Parkhurst v. Van Cortland

14 Johns. 15
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedApril 15, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 14 Johns. 15 (Parkhurst v. Van Cortland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parkhurst v. Van Cortland, 14 Johns. 15 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1816).

Opinion

Thompson, Ch. J.

It was not pretended upon the argument, that this was a case coming within the statute of frauds, or that any note, or memorandum in writing, was necessary for the purpose of making out a valid and binding contract between the parties. The appellants, in the court of chancery, bottomed their claim to relief upon a part performance of an agreement alleged, by them, to have been made with the respondent, in relation to the lands in question. If any authority was necessary to show that such cases are not within the statute of frauds, we have it in the case of Brodie v. St. Paul. (1 Ves. jun. 333.,) where Buller, J., sitting for the lord chancellor, lays it down as a settled rule in equity, that part performance of a parol agreement takes it out of the statute of frauds. The object of the bill, in the case now before us, was a specific performance of an agreement. This necessarily presupposes the existence of such agreement, and the bill, therefore, as it must, in all cases of this description, sets out what that agreement was. It, accordingly, became necessary for the appellants to prove the agreement with all requisite certainty, or to furnish such evidence as to warrant the court in presuming the agreement which they claimed to be in force. In Forster v. Hale, (3 Ves. jun., 712.,) the lord chancellor observed, that he thought courts had gone too far in admitting part performance, and other circumstances, to take cases out of the statute of frauds. Part performance, said he, might be evidence of some agreement, but of what, must be left to parol proof. It would, he thought, have been better, in such cases, to have the money laid out, or repaid, than to consider part performance evi[32]*32dence of an unknown agreement. Here is a full recognition of the principle, that from the fact of part performance an agreement may be presumed. And the same lord chancellor, in another case, (3 Ves. jun. 320.,) observes, that the fact of some agreement may be implied from circumstances. If, then, from the fact of part performance, we are authorized to presume some agreement between those parties, in relation to the land, what that agreement was may be collected, with all reasonable certainty, from the parol proof.

I agree fully with the reasoning of the chancellor upon the insufficiency of the memorandum of April 179?, to ascertain and define the terms and nature of any contract. It is too vague and indefinite for that purpose ; nor, according to my understanding of it, was it ever intended for any such purpose. There is nothing in it which looks like fixing, or defining, a bargain as to the purchase or leasing of the lands. It purports only to give permission to the appellants to possess the lands subject to some future arrangement, as to the purchasing or leasing the same ; they, however, by such possession, gaining a preference, or what is usually called a refusal, of such bargain. If the appellant’s claim, therefore, rested upon this memorandum alone, as the evidence of the contract, I should have no hesitation in saying it could not be supported.

Nor is it to be disputed, that where it is necessary to make out a contract in writing, no parol evidence can be admitted to supply any defects in the writing. It is a sound and salutary rule, that a contract cannot rest partly in writing and partly in parol; but the case before us is not one falling within either of these rules. It was not necessary that the contract should be in writing; nor does it require that the memorandum in writing should be connected with the parol proof, for the purpose of making out the contract. If my construction of the memorandum is right, it does not profess to make any part of the agreement for the purchase or leasing of the premises. The principal object was, to show that the possession was taken with the assent of the owner of the land, and that the appellants were not intruders. That is all the purpose for which it is necessary to use this memorandum ; and if this permission had been given by parol, it would have been of equal force with the written memorandum. But if this memorandum is nugatory and void, for uncertainty, we may surely reject it altogether, and rest en[33]*33tirely upon the parol proof, as it is a case where no writing was necessary. There are not, however, wanting the opinions of very able chancellors in support of the position, and it is, perhaps, "the better opinion, that where part performance is made the basis of the claim for a specific execution of an agreement, parol proof may be connected with written evidence for the purpose of making out the contract.

The case of Allen v. Bower, (3 Bro. Ch. 149,) is directly in point on this question. That was a bill for specific perform.ance, and the evidence to establish the agreement was partly written and partly oral. The written promise of a lease was imperfect, and parol evidence was admitted, by direction of Lord Thurlow, (after it had been rejected by a master,) to supply the defects in the writing. Lord Redesdale, in commenting upon this case, and particularly upon the question, whether a defective writing can be supplied by parol, observes, that this cannot be done, when the writing is set up as the sole foundation of the agreement, nor unless it be a case of part performance. (1 Sch. & Lef. 37.) It is fairly tobe collected from his opinion, that in such cases, parol and written evidence may be let in, to make out the contract.

But laying aside the written memorandum altogether, let us examine the proofs in the case, and sec whether an agreement for a deed or a durable lease is not satisfactorily made out : and it ought here to be noticed, that the bill in chancery seems to be framed upon an agreement distinct and independent of the memorandum. We have not the bill set out at large in the case, but according to the statement given, it appears, that after setting out the memorandum, the bill alleges, that afterwards, that is, after the giving of the memorandum, the respondent, for the further security of the appellants, and to induce them to make permanent improvements, agreed, that in case of the sale of the land, under such agreement, (referring to the memorandum,) the price should be the actual value at the time of the agreement, superadding interest up to the time of the conveyance 5 and, in case of a lease, the same should be durable, or, in other words, a lease in fee, at the usual and customary rents of the country. This agreement, or any other than what is contained in the memorandum, the respondent denied in his answer in chancery. A recurrence to the evidence becomes necessary, then, to see how far it" will support the alleged agree- ' [34]*34merit. The memorandum authorizing the appellants to take possession is dated in the year 1797 ; but it appears they had k®en in possession from the spring of 1794, under an assignment of a similar memorandum, which had been given by the respondent, to Benjamin Lawrence, This assignment was known to the respondent in the fall of-the year 1794, and he recognised the appellants, as standing in the place of Lawrence. The memorandum given in 1797 was a mere substitute for the other, and must have a retrospective effect, so as to sanction and make valid every thing done by the appellants, after they came into possession under the assignment from Lawrence.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Johns. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkhurst-v-van-cortland-nycterr-1816.