The clause of the statute of frauds which requires a memorandum
in writing of "any agreement which is not to be performed within
the space of one year from the making thereof" applies only to
agreements which, according to the intention of the parties as
shown by the terms of their contract, cannot be fully performed
within a year, and not to an agreement which may be fully performed
within the year, although the time of performance is uncertain, and
may probably extend, and may have been expected by the parties to
extend, and does in fact extend, beyond the year.
An oral agreement between a railroad company and the owner of a
mill, by which it is agreed that if he will furnish the ties and
grade the ground for a switch opposite his mill, the company will
put down the iron rails and maintain the switch for his benefit for
shipping purposes as long as he needs it, is not within the statute
of frauds as an agreement not to be performed within a year.
Packet Co. v.
Sickles, 5 wall. 580, doubted.
The provisions of the statute of frauds of the State of Texas
concerning sales or leases of real estate do not include grants of
easements.
This was an action brought May 9, 1892, by Warner against the
Texas and Pacific Railway way Company, a corporation created by the
laws of the United States, upon a contract made in 1874 by which it
was agreed between the parties that if the plaintiff would grade
the ground for a switch and put on the ties at a certain point on
the defendant's railroad, the defendant would put down the rails
and maintain the switch for the plaintiff's benefit for shipping
purposes as long as he needed it. The defendant pleaded that the
contract was oral, and within the statute of frauds because it was
"not to be performed within one year from the making thereof" and
because it was "a grant or conveyance by this defendant of an
estate of inheritance, and for a term of more than one year, in
lands."
Page 164 U. S. 419
At the trial, the plaintiff, being called as witness in his own
behalf, testified that prior to the year 1874, he had been engaged
in the lumbering and milling business in Iowa and in Arkansas, and,
in contemplation of breaking up and consolidating his business,
came to Texas and selected a point, afterwards known as "Warner's
Switch," as a suitable location, provided he could obtain
transportation facilities; that he found at that point an abundance
of fine pine timber, and, three miles back from the railroad, a
stream, known as "Big Sandy Creek," peculiarly adapted to floating
logs, and lined for many miles above with pine timber; that in 1874
the defendant's agent, after conversing with him about his
experience in the lumber business, the capacity of his mill, and
the amount of lumber accessible from the proposed location, made an
oral contract with him by which it was agreed that if he would
furnish the ties and grade the ground for the switch, the defendant
would put down the iron rails and maintain the switch for the
plaintiff's benefit for shipping purposes as long as he needed it;
that the plaintiff immediately graded the ground for the switch,
and got out and put down the ties, and the defendant put down the
iron rails, and established the switch, and that the plaintiff, on
the faith of the continuance of transportation facilities at the
switch, put up a large sawmill, bought many thousand acres of land
and timber rights and the water privileges of Big Sandy Creek, made
a tram road three miles long from the switch to the creek, and
otherwise expended large sums of money, and sawed and shipped large
quantities of lumber until the defendant, on May 19, 1887, while
its road was operated by receivers, tore up the switch and ties and
destroyed his transportation facilities, leaving his lands and
other property without any connection with the railroad. His
testimony also tended to prove that he had thereby been injured to
the amount of more than $50,000, for which the defendant was liable
if the contract sued on was not within the statute of frauds.
On cross-examination, the plaintiff testified that when he made
the contract, he expected to engage in the manufacture of lumber at
this place for more than one year, and to stay
Page 164 U. S. 420
there and to have a site for lumber there as long as he lived,
and that he told the defendant's agent, in the conversation between
them at the time of making the contract, that there was lumber
enough in sight on the railroad to run a mill for ten years, and by
moving back to the creek, there would be enough to run a mill for
twenty years longer.
No other testimony being offered by either party bearing upon
the question whether the contract sued on was within the statute of
frauds, the circuit court, against the plaintiff's objection and
exception, ruled that the contract was within the statute,
instructed the jury to find a verdict for the defendant, and
rendered judgment thereon, which was affirmed by the circuit court
of appeals, upon the ground that the contract was within the
statute of frauds as one not to be performed within a year. 54 F.
