27 S.W.2d 427 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1930
Affirming.
Breckinridge county sued M.D. Beard upon two notes for $1,666.66 each. The answer interposed a defense to the effect that the notes were executed pursuant to a written subscription by which the defendant had agreed to donate $5,000 to the county for the purpose of constructing a public road upon condition that the road should be completed within three years from the time of the subscription, and that it should be of water-bound macadam construction. No such road was built within the three years, or at all, and the gravel road which was ultimately constructed was not built until 1927. The written contract of subscription also contained an agreement that notes might be given making the donation payable in three equal installments, due in one, two and three years. Upon motion of defendant, a rule was issued against the county to produce the written contract of subscription which had been delivered to it, and was last seen in the custody of an officer of the county. In response to the rule, the county answered that it was unable to produce the writing. The contents of the writing, however, were proven to have been in accordance with the pleading of defendant. The *825 case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury, and a separate finding of law and facts was made. It was found as a fact that defendant had made a written subscription to the road which contained the conditions that the road was to be completed within three years, and was to be of water-bound macadam, or better, surface. It was further found as a fact that the subscription contract provided that notes might be given payable in one, two, and three years, and that the notes sued on were two of the notes executed by the defendant in pursuance of the subscription; that Breckinridge county and the fiscal court had notice of the terms and conditions of the subscription; that the Bank of Hardinsburg Trust Company was the payee in the note and was the authorized and acting agent of the county for that purpose; that the notes were executed and delivered with the understanding and agreement that the conditions of the subscription should be carried out; and that the road was not completed either actually or substantially in conformity to the conditions. The court concluded as a matter of law that the subscription was merely an offer until accepted, which might be legally burdened with any conditions desired by the subscriber, and, when the county accepted the offer, it accepted the conditions coupled with it, and could not recover upon the notes without complying with the conditions. Judgment was entered accordingly dismissing the action and the county has prosecuted an appeal.
It is first argued that parol evidence is not admissible to prove the contents of a written instrument unless it is shown that the writing is lost or destroyed. The contention is correct. Elkhorn Land Imp. Co. v. Wallace,
It is argued also that the county is not bound by any action of the individual members of the fiscal court, but only by corporate action taken in regular sessions and evidenced by official record. McDonald v. Franklin *826
County,
It is said that this action was predicated upon promissory notes alone, and not upon the written agreement pursuant to which the notes were executed, and that in the absence of fraud or mistake, no evidence of contemporaneous or previous oral declarations or agreements is admissible to contradict the terms of the notes. Tross v. Bills' Ex'x,
In a supplemental brief, it is argued that the Legislature transferred the power to build the roads to another governmental agency, and that the validity of appellee's obligation was not affected by the change. The assumption is correct, Wickliffe v. Smith,
It is clear that the circuit court reached the correct conclusion.
The judgment is affirmed.