Wiley v. Robert
Decision Date | 31 October 1860 |
Citation | 31 Mo. 212 |
Parties | WILEY, Defendant in Error, v. ROBERT, Plaintiff in Error. |
Court | Missouri Supreme Court |
1. A memorandum made by a deputy sheriff and signed by him of a sale of one of several lots in a partition proceeding, in which Louis Robert and others were plaintiffs and one B. T. Adams, defendant, was as follows: “Partition, lands--Louis Robert v. B. T. Adams--lot No. 11--274 80-100 a.-- Louis Robert, $10.50 per a.--$2,885.40.” Held, that this memorandum was sufficient to take the case out of the statute of frauds. (Wiley v. Robert, 27 Mo. 388, affirmed.)
2. Where at a sheriff's sale under a decree of partition, C., one of the parties to the partition suit, became a purchaser, and agreed by parol with A., another of the parties to said suit, who was entitled to the greater portion of the proceeds of said sale, “that said A. (who was in possession of the premises sold), should keep the place upon a price to be afterwards agreed upon, held, that this at furthest was only an agreement to sell upon terms to be afterwards settled, and therefore incapable of specific enforcement; nor, on account of the indefiniteness of its terms, can it be interpreted as a release by A. of his claim to the proceeds of the partition sale.
3. Such agreement is also within the statute of frauds.
Error to Jefferson Circuit Court.
This was an action brought in 1856 by the sheriff of Jefferson county, to recover from Louis Robert the amount bid by him for a certain tract of land at a sale in a partition proceeding, in which said Robert and others were plaintiffs and B. T. Adams, defendant. The defendant denied in his answer that a memorandum in writing of the alleged sale had been made by one lawfully authorized. The defendant also set up that after said sale it was agreed between the plaintiff in said partition suit and the defendant therein, Adams, that the latter should keep the land and compromise upon a price to be agreed upon; that Adams retained possession of said land; that plaintiff had not disturbed him, and was ready to carry out the agreement when Adams should require. This portion of the answer was stricken out on motion of the plaintiff, and on a trial of the issue made by the rest of the answer, the court held the memorandum of the sheriff's deputy sufficient in law, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff.
An appeal was taken to this court, which resulted in a reversal of the judgment thus rendered, for error in sustaining the motion to strike out the parts of the answer hereinbefore referred to. The case is reported in 27 Mo. 388.
Another trial was had upon the original petition and the answer was restored in accordance with the decision of this court, which resulted in judgment for the plaintiff From this judgment a writ of error has been prosecuted.
The memorandum of the sheriff's sale, introduced in evidence on the trial, was made and signed by a deputy sheriff who attended to the sale, and was as follows: “Partition, lands--Louis Robert v. B. T. Adams--lot No. 11--274 80-100 a.--Louis Robert--$10.50 per a.--$2,885.40.”
The plaintiff in error asked the following instructions, which were refused by the court:
There is no sufficient memorandum or note in writing shown in this case to authorize the plaintiff to recover.
Whittelsey and Pipkin, for plaintiff in error.
I. There was no sufficient memorandum of the sale so as to give the sheriff a right to enforce a specific performance of the contract. (2 Kent, Com. 511; 3 Duer, 395; 7 East, 558; 11 East, 157; 15 East, 103; 1 J. C. B. 274, 277; S. C. 14; J. R. 15; 1 Sch. & Lef. 22; 16 Wend. 28; 3 J. R. 399, 419; 1 Atk. 12; 9 Ves. 234, 250, 253; 3 Ad. & El. 355; 11 Ves. 550; 11 Ves. 583; 13 J. R. 297; S. C. 15; J. R. 505; 12 Ves. 466.)
II. The court erred in not treating the contract of sale and purchase, as rescinded by the parties in interest, and therefore not to be specifically enforced except as to costs. Said contract could be discharged, rescinded, or waived, by parol agreement between the parties who had a claim to the proceeds of the sale. A written contract not under seal may be discharged by parol. .) And such discharge is a defence to a bill for the specific performance of the contract. ...
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