922. The plaintiff sued out this writ of error.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
The statute of frauds of the State of Texas, reenacting in this
particular the English statute of 29 Car. II, c. 3, § 4
(1677), provides that no action shall be brought "upon any
agreement which is not to be performed within the space of one year
from the making thereof," unless the
"agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some
memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing and signed by the
party to be charged therewith or by some person by him thereunto
lawfully authorized."
Tex.Stat. Jan. 18, 1840; 1 Paschal's Digest (4th ed.), art.
3875; Rev.Stat. 1879, art. 2464;
Bason v. Hughart, 2 Tex.
476, 480.
This case has been so fully and ably argued, and the
construction of this clause of the statute of frauds has so
seldom
Page 164 U. S. 421
come before this Court, that it will be useful, before
considering the particular contract now in question, to refer to
some of the principal decisions upon the subject in the courts of
England and of the several states.
In the earliest reported case in England upon this clause of the
statute, regard seems to have been had to the time of actual
performance in deciding that an oral agreement that if the
plaintiff would procure a marriage between the defendant and a
certain lady, the defendant would pay him fifty guineas, was not
within the statute, Lord Holt saying:
"Though the promise depends upon a contingent the which may not
happen in a long time, yet if the contingent happen within a year,
the action shall be maintainable, and is not within the
statute."
Francam v. Foster (1692), Skin. 326;
s.c.,
Holt 25.
A year later, another case before Lord Holt presented the
question whether the words, "agreement not to be performed within
one year" should be construed as meaning every agreement which need
not be performed within the year, or as meaning only an agreement
which could not be performed within the year, and thus, according
as the one or the other construction should be adopted, including
or excluding an agreement which might or might not be performed
within the year, without regard to the time of actual performance.
The latter was decided to be the true construction.
That was an action upon an oral agreement, by which the
defendant promised, for one guinea paid, to pay the plaintiff so
many at the day of his marriage, and the marriage did not happen
within the year. The case was considered by all the judges. Lord
Holt
"was of opinion that it ought to have been in writing, because
the design of the statute was not to trust to the memory of
witnesses for a longer time than one year."
But the great majority of the judges were of opinion that the
statute included those agreements only that were impossible to be
performed within the year, and that the case was not within the
statute because the marriage might have happened within a year
after the agreement, and laid down this rule:
"Where the agreement is to be performed upon a
Page 164 U. S. 422
contingent, and it does not appear within the agreement that it
is to be performed after the year, then a note in writing is not
necessary, for the contingent might happen within the year; but
where it appears by the whole tenor of the agreement that it is to
be performed after the year, there a note is necessary."
Peter v. Compton (1693), Skinner 353;
s.c.,
Holt 326, cited by Lord Holt in
Smith v. Westall, 1
Ld.Raym. 316, 317;
Anon., Comyns 49, 50; Comberbach
463.
Accordingly, about the same time, all the judges held that a
promise to pay so much money upon the return of a certain ship,
which ship happened not to return within two years after the
promise made, was not within the statute,
"for that, by possibility, the ship might have returned within a
year, and although by accident it happened not to return so soon,
yet, they said, that clause of the statute extends only to such
promises where, by the express appointment of the party, the thing
is not to be performed within a year."
Anon., 1 Salk. 280.
Again, in a case in the King's Bench in 1762, an agreement to
leave money by will was held not to be within the statute, although
uncertain as to the time of performance. Lord Mansfield said that
the law was settled by the earlier cases. Mr. Justice Denison
said:
"The statute of frauds plainly means an agreement not to be
performed within the space of a year, and expressly and
specifically so agreed. A contingency is not within it, nor any
case that depends upon contingency. It does not extend to cases
where the thing only may be performed within the year, and the act
cannot be extended further than the words of it."
