Contracts/Statute of frauds

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Revision as of 18:05, December 20, 2005 by 70.92.156.1 (talk) (this is the revised U.C.C. it's actually not law yet (I'm a law professor))

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The statute of frauds refers to a requirement in many common law jurisdictions that certain kinds of transactions, typically contractual obligations, be evidenced by a writing signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought, or by the party's authorized agent. The term comes from an English statutory law (29 Car. II c. 3) passed in 1677. It is more properly called the Statute of Frauds and Perjuries.

The writing that the Statute requires is a precondition to maintaining a suit for breach of contract (or other obligation). However, the Statute is used as a defense, which defense is waived if the person against whom enforcement is sought fails to raise in a timely manner. Thus, the burden of showing evidence that such a writing exists only comes into play when a Statute of Frauds defense is raised by the defendant. A defendant who admits the existence of the contract in his pleadings, under oath in a deposition or affidavit, or at trial, may not use the defense.

Traditionally, the statute of frauds requires a writing signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought in the following circumstances:

  • Contracts in consideration of marriage.
  • Contracts which cannot be performed within one year.
  • Contracts for the sale of an interest in land.
  • Contracts by the executor of a will to pay a debt of the estate with his own money.
  • Under the Uniform Commercial Code, contracts for the sale of goods where the price exceeds $500.00 (with the exception of professional merchants performing their normal business transactions, or any custom-made items designed for one specific buyer) [1].
  • Contracts in which one party becomes a surety (acts as guarantor) for another party's debt or other obligation.

Law students often remember these circumstances by the mnemonic "MYLEGS" (marriage, year, land, executor, goods, surety).

Interestingly, with respect to securities transactions, the Uniform Commercial Code (section 8-113) has abrogated the statute of frauds. The drafters of the most recent revision commented that "with the increasing use of electronic means of communication, the statute of frauds is unsuited to the realities of the securities business."

The Statute of Frauds also applies to modified contracts - for example, suppose party A makes an oral agreement to lease a house from party B for 9 months. Immediately after taking possession party A decides that he really likes the place, and makes an oral offer to party B to extend the term of the lease by 6 months. Although neither agreement alone comes under the Statute of Frauds, the ex