39 Conn. 155 | Conn. | 1872
In April, 1870, the defendants leased a tract of land on fifty-three acres, of which they were the owners, to the Atwood brothers, for the season of pasturage, for §165. On the 6th of August, 1870, the defendants sold thirty-three acres of said land to the plaintiff, and gave a deed of the same, with the usual covenants, to the plaintiff’s wife. The Atwoods continued to occupy and enjoy the premises after said sale as before, except that the plaintiff erected a house, &g., on a portion of the thirty-three acres purchased .by him, without objection from the Atwoods, they being informed by the plaintiff of bis said purchase.
On the trial in the court below the plaintiff claimed and offered evidence to prove, that at the time of the sale, but immediately after the delivery of the deed, the defendants agreed with the plaintiff that the Atwoods should continue to occupy and enjoy the tract sold after said sale the same as before, and that the defendants should pay him rent for the same. The defendants admitted that there was an agreement
To this evidence the plaintiff objected, on the ground that' it would contradict the deed; but the court overruled the objection, admitted the evidence, and found that the agreement was made as the defendants claimed. The court also found that the sum aforesaid was in fact deducted from the purchase money of the land. It was further proved that on the 7th of January, 1871, the lessees, the Atwoods, paid to the defendants $100 in part payment for the rent of the land aforesaid,. the balance of said rent, $55, having never been paid. And the court found that said sum of $100 was not a greater sum than was due the defendants on the 6th of August, 1870, for the rent of the entire tract up to that time, and for the twenty acres remaining unsold for the residue of the season; and that no part of the same had accrued under said lease on said thirty-three acres of said land since the 6th of August, 1870, the day of the sale.
’ Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, the plaintiff claiming that on these facts it should have been rendered for the plaintiff. And the motion for a new trial rests on two grounds; the one, because judgment was not rendered for the plaintiff, the other, because of the admission of the testimony offered by the defendants regarding the agreement as to the rent.
If the testimony on the record- was legitimately before the court, the judgment was unquestionably correct. What possible claim can this plaintiff have to recover this rent in/ace ■
It is said however that the testimony was inadmissible. That parol evidence is not admissible to explain or vary a written instrument is quite too well established to require the citation of any authorities. We doubt if this evidence is obnoxious to that objection, but if it is, we are clearly of opinion that it is admissible, after the plaintiff had offered evidence to prove a contract, to explain, vary or contradict that contract; in other words, to prove the real contract. This was done in the court below, and if the proof of this, found to be the real contract, is to be rejected as inadmissible, the claim of the plaintiff that the defendants were to pay him the rent of the land sold must necessarily fail, being wholly unsupported by evidence.
We deem it unnecessary to discuss the plaintiff’s claim as to his right to recover on the common counts for money had and received, and also his right to recover rent as incident to the reversion. There is no finding that the defendants "have received money to the use of the plaintiff; and to test the other question, the right to recover rent as incident to the reversion, the action should be against the lessees, as they only occupied and enjoyed the premises.
There should be no new trial.