And Mr. Justice Wilmot said that the rule laid down in 1 Salk.
280, above quoted, was the true rule.
Fenton v. Emblers, 3
Burrows 1278;
s.c., 1 W.Bl. 353.
It thus appears to have been the settled construction of this
clause of the statute in England, before the Declaration of
Independence, that an oral agreement which, according to the
intention of the parties as shown by the terms of the contract,
might be fully performed within a year from the time it was made
was not within the statute, although the time of
Page 164 U. S. 423
its performance was uncertain, and might probably extend, and be
expected by the parties to extend, and did in fact extend, beyond
the year.
The several states of the Union, in reenacting this provision of
the statute of frauds in its original words, must be taken to have
adopted the known and settled construction which it had received by
judicial decisions in England.
Tucker v. Oxley,
5 Cranch 34,
9 U. S. 42;
Pennock v.
Dialogue, 2 Pet. 1,
27 U. S. 18;
McDonald v. Hovey, 110 U. S. 619,
110 U. S. 628.
And the rule established in England by those decisions has ever
since been generally recognized in England and America, although it
may in a few instances have been warped or misapplied.
The decision in
Boydell v. Drummond (1809), 11 East
142, which has been sometimes supposed to have modified the rule,
was really in exact accordance with it. In that case, the
declaration alleged that the Boydells had proposed to publish by
subscription a series of large prints from some of the scenes of
Shakespeare's plays, in eighteen numbers containing four plates
each at the price of three guineas a number, payable as each was
issued, and one number at least to be annually published after the
delivery of the first, and that the defendant became a subscriber
for one set of prints, and accepted and paid for two numbers, but
refused to accept or pay for the rest. The first prospectus issued
by the publishers stated certain conditions, in substance as set
out in the declaration, and others showing the magnitude of the
undertaking, and that its completion would unavoidably take a
considerable time. A second prospectus stated that one number at
least should be published annually, and the proprietors were
confident that they should be enabled to produce two numbers within
the course of every year. The book in which the defendant
subscribed his name had only, for its title, "Shakespeare
Subscribers, their signatures," without any reference to either
prospectus. The contract was held to be within the statute of
frauds as one not to be performed within a year because, as was
demonstrated in concurring opinions of Lord Ellenborough and
Justices Grose, Le Blanc, and Bayley, the
Page 164 U. S. 424
contract, according to the understanding and contemplation of
the parties as manifested by the terms of the contract, was not to
be fully performed (by the completion of the whole work) within the
year, and consequently a full completion within the year, even if
physically possible, would not have been according to the terms or
the intent of the contract, and could not have entitled the
publishers to demand immediate payment of the whole
subscription.
In
Wells v. Horton (1826) 4 Bing. 40;
s.c., 12
J.B.Moore 177, it was held to be settled by the earlier authorities
that an agreement by which a debtor, in consideration of his
creditor's agreeing to forbear to sue him during his lifetime,
promised that his executor should pay the amount of the debt, was
not within the statute, and Chief Justice Best said:
"The present case is clearly distinguishable from
Boydell v.
Drummond, where, upon the face of the agreement, it appeared
that the contract was not to be executed within a year."
In
Souch v. Strawbridge (1846), 2 C.B. 808, a contract
to support a child for a guinea a month as long as the child's
father should think proper was held not to be within the statute,
which, as Chief Justice Tindal said, "speaks of
any agreement
that is not to be performed within the space of one year from the
making thereof,�" pointing to contracts the complete
performance of which is of necessity extended beyond the space of a
year. That appears clearly from the case of Boydell v.
Drummond, the rule to be extracted from which is that when the
agreement distinctly shows upon the face of it that the parties
contemplated its performance to extend over a greater space of time
than one year, the case is within the statute, but that where the
contract is such that the whole may be performed within a year and
there is no express stipulation to the contrary, the statute does
not apply.
In
Murphy v. O'Sullivan (1866), 11 Irish Jurist (N.S.)
