Tate's Administrator v. Jones'

16 Fla. 216
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 16 Fla. 216 (Tate's Administrator v. Jones') is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tate's Administrator v. Jones', 16 Fla. 216 (Fla. 1877).

Opinion

The Chief-Jtjstioe

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was commenced in 1866 by Jeremiah Tate in his life time against the executor and heirs at law of Robert S. Jones, for the purpose of enforcing the specific performance of an agreement, not in writing, for the conveyance of lands in Calhoun county alleged to have been made in June, 1863, between Robert S. Jones and Jeremiah Tate.

The bill alleges that Jones and Tate entered into an. agreement, whereby Jones agreed to sell and convey to-Tate the lands described for the sum of five hundred dollars, on which land was an orange grove situated on the west hank of the Chipóla river, and that Tate paid to Jones the purchase-money in full, to wit: five hundred dollars ;.. that Jones agreed to execute the necessary deed of conveyance, and have the same recorded in the clerk’s office in a few days thereafter, he being t-hen sick; that Jones put Tate in possession of the land, which possession he has continued to hold to the time of filing the bill, believing that Jones had performed his promises, and that he had, during his occupancy, made numerous and valuable improvements upon the property. Jones died in December, 1863, having, failed to execute the deed.

[239]*239The defendants answer that they know nothing of the alleged bargain and sale' of the payment of the money, and allege that Tate was in possession of the land as the tenant, or by the permission of Jones, at and before the time of the alleged agreement; and they insist.on the provisions of the statute commonly known as the statute of frauds as a bar to .the right of action for a specific performance of the alleged agreement.

After taking testimony, the casé was submitted to the court, and a decree was made upon the facts as found by the court directing the defendant to convey the premises as prayed in the bill of complaint. From this decree the defendant appealed.

The only questions presented in the argument are upon the effect of the statute of frauds, and the sufficiency of the proof to take the case out of the operation of the statute.

The statute is as follows : No action shall be brought whereby * * charge any person upon any agreement made upon consideration of marriage, or upon any contract for the sale of lands, * * unless the agreement or promise upon which such action shall be brought, or some note or memorandum thereof, shall be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith,, or by some other person by him thereunto lawfully authorized.” Thomp. Dig., 217-218, act of November 15, 1828.

“ The whole class of cases,” says Story on Eq. Jurisprudence, §741, “ of specific performance of contracts respecting real estate, where the contract is bj7 parol, and there has been párt-performance, or where the terms of the contract have not been strictly complied with, and yet equity relieves the party, are proofs that the right to maintain a suit in equity to compel a specific performance, does not and cannot properly be said to depend upon the party’s having a right to maintain a suit at law for damages.” 2 Sch. & [240]*240Lef., 347-8, 684; 13 Ves., 228 ; 1 Sugden, Vend., c. 4, sec. 2, 246-7, 9th ed.

“ If an agreement be by-parol, and not signed by the parties, or some one lawfully authorized by them, if such agreement be not confessed, as is said, in the answer, it cannot be •carried into .execution ; but if it be carried into execution by one of the parties, and such execution be accepted by the other, he who accepts it must perform his part. As if A. sells his estate to B. by parol for one thousand pounds, if A. accepts the one thousand pounds, or any considerable part of it, he must convey his estate to B., for otherwise it is a fraud to accept the money of B. and not convey it. Aird it •could never be the intent of the statute (which was to hinder bai’gains from being sworn upon men that they never .made) that men should take advantage of not completing bargains which they had made, and which were actually performed to them ; for when there is a performance the evidence'of the bargain does not merely lie upon the words, but upon the fact performed, of which they have reaped the advantage; and it is perfectly unconscionable that the party who has received the advantage of the verbal contract .should be admitted to say such contract was never made ; for the law must be construed according to natural equity, and not to create a fraud; and the person that receives money and does not convey is plainly guilty of a fraud, and therefore must not be permitted to insist that he did not sign, when he has received all the benefit he could have had by such signing, for that were to construe the statute against frauds so as to protect fraud and not suppress it.” Lord Chief Baron Gilbert, Lex Prsetoria, C. I., 232-233, citing Leake vs. Maurice, Eq. Abr. 23, p. 20, 2 Ch. Cas., 135.

The cases cited by Baron Gilbert contain the earliest interpretation of the statute of 29 Car. II., of which the stat[241]*241ute of Florida is a substantial copy. See also 1 Story’s Eq. Jur., §759, and authorities cited.

Sir William Grant, in Frame vs. Dawson, 14 Yes., 386, says : “ It is admitted that supposing an agreement ever so clearly proved, yet, as a parol agreement, the plaintiff is not entitled to have it executed. It- is necessary, therefore, to show a part-performance; that is, an act unequivocally referring to and resulting from the agreement, and such that the party would suffer an injury, amounting to fraud, by the refusal to execute that agreement.”

And Browne on the Statute of Frauds deduces from a large number of American authorities, in section 465, the following: Although payment, alone is not sufficient, yet it may serve to corroborate other acts which are generally regarded as amounting to part-performance, so as to afford ground for a decree of specific execution. Where, for instance, it is accompanied by a purchaser’s entering into possession of land in pursuance of a verbal contract for the purchase of it, a case of part-performance is quite uniformly considered to be shown.”

In Mississippi, and one or two other States, the courts have construed the statute so strictly as to refuse to enforce the specific execution of parol contracts for the sale of lands, even where there has been entire performance on the part of the purchaser by payment, and taking possession under the agreement.

The question comes before the court in this State for the first time in' the present case: If we were to confine ourselves to the strict letter of the statute, and say that no power resides in the courts of equity to decree a conveyance of land in pursuance of a parol agreement to convey, notwithstanding the fact that the seller had received the'full price agreed on, and had also in pursuance thereof put the purchaser in possession, or induced him to improve it, or fix his residence upon it, we should go far towards ab[242]*242dicating one of the most important functions of chancery jurisdiction; a step which, after the beneficent action of the courts in England and in this country, and in view of the principles upon which they have acted, we cannot take.

In our judgment the statute should be construed so as to give it the full force and effect intended, and nothing beyond that. A mere

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16 Fla. 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tates-administrator-v-jones-fla-1877.