Tbe portion of our statute of frauds applicable to execu-tory contracts to sell and convey land (Revisal, sec. 976) provides tbat these and certain other contracts specified therein shall be void unless said contract, or some note or memorandum thereof, be put in writing and signed by the party to'be charged therewith or by some other person by him thereto lawfully authorized.
In various decisions construing the statute, it is held that the “party to be charged” is the one against whom relief is sought; and if the contract is sufficient to bind him, he can be proceeded against though the other could not be held, because as to him the statute is not sufficiently complied with. As expressed in Mizell, Jr., v. Burnett, 49 N. C., 249: “TJnder the statute of frauds, a contract in writing to sell land, signed by the vendor, is good against him, although the correlative obligation to pay the price is not in writing and cannot be enforced against the purchaser.”
Again, it is held that where the action is against the vendor, it is not required, for the validity of the contract, that the consideration appear in the writing. This position, a departure from the English decisions on the subject, was approved and sustained in a learned and notable opinion by Chief Justice Ruffin in Miller v. Irvine, 18 N. C., 103, and has since been accepted with us as the correct interpretation of the law. Subject to these rulings, it is recognized that the written contract or memorandum must contain expressly or by necessary implication the essential features of an agreement to sell, and it must describe the land with reasonable certainty, affording data in itself or by reference to some other written paper that will-enable the court, with the aid of extrinsic evidence, to identify the property, the subject-matter of the contract. Bateman v. Hopkins, 157 N. C., 470; Farmer v. Batts, 83 N. C., 387.
Applying these principles, we are of opinion that the paper-writing declared on is in full compliance with the statutory requirements. The party to be charged in this instance being the vendor, the consideration, as we have seen, need not be stated. The words clearly import that there was a contract for the sale of the vendor’s home place to plaintiff. This is not only a permissible and accepted definition of the word “trade” in a transaction of this character (May v. Sloan, 101 U. S., *20231; 8 Words and Phrases, 7037), but such an interpretation is put beyond question by thé language in which it is expressed: “Received on account of trade on home, $100, from D. B. Lewis. (Signed) J. P. Murray” — language fully as significant of a contract of sale between the parties as that upheld in the well-considered case of Bateman v. Hopkins, supra, and Mfg. Co. v. Hendricks, 106 N. C., 485, and approved as sufficient against the vendor in Hall v. Meisenheimer, 137 N. C., 183. And, under the authorities more directly relevant, the terms are sufficiently definite to identify the property, the subject-matter of the trade, and to permit the aid of parol testimony in fitting the description to the land sold. Bateman v. Hopkins, supra; Mfg. Co. v. Hendricks, supra; Thornburg v. Masten, 88 N. C., 293; Farmer v. Batts, 83 N. C., 387; Simmons v. Spruill, 56 N. C., 9; 29 A. & E. Enc. (2d Ed.), 866.
In this last citation, the general principle is correctly stated as follows : “A contract for the sale of real property must contain a description of the land to be sold, but it is not necessary that the description should be given with such particularity as to make a resort to extrinsic evidence unnecessary. The doctrine ‘Id certum est quod certum riddi potest1 applies, and if the designation is so definite that the purchaser knows exactly what he is buying and the seller knows what he is getting, and th£ land is so described that the court can, with the aid of extrinsic evidence, apply the description to the exact property intended to be sold, it is enough.”
In Simmons v. Spruill the instrument designating the land as that “whereon the vendor resides,” or the A. B. farm, was held to be sufficient. And in Farmer v. Batts the Court, giving a number of illustrations where the contract was enforced, refers to Hurly v. Brown, 98 Mass., 545, and other authorities as follows: “So a receipt of fifty dollars in part payment of a house and lot of land situated in Amity Street, Lynn, Mass., the full amount is seventeen hundred dollars,” the defendant being shown to own no other real estate on that street except the lot, was declared to be binding and a specific performance enforced in Hurly v. Brown, 98 Mass., 545, and the Court say: “The presumption is strong that a description which actually corresponds with an estate owned by the contracting party is intended to apply to that particular estate, although couched in such general terms as to agree equally well with another estate which he does not own.”
In the subsequent case of Mead v. Parker, 115 Mass., 413, where the writing was in these words, “This is to certify that I, Jonas Parker, have sold to Franklin Parker a house on Church Street for the sum of fifty-five hundred dollars,” the Court held that evidence was competent to show what house the defendant owned on Church Street, and decreed specific performance of the contract, remarking as follows: “The most specific *21and precise description of tbe property intended requires some proof to complete its identification. A more general description requires more. When all tbe circumstances of possession, ownership and situation of tbe parties, and of tbeir relation to eacb other and tbe property, as they were when tbe negotiation took place and tbe writing was made, are disclosed, if tbe meaning and application of tbe writing, read in tbe light of those circumstances, are certain and plain, tbe parties will be bound by it as a sufficient written contract or memorandum of tbeir agreement.”
“Every valid contract,” says Mr. Fry in bis work on specific performance, sec. 209, “must contain a description of tbe subject-matter; but it is not necessary it should be so described as to admit of no doubt what it is, for tbe identity of tbe actual thing and tbe thing described may be shown by extrinsic evidence.” To tbe same effect, Pomeroy on Contracts, sec. 90, note.
In Burns v. Starr, 165 N. C., 657, cited for defendant, tbe note was for so much money “for land,” and it was held that tbe same was not a sufficient memorandum within tbe meaning of tbe statute, as tbe terms did -not sufficiently import an agreement to sell, nor did it sufficiently describe tbe property. And in Hall v. Meisenheimer; action was against the purchaser and relief was denied because tbe writing contained no evidence of tbe contract on bis part. If tbe party sued in that case, tbe party to be charged bad been tbe vendor, as in this, tbe decided intimation is that tbe writing was a sufficient memorandum under tbe statute.
There is error in tbe judgment of nonsuit, and this will be certified that tbe ease be submitted to tbe jury on appropriate issues.
Error.