111, the Court of Exchequer Chamber in Ireland, in a series of
careful opinions by Mr. Justice O'Hagan (afterwards Lord Chancellor
of Ireland), Baron Fitzgerald, Chief Baron Pigot, and Chief Justice
Monahan, reviewing the English cases, held
Page 164 U. S. 425
that under the Irish statute of frauds of 7 Wm. III, c. 12
(which followed in this respect the words of the English statute),
an agreement to maintain and clothe a man during his life was not
required to be in writing.
In the recent case of
McGregor v. McGregor (1888), 21
Q.B.D. 424, the English Court of Appeal held that a lawful
agreement made between husband and wife, in compromise of legal
proceedings, by which they agreed to live apart, the husband
agreeing to allow the wife a weekly sum for maintenance and she
agreeing to maintain herself and her children and to indemnify him
against any debts contracted by her, was not within the statute.
Lord Esher, M.R., thought the true doctrine on the subject was that
laid down by Chief Justice Tindal in the passage above quoted from
Souch v. Strawbridge. Lord Justice Lindley said:
"The provisions of the statute have been construed in a series
of decisions from which we cannot depart. The effect of these
decisions is that if the contract can by possibility be performed
within the year, the statute does not apply."
Lord Justice Bowen said:
"There has been a decision which for 200 years has been accepted
as the leading case on the subject. In
Peter v. Compton,
it was held that 'an agreement that is not to be performed within
the space of a year from the making thereof' means, in the statute
of frauds, an agreement which appears from its terms to be
incapable of performance within the year."
And each of the three judges took occasion to express approval
of the decision in
Murphy v. O'Sullivan, above cited, and
to disapprove the opposing decision of Hawkins, J., in
Davey v.
Shannon, 4 Exch.Div. 81.
The cases on this subject in the courts of the several states
are generally in accord with the English cases above cited. They
are so numerous, and have been so fully collected in Browne on the
Statute of Frauds (5th ed.) c. 13, that we shall refer to but few
of them other than those cited by counsel in the case at bar.
In
Peters v. Westborough, 19 Pick. 364, an agreement to
support a girl twelve years old until she was eighteen was held not
to be within the statute. Mr. Justice Wilde, in
Page 164 U. S. 426
delivering judgment, after quoting
Peter v. Compton, Fenton
v. Emblers, and
Boydell v. Drummond, above cited,
said:
"From these authorities it appears to be settled that, in order
to bring a parol agreement within the clause of the statute in
question, it must either have been expressly stipulated by the
parties, or it must appear to have been so understood by them, that
the agreement was not to be performed within a year. And this
stipulation or understanding is to be absolute and certain, and not
to depend upon any contingency. And this, we think, is the clear
meaning of the statute. In the present case, the performance of the
plaintiff's agreement with the child's father depended on the
contingency of her life. If she had continued in the plaintiff's
service, and he had supported her, and she had died within a year
after the making of the agreement, it would have been fully
performed. And an agreement by parol is not within the statute
when, by the happening of any contingency, it might be performed
within a year."
In many other states, agreements to support a person for life
have been held not to be within the statute. Browne on Statute of
Frauds § 276. The decision of the Supreme Court of Tennessee
in
Deaton v. Tennessee Coal Co., 12 Heisk. 650, cited by
the defendant in error, is opposed to the weight of authority.
In
Roberts v. Rockbottom Co., 7 Met. 46, Chief Justice
Shaw declared the settled rule to be that
"when the contract may, by its terms, be fully performed within
the year, it is not void by the statute of frauds although in some
contingencies it may extend beyond a year,"
and stated the case then before the court as follows:
"The contract between the plaintiff and the company was that
they should employ him, and that he should serve them, upon the
terms agreed on, five years or so long as Leforest should continue
their agent. This is a contract which might have been fully
performed within the year. The legal effect is the same as if it
were expressed as an agreement to serve the company so long as
Leforest should continue to be their agent, not exceeding five
years, though the latter expression shows a little more
Page 164 U. S. 427
clearly that the contract might end within a year if Leforest
should quit the agency within that time."
