Marsh v. Hyde
Marsh v. Hyde
Opinion of the Court
The report of the referee presents the question whether the contract was binding on the parties under the statute of frauds—Rev. Sts. c. 74, § 4. The defendant’s objection is put on the ground, that, there having been no delivery of any part of the hay at the time the agreement was entered into for its sale and purchase, the subsequent delivery of the three loads to the defendant will not avail to take the case out of the operation of the statute; and that the delivery of the hay, under the circumstances proved, only establishes three different and distinct contracts for each load ; so that an action could have been maintained by the seller for each load as it was delivered.
But this position cannot be maintained upon any reasonable and just construction of the language of the statute; nor is it supported by a consideration of the purposes and objects which the statute was intended to accomplish. There is nothing in the statute, which fixes or limits the time within which a purchaser is to accept and receive part of the goods sold, or give something
The great purpose of the enactments, commonly known as the statute of frauds, is to guard against the commission of perjury in the proof of certain contracts. This is effected by providing that mere paroi proof of such contracts shall be insufficient to establish them in a court of justice. In regard to contracts for sales of goods, one mode of proof which the statute adopts to secure this object is the delivery of part of the goods sold. But this provision does not effectually prevent the commission of perjury; it only renders it less probable, by rendering proof in support of the contract more difficult. So in regard to other provisions of the same statute; perjury is not entirely prevented by them; the handwriting of a party to be charged, or the agency of the person acting in his behalf, may still be proved by the testimony of witnesses who swear falsely. Absolute prevention of perjury is not possible. In carrying this great purpose of the statute into practical operation, it can add no security against the danger of perjury, that the act, proof of which is necessary to render a contract operative, is not contemporaneous with the verbal agreement. A memorandum in writing will be as effectual against perjury, although signed subsequently to the making of a verbal contract, as if it had been executed at the moment when the parties consummated their agreement by word of mouth. So proof of the delivery of goods, in pursuance of an agreement for their sale previously made, will be as efficacious to secure parties against false swearing, as if the delivery had accompanied the verbal contract. It is the fact of delivery under and in pursuance of an agreement of sale, not the time when the delivery is made, that the statute renders essential to the proof of a valid contract. It is to be
The fallacy of the argument, pressed by the counsel for the defendant, seems to us to consist in assuming that the contract takes its legal force and effect from the time when its terms are verbally agreed upon ; and that therefore, being void when made, it cannot become valid by any subsequent act of the parties. It would be more correct to say, that, until the formalities required by the statute are complied with, there is no legal and valid contract entered into. The terms verbally agreed upon between the parties amount to little else than a proposition for a contract; and it is not until delivery of part of the goods takes place, or part payment is made, that it assumes the qualities of a legal contract; in the same manner as the written memorandum of the previous verbal agreement of the parties becomes in law the binding agreement between them. It is not, therefore, the subsequent delivery of goods, which gives vitality and force to a contract previously void. Until the delivery is made, no binding contract exists ; and when it takes place, the act of the parties unites with their previous verbal understanding to create a full, complete and obligatory agreement. In all cases like the present, a single inquiry operates as a test by which to ascertain whether a contract is binding upon the parties under the statute of frauds. It is whether the delivery and acceptance, whenever they took place, were in pursuance of a previous agreement. If the verbal contract is proved, and a delivery in pursuance of it is shown, the requisites of the statute are fulfilled. Such was the proof in the present case. The plaintiffs, if they had proved only a delivery of three loads of hay, would
It is true, as the counsel for the defendant suggests, that an action would lie against the plaintiffs to recover the price of each separate load of hay as it was delivered ; but this does not show that there was not an entire contract for the sale and delivery of all the hay stored in the two barns. The defendant could maintain an action to recover the price of each load, because such were the terms of payment agreed upon. So, too, he could recover damages for a breach of the contract, if the plaintiffs had refused to accept and receive the residue of the hay, after the delivery of the three loads. Judgment for the plaintiffs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Warren Marsh & others v. Leonard Hyde, Jr.
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published