43 Wash. 49 | Wash. | 1906
On the 5th day of December, 1902, the defendant executed and delivered to the plaintiff the following written order;
It was further alleged that, on or about April 10, 1903, the defendant was informed that the brougham being manufactured by the plaintiff was not according to' contract, and the defendant thereupon wired the plaintiff countermanding the order as to the brougham and refusing to accept the same,
Two questions are naturally presented by the appeal: (1) Was the order in question so far an entire contract as to preclude the appellant from alleging and proving that a separate consideration was agreed upon for each of the vehicles; and (2) in the absence of fraud or mistake, should the appellant be permitted to vary the terms of the written order by parol testimony tending to show a cotempoxaneous oral agreement. If the contract in suit was entire, and parol testimony was incompetent to explain the consideration, the judgment must he affirmed, as an acceptance of one vehicle would in law be equivalent to the acceptance of both. If, on the other hand, it was competent for the appellant to- show that the contract was in fact severable, the judgment must he reversed, as a sufficient deviation from the written contract was alleged to warrant the appellant in refusing to accept the brougham.
“Where a number of articles are bought at the same time, and a separate price- agreed upon for each, although they are all included in one instrument of conveyance, yet the contract, for sufficient cause, may be rescinded as to part, and the price paid recovered back, and may be enforced as to the residue. But this cannot -properly be said to be an exception to the rule; because in effect there is a separate contract for each separte article.”
Again, “Had the plaintiff bid off the cow at one price and the hay at another, although he had taken one bill of sale for both, it would have come within the principles of the above case. [Referring to Johnson v. Johnson, 3 Bos. & Pul. 162.] But such was not the fact.”
In Aultman & Taylor Co. v. Lawson, 100 Iowa 569, 69 H. W. 865, the court held that, although a threshing outfit was sold for “one lump sum,” yet it was competent to show that a separate price was agreed upon for each of the several parts, saying,
“True, the consideration is stated in ‘one lump sum,’ but the evidence shows that the sum was the aggregate of prices agreed upon as to the different parts. The contract does not
To the same effect see, Field v. Austin, 131 Cal. 379, 63 Pac. 692.
On the second question we are clearly of opinion that the order or contract cannot be modified or varied by parol testimony as to a contemporaneous oral agreement. The rights of the parties mnst therefore he determined by the written contract, except in so far as the appellant should be permitted to prove that a separate consideration was agreed upon for each vehicle, and that the brougham was not accepted by it and did not conform to the written order.
The judgment is therefore reversed and the canse is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Mount, C. J., Hadley, Grow, Dunbar, and Eoot, JJ., concur.