In
Blanding v. Sargent, 33 N.H. 239, the court stated
the rule, as established by the authorities elsewhere, and
therefore properly to be considered as adopted by the legislature
of New Hampshire when reenacting the statute, to be that
"the statute does not apply to any contract unless, by its
express terms or by reasonable construction, it is not to be
performed -- that is, incapable, in any event, of being performed
-- within one year from the time it is made,"
and that
"if, by its terms, or by reasonable construction, the contract
can be fully performed within a year, although it can only be done
by the occurrence of some contingency by no means likely to happen,
such as the death of some party or person referred to in the
contract, the statute has no application, and no writing is
necessary,"
and therefore that an agreement by a physician to sell out to
another physician his business in a certain town, and to do no more
business there, in consideration of a certain sum to be paid in
five years, was not within the statute, because,
"if the defendant had died within a year from the making of the
contract, having kept his agreement while he lived, his contract
would have been fully performed."
The decisions in other states are to the same effect. Browne on
Statute of Frauds § 277.
In
Hinckley v. Southgate, 11 Vt. 428, cited by the
defendant in error, the contract held to be within the statute of
frauds was in express terms to carry on a mill for a year from a
future day, and the suggestion in the opinion that if the time of
performance depends upon a contingency, the test is whether the
contingency will probably happen or may reasonably be expected to
happen within the year was not necessary to the decision of the
case, and cannot stand with the other authorities. Browne on
Statute of Frauds § 279.
In
Linscott v. McIntire, 15 Me. 201, also cited by the
defendant in error, an agreement to sell a farm at the best
advantage and to pay to the plaintiff any sum remaining after
refunding the defendant's advances and paying him for his trouble
was held not to be within the statute of frauds,
Page 164 U. S. 428
Chief Justice Weston saying:
"The sale did not happen to be made until a year had expired,
but it might have taken place at an earlier period, and there is
nothing in the case from which it appears that, in the
contemplation of the parties at the time, it was to be delayed
beyond a year. This clause of the statute has been limited to cases
where, by the express terms of the agreement, the contract was not
to be performed within the space of a year. And it has been held to
be no objection that it depended on a contingency which might not
and did not happen until after that time."
In
Herring v. Butters, 20 Me. 119, likewise cited by
the defendant in error, the contract held to be within the statute
could not possibly have been performed within the year, for it was
to clear eleven acres in three years, one acre to be seeded down
the present spring, one acre the next spring, and one acre the
spring following, and to receive in consideration thereof all the
proceeds of the land except the two acres first seeded down.
In
Broadwell v. Getman, 2 Denio, 87, the Supreme Court
of New York stated the rule thus:
"Agreements which may be completed within one year are not
within the statute. It extends to such only as by their express
terms are not to be, and cannot be, carried into full execution
until after the expiration of that time."
The contract there sued on was an agreement made in January,
1841, by which the defendant agreed to clear a piece of woodland
for the plaintiff and to partly make a fence at one end of it,
which the plaintiff was to complete, the whole to be done by the
spring of 1842, and the defendant was to have for his compensation
the wood and timber, except that used for the fence, and also the
crop to be put in by him in the spring of 1842. The court well
said:
"As this agreement was made in January, 1841, and could not be
completely executed until the close of the season of 1842, it was
within the statute, and, not being in writing, and signed, was
void. Upon this point it would seem difficult to raise a doubt upon
the terms of the statute."
In
Pitkin v. Long Island Railroad, 2 Barb.Ch. 221,
cited by the defendant in error, a bill in equity to compel a
railroad
Page 164 U. S. 429
company to perform an agreement to maintain a permanent turnout
track and stopping place for its freight trains and passenger cars
in the neighborhood of the plaintiff's property was dismissed by
Chancellor Walworth upon several grounds, the last of which was
that, as a mere executory agreement to continue to stop with its
cars at that place "as a permanent arrangement," the agreement was
within the statute of frauds, because, from its nature and terms,
it was not to be performed by the company within one year from the
making thereof.
