the contract invovles the transfer of interest in lands AND it could not be completed within one year.
The statute of frauds you quoted is similar to that of many states; not surprising since it comes from the old English statute of frauds that was a feature of the law prior to our revolution. But just reading the statute is not enough to know how that works. In many states the courts have carved out exceptions for either part or full performance, and Iowa is one of those states. The Iowa Supreme Court stated that about as clearly as you can get: “Under our statute of frauds, it is well established that a party who partially performs under the agreement may avoid the impact of the statute of frauds and introduce evidence of the oral contract.”
Gardner v. Gardner, 454 N.W.2d 361, 363 (Iowa 1990)
Here, the employer has fully performed its end of the bargain by conveying the real estate to the employee. Thus, in Iowa that performance of the contract will take this out of the statute of frauds and allow the employer to prove (if he can) the oral contract.
Edited to add: After rereading the original post, it appears the employer might not have deeded the home to the employee directly. Instead, the employee may have bought it from a third party with the employer providing part of the down payment. In that case, the employer providing the $5,000 down payment is the part performance of the employer that would take it out of the statute of frauds. Of course, in that case the question is what was the deal for payment of the mortgage that the post implies exists? That part is never really addressed.
Obviously one of the greatest reasons behind the statute of frauds is the problem proving a contract to an enforceable level if it is not reduced to a written contract. What has been posted is the perfect example of why the statute of frauds demands certain contracts must be in writing.
Not exactly. The purpose of the statute of frauds was to prevent the situation in which a person is held to perform on a contract that actually never existed just based on the oral evidence of the person asserting the contract. The fact that the writing also helps to clarify the terms of the contract is a secondary benefit but was not the main reason for the rule. But where a party has partly or fully performed his/her end of the deal that provides some pretty good evidence that some kind of contract existed quite apart from simply the oral claim of the party. Moreover, refusing to enforce an oral contract when performance has been made by one party would itself open up the potential for fraud and injustice. It would make it easy to prey on those who do not know of the need for a writing. Imagine that Paul orally agrees with Brenda to buy her land worth $100,000 with $5,000 down today and full payment of the remaining $95,000 in six months. She conveys the property to him today as per the deal and gets $5,000. Six months later Paul never pays. When she sues, he laughs and says “sorry, you can’t enforce our deal because its not in writing!” If he was right, he just succeeded in swindling her out of land worth $100,000 for a mere $5,000, aided and abetted by the law. It is exactly that sort of injustice that have lead many states to provide for an exception to the rule for performance, and IMO that is exactly the right thing to do.
While you argue partial performance ratifies said contract and makes it enforceable, the problem still remains of what does the actual contract demand of all parties.
Of course, and I never said otherwise. Certainly a writing would be a big help in sorting that out, which is why it is a really good idea to get any significant contract in writing regardless of whether the statute of frauds or UCC requires it.
The guy worked for an employer for 10 years.
We don’t know that. What we know is that the alleged contract was for the employee to work for 10 years in exchange for the land. We don’t know exactly how long the employee actually worked as the post never comes out and says how much of the 10 years was worked.
While it is obviously suggested he was being paid by being given the house. I presume he was paid a regular wage. So where does working for 10 years prove there was a contract regarding the property? Oh ya, the paychecks were made to the wife. Let’s count how many laws were broken in that activity.
It’s the performance by the employer in deeding the employee the house or paying the down payment that provides the performance necessary to take it out of frauds. There is no need to prove the employee worked the 10 years. I agree that arguing that the work was the performance on the contract would raise a problem if the employee is also being paid a salary since that muddies whether any performance by the employee was actually made. But as it is not necessary for the employer to go down that path to take it out of the statute of frauds this doesn’t present a problem.
So does an illegal contract that isn’t in writing somehow become enforceable when the statute of frauds demands then contract be in writing and the performance by the employee is based entirely on an illegal contract?
Granting an employee a house in exchange for work is not an illegal contract. His wage arrangement is not, so far as I can see, a part of the claimed contract and in any event likely can be separated from the deal for the land and thus the court would not be called on to enforce an illegal contract. That is simply a red herring.
Without the employers input it’s impossible to determine what their claims are but I have to believe there is something other than what the op claims.
Of course determining exactly what the deal was is unclear here and it would be necessary to hear the evidence of both sides to sort that out. That’s what trials are for.