Hodson v. Varney

122 Cal. 619 | Cal. | 1898

GAROUTTE, J.

This is an action of claim and delivery, and defendant appeals from the judgment and order denying his motion for a new trial. Defendant purchased the photographic business of plaintiff under a written contract of sale which provided: “It is the purpose of this agreement to transfer all the materials and working apparatus now contained in said gallery, No. 521 J street, Sacramento, California, including everything essential to the working of the operating-room, the printing-room, furnishing, dressing and reception rooms, and all furniture' therein contained, also sixteen oil paintings and other various, pictures and their frames, also all signs and advertising cases,, also all the cameras, material, and negatives therein contained.”

Plaintiff now seeks to recover possession of certain personal property which he claims did not pass to defendant under this *620Bale, evidenced by the foregoing written contract. The plaintiff sold to defendant “all the materials and working apparatus now contained in said gallery, No. 521 J street, Sacramento, California.” Upon the same floor of the building in which this gallery is located Hodson had the possession of two rooms, Nos. 10 and 11, in which was situated certain of the property sought to be recovered in this action. By an inspection of the contract of sale it will be perceived that plaintiff only disposed of property situated in the gallery (Hudson’s Art Gallery). If rooms 10 and 11 were part of the gallery, then the title to the property situated therein passed to defendant under the bill of sale. As to what constituted Hodson’s Art Gallery was a question of fact upon which the evidence of witnesses was properly received, and upon the evidence introduced the court held that rooms numbers 10 and 11 were no part of the gallery.

A Mammoth Peerless lens and camera was located in the gallery at the time of the sale, but it is claimed upon the part of plaintiff that it was specially reserved from the property sold. Under objection from defendant, plaintiff offered oral evidence to show that this instrument was reserved from the sale. In the face of the written contract, which in direct and explicit language declared that title to all the property in the gallery passed to defendant, and winch also declared that “all cameras therein contained” passed to defendant, this evidence was clearly inadmissible. The offer of such evidence was a bald attempt to vary and contradict the terms of a written contract, and principles of elementary law forbid it being done. If six horses are sold by an instrument in writing, oral evidence will not be allowed to show that one of these horses was excepted from the effect of the sale. The writing in such a case contains no exception or reservation, and the writing must be held to contain all the terms of the contract. Oral evidence of reservations or exceptions of certain property from the effect of the bill of sale presented in this case should have been rejected by the trial court. The two hundred sample negatives located in the gallery, and which it is claimed were also reserved, stand hand in hand with the Mammoth lens and camera. They passed to defendant by the terms of the sale. If the other articles of personal property involved in this litigation were located in rooms 10 and 11 at the time of *621the sale, and those rooms, as a matter of fact, were no part of HodsoAs Art Gallery, then they were not included in the sale, and title to them still remained in the plaintiff.

For the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are reversed and. the cause remanded for a new trial.

Van Fleet, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.

Hearing in Bank denied.

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