In
Kent v. Kent, 62 N.Y. 560, an agreement by which a
father, in consideration of his son's agreeing to work for him upon
his farm, without specifying any time for the service, agreed that
the value of the work should be paid out of his estate after his
death, which did not in fact happen until twenty years after the
son ceased work, was not within the statute. Judge Allen,
delivering the judgment of the Court of Appeals, said:
"The statute, as interpreted by courts, does not include
agreement which may or may not be performed within one year from
the making, but merely those which, within their terms and
consistent with the rights of the parties, cannot be performed
within that time. If the agreement may, consistently with its
terms, be entirely performed within the year, although it may not
be probable or expected that it will be performed within that time,
it is not within the condemnation of the statute."
In
Saunders v. Kasterbine, 6 B.Monroe 17, cited by the
defendant in error, the contract proved, as stated in the opinion
of the court, was to execute a bill of sale of a slave when the
purchaser had paid the price of $400, in monthly installments of
from $4 to $8 each, which would necessarily postpone performance by
either party beyond the year.
In
Railway Co. v. Whitley, 54 Ark.199, a contract by
which a railway company, in consideration of being permitted to
build its road over a man's land, agreed to construct and maintain
cattle guards on each side of the road was held not to be within
the statute because it was contingent upon the continuance of the
use of the land for a railroad, which might have ceased within a
year. And a like decision was
Page 164 U. S. 430
made in
Sweet v. Desha Lumber Co., 56 Ark. 629, upon
facts almost exactly like those in the case at bar.
The construction and application of this clause of the statute
of frauds first came before this Court at December term, 1866, in
Packet Co. v.
Sickles, 5 Wall. 580, which arose in the District
of Columbia under the statute of 29 Car. IIc c. 3, § 4, in
force in the State of Maryland and in the District of Columbia.
Alexander's British Statutes in Maryland 509;
Ellicott v.
Peterson, 13 Md. 476, 487; Comp.Stat.D.C., c. 23, §
7.
That was an action upon an oral contract, by which a steamboat
company agreed to attach a patented contrivance known as the
"Sickles Cut-Off" to one of its steamboats, and, if it should
effect a saving in the consumption of fuel, to use it on that boat
during the continuance of the patent if the boat should last so
long, and to pay the plaintiffs weekly, for the use of the cut-off,
three-fourths of the value of the fuel saved, to be ascertained in
a specified manner. At the date of the contract, the patent had
twelve years to run. The Court, in an opinion delivered by Mr.
Justice Nelson, held the contract to be within the statute, and
said:
"The substance of the contract is that the defendants are to pay
in money a certain proportion of the ascertained value of the fuel
saved at stated intervals throughout the period of twelve years, if
the boat to which the cut-off is attached should last so long. . .
. It is a contract not to be performed within the year, subject to
a defeasance by the happening of a certain event, which might or
might not occur within that time."
5 Wall.
72 U. S.
594-596. And reference was made to
Birch v.
Liverpool, 9 B. & C. 392, and
Dobson v. Collis, 1
H. & N. 81, in each of which the agreement was for the hire of
a thing or of a person for a term specified of more than a year,
determinable by notice within the year, and therefore within the
statute because it was not to be performed within a year, although
it was defeasible within that period.
In
Packet Co. v. Sickles, it appears to have been
assumed almost without discussion that the contract, according to
its true construction, was not to be performed in less than twelve
years, but was defeasible by an event which might or
Page 164 U. S. 431
might not happen within one year. It may will be doubted whether
that view can be reconciled with the terms of the contract itself
or with the general current of the authorities. The contract, as
stated in the forepart of the opinion, was to use and pay for the
cut-off upon the boat "during the continuance of the said patent,
if the said boat should last so long." 5 Wall.
