A claim by appellant against the estate of Bateman, in the hands of an assignee, was referred; and, on the decision of the referee, judgment was entered for the respondent. For reversal,
“That the negotiations leading up to the sale were conducted between himself and Mr. Bateman; that he supposed he was selling the road to Bate-man; that, when the contract came 1» be signed, it was executed in Hood’s ■ name, Bateman vouching for Hood; that all the subsequent dealings were with Batemаn, and that ten bonds were still to be delivered. At) this point, Bateman denies that he holds, or ever held, such bonds, and demands that we рroduce the mythical Hood to prove an actual delivery of the bonds to Bateman. To meet this, we undertake tо show that Bateman was the real and undisclosed principal, and it is our evidence in this behalf which was improperly excluded.”
The evidence offered was of prior negotiations, and of the circumstances attending the execution оf the contract; and its object was, not to show Hood a myth, but to prove Bateman the principal whom Hood reрresented. It was excluded on the ground that previous negotiations were merged in the written agreement, and parol evidence incompetent to modify it. Appellant recognizes the rule that oral testimony is inadmissible to add to a written сontract, like this, complete in itself, or to explain a written contract, of which, like this, the meaning is explicit, beyond all obscurity or possibility of misapprehension. Broom, Leg. Max. 619; Corse v. Peck,
