43 Minn. 468 | Minn. | 1890
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from an order denying a new trial after verdict in favor of the defendants. The action was prosecuted against Franklin J. Schreiber (who has died, and in whose place his administrators have been substituted as defendants) and his wife, Sallie, to recover damages for a breach of the covenants in a deed of conveyance executed by Schreiber and wife to the plaintiff, in 1881, conveying a large tract of land. The consid
The respondents, recognizing the general rule which forbids the contradiction or variation of the written agreements of parties by proof of their prior or contemporaneous negotiations or agreements resting only in parol, claim that this case is within a recognized qualification of that rule. They seek to avail themselves of the general proposition that the statement of the consideration in a deed of
But it is urged that the evidence was admissible as bearing upon the measure of d amages, the recovery for breach of covenant being restricted in amount to the real consideration for which the deed was given. It is probably true that for this purpose it might have been shown that the consideration named in the deed had not been paid, or that the real consideration was less than that stated. But; it being conceded that the stated co nsideration was paid, a separate agreement cannot be shown, having the effect to restrict the legal operation of the covenants, even though such agreement might be shown to have constituted a consideration or inducement for the giving of the deed. As was said in a late case in Massachusetts: “While, for some purposes, it is competent to show what the real consideration of a deed is, a party cannot, under the guise of showing what the consideration is, prove an oral agreement, either antecedent to or contemporaneous with the deed, which will cut down or vary the stipulations of his written covenant.” Simanovich v. Wood, 145 Mass. 180, (13 N. E. Rep. 391.) This case was closely analogous to that before us. To. the same effect: Flynn v. Bourneuf, 143 Mass. 277, (9 N. E. Rep. 650;) Howe v. Walker, 4 Gray, 318; Spurr v. Andrew, 6 Allen, 420; Johnson v. Walter, 60 Iowa, 315, (14 N. W. Rep. 325;) MacLeod v. Skiles, 81 Mo. 595; Wadhams v. Swan, 109 Ill. 46, 60; Rawle, Cov. (5th Ed.) § 88. The evidence here in question was inadmissible because it did vary and restrict the legal effect of the deed, not as to the price paid as stated in the deed, for there is no dispute as to that, but in the scope and applicability of
The conclusion which we have expressed is not opposed to the decision in Jordan v. White, 20 Minn. 77, (91,) in which case the evidence of the parol agreement related to other lands than those conveyed by deed to the defendant. It did not vary or change the legal effect of, and was not inconsistent with, the deed of the 120 acres executed to the defendant subsequent to the negotiations in the course of which the oral agreement was made. That deed was not presumed to embody or to have merged agreements which may have been previously made relating to other lands, not the subject of that conveyance nor referred to therein.
Order reversed.