72 U. S. 581,
72 U. S. 594.
The terms "during the continuance of" and "last so long" would seem
to be precisely equivalent, and the full performance of the
contract to be limited alike by the life of the patent and by the
life of the boat. It is difficult to understand how the duration of
the patent and the duration of the boat differed from one another
in their relation to the performance or the determination of the
contract; or how a contract to use an aid to navigation upon a boat
so long as she shall last can be distinguished in principle from a
contract to support a man so long as he shall live, which has been
often decided, and is generally admitted, not to be within the
statute of frauds.
At October term, 1877, this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice
Miller, said:
"The statute of frauds applies only to contracts which, by their
terms, are not to be performed within a year, and does not apply
because they may not be performed within that time. In other words,
to make a parol contract void, it must be apparent that it was the
understanding of the parties that it was not to be performed within
a year from the time it was made."
And it was therefore held in one case that a contract by the
owner of a valuable estate employing lawyers to avoid a lease
thereof and to recover the property, and promising to pay them a
certain sum out of the proceeds of the land when recovered and
sold, was not within the statute, because all this might have been
done within a year, and, in another case, that a contract made
early in November, 1869, to furnish all the stone required to build
and complete a lock and dam which the contractor with the state had
agreed to complete by September 1, 1871, was not within the
statute, because the contractor, by pushing the work, might have
fully completed it before November, 1870.
Page 164 U. S. 432
McPherson v. Cox, 96 U. S. 404,
96 U. S.
416-417;
Walker v. Johnson, 96 U. S.
424,
96 U. S.
427.
In Texas, where the contract now in question was made and this
action upon it was tried, the decisions of the supreme court of the
state are in accord with the current of decisions elsewhere.
In
Thouvenin v. Lea, 26 Tex. 612, the court said:
"An agreement which may or may not be performed within a year is
not required by the statute of frauds to be in writing. It must
appear from the agreement itself that it is not to be performed
within a year."
In that case, the owner of land orally agreed to sell it for a
certain price, payable in five years. The purchaser agreed to go
into possession and make improvements, and the seller agreed, if
there was a failure to complete the contract, to pay for the
improvements. The agreement to pay for the improvements was held
not to be within the statute, the court saying:
"There is nothing from which it can be inferred that the failure
to complete the contract (by reducing it to writing, for instance,
as was stipulated should be done) or its abandonment might not
occur within a year from the time it was consummated. The
purchaser, it is true, was entitled by the agreement to a credit of
five years for the payment of the purchase money if the contract
had been reduced to writing. But appellant might have sold to
another, or the contract might have been abandoned by the purchaser
at any time, and upon this alone depended appellant's liability for
the improvements."
See also Thomas v. Hammond, 47 Tex. 42.
In the very recent case of
Weatherford &c. Railway v.
Wood, 88 Tex. 191, 195, 196, it was held that an oral
agreement by a railroad company to issue to one Wood annually a
pass over its road for himself and his family, and to stop its
trains at his house, for ten years was not within the statute. The
court, after reviewing many of the authorities, said:
"It seems to be well settled that where there is a contingency
expressed upon the face of the contract or implied from the
circumstances upon the happening of which within a year the
contract or agreement will be performed, the contract is not
Page 164 U. S. 433
within the statute though it be clear that it cannot be
performed within a year except in the event the contingency
happens. . . . If the contingency is beyond the control of the
parties and one that may, in the usual course of events, happen
within the year whereby the contract will be performed, the law
will presume that the parties contemplated its happening, whether
they mention it in the contract or not. The statute only applies to
contracts 'not to be performed within the space of one year from
the making thereof.' If the contingency is such that its happening
may bring the performance within a year, the contract is not within
the terms of the statute, and this is true whether the parties at
the time had in mind the happening of the contingency or not. The
existence of the contingency in this class of cases, and not the
fact that the parties may or may not have contemplated its
happening, is what prevents the agreement from coming within the
scope of the statute. Applying these principles to the case under
consideration, we think it clear that the contract above set out
was not within the statute. The agreement to give the pass and stop
the trains was personal to Wood and his family. He could not
transfer it. In case of his death within the year, the obligation
of the company to him would have been performed, and no right
thereunder would have passed to his heirs or executors. If it be
held that each member of his family had an interest in the
agreement, the same result would have followed the death of such
member, or all of them, within the year. If the agreement had been
to give Wood a pass for life, it would, under the above
authorities, not have been within the statute, and we can see no
good reason for holding it to be within the statute because his
right could not have extended beyond ten years. The happening of
the contingency of the death of himself and family within a year
would have performed the contract in one case as certainly as in
the other."
