104 So. 277 | Ala. | 1925
Statutory detinue for one Haynes automobile. Defense was made under the general issue. Judgment for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.
Plaintiff claimed title as remote assignee of a contract by which the Ewart-Brewer Motor Company sold the car in question to E. H. Posey, retaining title until the purchase money should be paid in full. The evidence showed a balance due of something over $800. This, with the possession acknowledged by the plea, made a prima facie case for plaintiff. Code 1923, § 7404. Defendant had bought the car from L. B. Cooper, who, October 27, 1923, had taken an assignment of the Ewart-Brewer contract, and to whom Posey had, on what consideration does not appear — but that is immaterial — surrendered the automobile. Two days later, October 29th, in pursuance of a contract entered into on October 24th, defendant accepted the automobile from Cooper and, by an agreement indorsed on the Ewart-Brewer contract, acknowledged the unpaid balance due on the purchase price to be $800, with interest, and agreed "that said [Ewart-Brewer] contract shall henceforth be a subsisting and binding one between the undersigned and L. B. Cooper as to all its terms just as though we were the original parties thereto." The effect of this transaction was to establish a contract between Cooper as vendor and Edwards as vendee on the terms of the Ewart-Brewer-Posey contract.
Defendant's main reliance on this appeal is that the trial court refused to admit in evidence an executory agreement in writing, *158 of date October 24th, between himself and Cooper, by the terms of which defendant was within 5 days to convey a certain house and lot to Cooper in consideration of the sale to him by Cooper of the automobile in suit, defendant "to assume $800 first mortgage on Haynes automobile." The report of the case sets out the agreement. This agreement was executed on the part of defendant by his indorsement of October 29th on the Ewart-Brewer contract, to which we have referred. It is also to be inferred from the evidence that at some time he executed a deed to the house and lot as agreed.
Defendant's purpose, as appears from his brief, in offering the agreement of October 24th in evidence was to show thereby that title to the automobile had vested in him, and therefore there was no consideration moving to him for his subsequent indorsement on the Ewart-Brewer contract, and, as we gather from the brief, to show that the indorsement contract of October 29th, even if so intended, cannot be accepted as an execution of the agreement of October 24th, for the reason that the last-mentioned agreement provides for the assumption of a "first mortgage" on the automobile, whereas the indorsement contract evidenced the assumption of the burden of a so-called lease sale contract — conditional sale it is, with superadded terms. Barton v. W. O. Broyles Stove Co. (Ala. Sup.)
It is to be conceded that defendant, upon the performance of the obligations incurred by the agreement of October 24th, would have acquired a right to the automobile, but in pursuance of a previous undertaking he had entered into the indorsement agreement to assure Cooper of his rights. For the promise so evidenced the delivery of the automobile was a sufficient consideration, whether such delivery was made antecedently, contemporaneously, or subsequently, and, in the absence of fraud or coercion, that agreement became the conclusive memorial of the contract between the parties. The intention of the parties, as expressed on the face of the paper writings, together with the undisputed facts aliunde, made the question of merger a question for the decision of the court. The conclusion as to this reached in the trial court was in our opinion clearly correct. The agreement of October 24th was excluded without error for the reason that, having been merged in the later agreement of the parties, it was immaterial to any issue presented in the cause.
The court also properly denied all the numerous efforts of defendant by parol evidence to vary the terms of the adopted contract. In particular, it may be worth while to state there was no error in the exclusion of questions the apparent purpose and effect of which were to lay emphasis on an admitted fact, viz. that defendant had made a deed of his house and lot in part payment for the automobile, as if that were any sufficient reason in law why the contract, hard as it was, and, on the part of defendant, improvident to a degree, but still within the limits of the law, should not be enforced by the jury.
The fact that a contract under which a party claims is in writing does not in general preclude the admission of parol evidence of fraud or misrepresentation in its procurement or execution. Brenard Mfg. Co. v. Jacobs,
If fraud was the idea, the defense so attempted was precluded by the fact that defendant had accepted possession from plaintiff's assignor and retained it. He could not be heard to offer evidence to rescind the contract while retaining the benefit of the same. Jones v. Anderson,
In view of the fact that the general affirmative charge was properly given for plaintiff, there is no occasion to discuss the special instructions refused to defendant.
We have found it impossible within permissible limits to discuss every turn given to the contentions advanced by defendant, appellant, in voluminous briefs; but all have been considered, and our statement has been framed with a purpose to dispose of contentions between the parties which seemed to merit discussion.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.