Satisfying the dog-gone statute of frauds

May 9, 2018

The trial court found an oral contract to sell Xena, an “elite-pedigreed female Labrador retriever,” finding that the plaintiff established the partial-performance exception to the statute of frauds. .” The appellant challenged that conclusion, arguing that “his own partial performance is not ‘unequivocally referable’ to the contract to sell Xena . . . his leaving Xena with the [other side] in July 2013 is equally consistent with his prior conduct of leaving a dog with [them] for training.” The Fifth Court disagreed, observing: “[I]t is not [Appellant’s] partial performance that is at issue; instead, it is [Appellees’] performance, which was established by their testimony and their documentary evidence . . . Partial performance takes a contract out of the statute of frauds when the party seeking enforcement of the contract partially performed.” McCain v. Promise House, No. 05-16-00598-CV (May 7, 2018) (mem. op.)