In the case at bar, the contract between the railroad company
and the plaintiff, as testified to by the plaintiff himself, who
was the only witness upon the point, was that if he would furnish
the ties and grade the ground for the switch at
Page 164 U. S. 434
the place where he proposed to erect a sawmill, the railroad
company would "put down the iron rails and maintain the switch for
the plaintiff's benefit for shipping purposes as long as he needed
it."
The parties may well have expected that the contract would
continue in force for more than one year. It may have been very
improbable that it would not do so, and it did in fact continue in
force for a much longer time. But they made no stipulation which,
in terms or by reasonable inference, required that result. The
question is not what that probable or expected or actual
performance of the contract was, but whether the contract,
according to the reasonable interpretation of its terms, required
that it should not be performed within the year. No definite term
of time for the performance of the contract appears to have been
mentioned or contemplated by the parties, nor was there any
agreement as to the amount of lumber to be sawed or shipped by the
plaintiff, or as to the time during which he should keep up his
mill.
The contract of the railroad company was with, and for the
benefit of, the plaintiff personally. The plaintiff's own testimony
shows (although that is not essential) that he understood that the
performance of the contract would end with his own life. The
obligation of the railroad company to maintain the switch was in
terms limited and restricted by the qualification "for the
plaintiff's benefit for shipping purposes as long as he needed it,"
and no contingency which should put an end to the performance of
the contract, other than his not needing the switch for the purpose
of his business, appears to have been in the mouth or in the mind
of either party. If within a year after the making of the contract,
the plaintiff had died, or had abandoned his whole business at this
place, or for any other reason had ceased to need the switch for
the shipping of lumber, the railroad company would have been no
longer under any obligation to maintain the switch, and the
contract would have been brought to an end by having been fully
performed.
The complete performance of the contract depending upon a
contingency which might happen within the year, the contract
Page 164 U. S. 435
is not within the statute of frauds as an "agreement which is
not to be performed within the space of one year from the making
thereof."
Nor is it within the other clause of the statute of frauds,
relied on in the answer, which requires certain conveyances of real
estate to be in writing. The suggestion made in the argument for
the defendant in error that the contract was, in substance, a grant
of an easement in real estate, and as such within the statute,
overlooks the difference between the English and the Texan statutes
in this particular. The existing statutes of Texas, while they
substantially follow the English statute of frauds so far as to
require a conveyance of any "estate of inheritance or freehold, or
for a term of more than one year, in lands and tenements," as well
as "any contract for the sale of real estate, or the lease thereof
for a longer term than one year," to be in writing omit to reenact
the additional words of the English statute in the clause
concerning conveyances, "or any uncertain interest of, in, to, or
out of" lands or tenements, and, in the other clause, "or any
interest in or concerning them." Stat. 29 Car. II, c. 3,
§§ 1, 4; Rev.Stat. Tex. 1879, arts. 548, 2464; 1
Paschal's Digest, arts. 997, 3875;
James v. Fulcrod, 5
Tex. 512, 516;
Stuart v. Baker, 17 Tex. 417, 420;
Anderson v. Powers, 59 Tex. 213.
Judgment reversed, and case remanded to the circuit court,
with directions to set aside the verdict, and to order a new
trial.