Burhans v. Johnson

15 Wis. 286 | Wis. | 1862

By the Court,

PAINE, J.

The court below clearly erred in refusing to admit the testimony offered by the defendant to show-that the map offered him contained nicknames of some . of the persons designated as land owners upon it, and epithets having a natural tendency to subject them to ridicule. If the map did contain such things, it would be a libel, and no man having contracted fora map of Dodge county, would be bound to take a map which would be a libel on his neighbors. The argument of the respondents’ counsel is, that as the defendant entered into a written contract to take a copy of the map which the plaintiffs were then preparing, and as it was shown that this was such a copy, the defendant was bound absolutely to take it. It was urged that to attempt to excuse him upon the ground that the map contained these insulting epithets, was an attempt to add to the agreement, by parol, conditions and stipulations which the writing did not contain. But we think this is standing too strictly upon *288tbe letter of tbe contract, and disregarding its obvious spirit meaning. The same argument would have required the ¿efen¿ailt to have accepted tbe map even though it contained obscene pictures. But, without being expressed, it was tacitly implied in sucha contract, that the map should be properly a map, and not an indecent picture or a libel. No one contracting to take a map as the defendant did, would ever think of inserting an express provision to guard against these things, for the very reason that any such contract would be interpreted to exclude them by implication. If the plaintiff, therefore, printed a libel on their map, against some of the defendant’s neighbors, it was a clear violation of an implied condition of the contract, and the defendant was not bound to take it.

The defendant also offered evidence to show that at the time of making the contract, the plaintiffs represented that the map was to contain things which it did not contain. If this evidence was offered to add something to the agreement, and then show a non-compliance with it by the plaintiffs, it was properly rejected. The argument of the respondents’ counsel is correct to that extent. The agreement having been reduced to writing, no new provisions or conditions can be added to it by parol. The only ground upon which such evidence could be admitted in such a case, would be that of fraud. At the time the contract was entered into, the map had not been prepared. The plaintiffs knew what it was to contain, and the defendant, of course, could not know. If, under these circumstances, the plaintiffs falsely represented that it was to contain any particular plates or be of any particular description, to induce the defendant to take it, and he signed the contract in consequence of such representations, he might avoid it on the ground of fraud.

Whether it was the intention of the pleader to aver such fraudulent representations in the answer in this case, does not very clearly appear. The representations are averred, and the defendant offered to show that they were untrue, but it was not expressly averred that they were falsely and fraudulently made. Whether this would be necessary to *289admit tbe evidence on tbe ground of fraud, it is perhaps not necessary here to determine.

Eor tbe reason first stated, tbe judgment is reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.