instead of voidable, is admitted by the demurrer, it is at last but an admission that there is an incurable defect in the title set up by the plaintiff. In the case of Young v. Young, 81 N. C., 91, cited for *428 defendant, it appeared upon the face of the complaint that-Seth Young, who had agreed, by parol, to convey the land in controversy to the father of the infant plaintiff, had subsequently, and before the action was brought, actually conveyed to one of the other defendants, Zephaniah Young, thus rendering it impossible for him, at his election, to ratify the original agreement, and thereby enable the plaintiff to make out his title and establish his right to the possession.

As it does not appear from the complaint that the defendant is not still able to perform the verbal agreement, we do not think that the Court should treat the demurrer as an election to repudiate the contract. In the absence of an allegation that the defendant had, before suit brought, placed himself in such condition that he could not perform the agreement, there is a failure to disclose all of the facts necessary to constitute a good defence, and even in States where the demurrer has been sustained in causes of this character, it was originally so held upon the ground that admitting the allegations of the complaint to be true, there would be no possibility of recovery upon them in any contingency. The earliest of the Massachusetts cases that we can find, in which such a demurrer was sustained ( Walker v. Locke, 5 Cush., 90), was one where the defendant, by conveying the premises, as in Young v. Young, supra,

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14 S.E. 966, 110 N.C. 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loughran-v-giles-nc-1892.