32 Ga. App. 746 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1924
-(After stating the foregoing facts.) The only point insisted upon in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error is the alleged error in striking paragraph 5 of the plea. The special ground of the motion for a new trial complaining of the striking of this paragraph cannot be considered, since “a ruling of the court in striking a plea cannot be made the ground of a motion for a new trial.” Wilkinson v. State, 18 Ga. App. 330 (1) (89 S. E. 460), and eases cited. However, exceptions pendente lite having been filed to the striking of this paragraph, the question is properly raised by an assignment of error in the bill of exceptions.
We think the court erred in striking, paragraph 5 of the plea. Where a written, unambiguous contract has been executed and delivered, as contemplated in law, parol or extrinsic evidence of a prior or contemporaneous oral agreement should not, generally, be admitted, unless reference to the oral agreement is made' in the
While “it is not permissible to show by parol that a note was delivered to the payee as a completed contract, but upon a promise upon his part that he would subsequently secure-the signature of another person thereto, where the writing is silent as to any such promise on the payee’s part,” still “it is permissible to show that a promissory note, signed by one or more persons and apparently complete, is not in fact complete, by reason of the fact that it has never been delivered from one party to the other as a'finally completed contract, but that it was simply left in the possession of the payee until some additional person should sign it before it should become a completed contract.” Pidcock v. Crouch, 7 Ga. App. 299 (1) (66 S. E. 971). The distinction between these rules is that in the first instance the execution and delivery of the note is in fact complete, and is in no way dependent upon a fulfillment of the contemporaneous promise of the payee to secure another signature to the note. In the second instance the securing of another signature is a condition precedent to the completion and to the binding force of the written contract.
In this case, while the note is in the manual possession
Of course, what has been said applies only as between the original parties. A bona fide transferee or innocent holder of a note which has not matured, which is apparently complete on its face, and which bears no reference to any condition precedent to be performed, would not be defeated in the collection of the note because of the non-performance by the original payee of a condition precedent to its validity. As between an innocent purchaser for value and the maker of such a note, the maker must suffer, because he put it in the power of the payee to place the note in circulation. “When one of two innocent persons must suffer by the act of a third person, he who puts it in the power of the third person to inflict the injury
Be it understood that nothing herein infringes upon or beclouds the so-called parol-evidence rule. We recognize the importance of a strict adherence to and enforcement of this rule, especially in this day when negotiable instruments are used in business transactions as freely as currency. Admitting parol evidence to show the non-performance of a condition precedent to the validity of a written contract is not varying the terms of a written contract by extrinsic evidence, for the simple reason that it shows that, because of the non-performance of the condition precedent, there is no contract in existence, and that therefore there is nothing to which to apply the excluding rule. Evidence as to a condition precedent, or an event which is to take place before a proposed contract is to become valid, does not vary the terms of the contract, but rather shows whether or not there is such a contract in existence. As stated in the Heitmann case, supra (p. 591), “The so-called parolevidence rule presupposes the existence of a valid contract; and on the question of whether or not a contract is in existence or has been created, generally parol or other evidence dehors the writing is always competent and legal.”
In the light of the foregoing decisions we now come to the exact question in this case, which, briefly stated, is: Did the stricken plea allege a condition precedent? We think it did. As shown by the foregoing statement of facts the stricken plea alleged “that said notes were signed conditionally and were not to be binding against this defendant until certain conditions were complied withj that said conditions have not been complied with, and said notes are not therefore binding upon this defendant,” and further alleged the conditions. Under the facts of this case and the authorities cited, this was an allegation of a condition precedent, and the plea- should have been allowed to stand, in order that evidence on the question could have been submitted to the jury.
Judgment reversed.