61 Wash. 555 | Wash. | 1911
On the 22d day of April, 1908, the defendant gave the plaintiff a written order directing it to manufacture a combined harvester and ship it to him at Almira Station, in this state. The order stipulated that the defendant “agrees not to countermand this order except for failure of crops prior to the date of shipment, . . . and it is understood
“For further and separate defense, defendant alleges that on or about the 22d of April, 1908, he entered into negotiations with one E. R. Gordon and one Pew, who represented themselves to be agents of the plaintiffs in this action, and that then and there he entered into a contract for the purchase of one Holley Junior Combined Harvester, with the express understanding and agreement with the said Pew and said Gordon that said contract was not to be completed nor deemed in effect nor become effective or delivered to the Holt Manufacturing Company, for at least one month, and that he was to have the right at any time within the month to recall said contract from the hands of said Pew and Gordon and cancel the same. That afterwards, within two weeks from the said 22d day of April, the said defendant did notify said Pew and Gordon that he did not desire to continue said contract and he therefore desired the same destroyed and can-celled, to all of which the said Pew and Gordon agreed, and then and there the said Pew began negotiations for the sale, to said defendant, of a McCormick Header, instead of the Combined Harvester. That thereafter this defendant purchased a Best Combine and that as soon as the plaintiffs discovered that he had purchased the ‘Best’ they then shipped and consigned to him a secondhand Holley Junior Machine from Walla Walla, Washington, and that said secondhand machine did riot arrive at Almira until the 14th day of July, 1908, or about three months after said contract had been cancelled and revoked. That this defendant never received*557 said machine, never had anything to do with it, never accepted it and it has never been in his possession.”
This averment was denied by the reply. From a verdict and judgment for the defendant, the plaintiff has appealed. The evidence is undisputed that the appellant delivered a new machine.
It is apparent that the new matter pleaded is not a defense, and that it does not raise an issue. The order expressly provides that all the contemporaneous stipulations between the parties are merged into the contract, and that no agent has the power to vary its terms. This would follow if the order did not so provide. Otherwise a written order or contract would be a useless formality and precaution. The object to be accomplished by a written agreement is that it may furnish the evidence of what the contract is. The very purpose of the averment was to contradict the terms of the written contract, and to prove a contract materially different from the written order. Respondent reserved the right to countermand the order for a failure of crops prior to the date of shipment. He does not plead that he exercised this right. The court refused to admit evidence offered in support of the new matter in the answer, but did, over the appellant’s objection, admit proof that the contract was cancelled before the machine was shipped, by the mutual agreement of the parties to the suit. If the respondent countermanded the order before the- machine was shipped, on account of the failure of crops, or if the contract was cancelled by mutual agreement, such matter was an affirmative defense, and should have been pleaded in the answer. Denny v. Stout, 59 Neb. 731, 82 N. W. 18; Grunwald v. Freese (Cal.), 34 Pac. 73; Koons v. St. Louis Car Co., 203 Mo. 227, 101 S. W. 49; Taussig v. Southern Mill & Land Co., 124 Mo. App. 209, 101 S. W. 602; Roberts v. Pacific & A. R. & Nav. Co., 121 Fed. 785.
While the appellant’s objections were not as full and specific as they might have been, we think they served to
Evidence was admitted which, under a proper issue, would have warranted the jui’y in finding, either 'that the right reserved in the order to countermand was exercised, or that the parties agreed to cancel it. The judgment is reversed, with directions to the trial court to permit an amendment to the answer, if applied for within thirty .days after filing the remittitur in the court below. Otherwise to enter a judg- ■ ment upon the pleadings in favor of the appellant.
Rudkin, C. J., Paekee, and Mount, JJ., concur.