96 N.W. 588 | N.D. | 1903
The complaint alleges the incorporation of defendant; that plaintiff Johnson is the owner and Halland the mortgagee of the leased premises; that on June 21, 1900, plaintiffs and defendant entered into a written lease of the described property, a copy of which is attached to the complaint as “Exhibit A,” and made a part of the complaint; that defendant was required by the terms of this written lease to write $400 insurance on the building on the leased premises; that it' was agreed and understood between the parties that said insurance should be maintained and kept in force by defendant in some company for which it was agent as long and for the full time during which the lessee remained in possession of the premises under the terms of the lease; that on May 28, 1901, while defendant was occupying the premises under the terms of the lease, the building was totally destroyed by fire; that prior to its burning, defendant negligently permitted the insurance thereon to lapse and cease, “against the covenant and agreement of said defendant with the plaintiffs,” and plaintiffs were' damaged thereby in the sum of $400; that defendant elected to and continued to remain in possession and use of the leased premises after the expiration of the first year, under the terms of the lease, and was in possession at the time of the fire; that plaintiffs demanded before suit that defendant pay them $400 because of the destruction -of the building and the loss incurred by and on account of the negligence and failure of said defendant to keep said building insured, as aforesaid, and by reason of the fact that said defendant has broken and violated its express covenant as to insurance. Exhibit A, referred to in the second paragraph of the complaint, and attached to it, in its formal part recites its making on the 21st day of June, 1900, the description of the property, and its pertinent part read as follows: “To have and to hold the above-rented premises
The action is founded upon the written lease, a copy of which is made a part of the complaint by reference, and its plain purpose is to recover damages for a breach of the stipulation therein “to write $400 insurance on building, and deduct from rent.” The terms of this writing will control in determining the sufficiency of the complaint as against demurrer in every particular where the terms of the lease do not sustain the allegations as to its contents; and where the averments are contradictory of or inconsistent with it, they will be disregarded. Willard v. Davis (C. C.) 122 Fed. 363, Freiberg v. Magale (Tex. Sup.) 7 S. W. 684. To state a cause of action, therefore, this complaint should allege a breach of the contract to write $400 insurance upon the building, and consequent damages. This is not done. The facts set forth as a breach are that, prior to the burning of the building, defendant permitted the .insurance thereon to lapse and wholly cease, against the covenant and agreement of defendant. There is no covenant in the lease that the insurance was to be maintained by defendant for any time, or that it was to be rewritten. It was simply to write it.. Consequently, no breach of contract is pleaded. But appellant urges -that there is a latent ambiguity in the insurance clause of
Appellant contends that the continuance of defendant in the occupancy of the leased premises after one year carried over the covenant to write insurance on the building, and imposed the duty of rewriting; and he cites section 4084, Rev. Codes 1899, to sustain his contention. Defendant’s occupancy of the leased premises, under the positive averments of the complaint, was by virtue of provisions in the written lease, and the section of the statute quoted can have no application. Fields v. Mott, 9 N. D. 621, 84 N. W. 555. The lease expressed the terms upon which defendant could remain in possession after May 15, 1901, and, if it was the intention of the parties that the insurance should be rewritten after the first year in case defendant continued its occupancy of the leased prem
Plaintiff further contends that his action was brought and is at issue upon a contemporaneous collateral matter- attaching itself to the lease, the lease being made a part of the complaint, to show that there was a contract for insurance, and that he pleaded and intends to show that collateral to this promise there was an oral agreement to be executed if respondent continued the lease after the first year. The answer to this contention is that no such contract is pleaded, and could not, under established rules of evidence, be shown, even if it were fully set forth in the complaint, and the demurrer must, nevertheless, be sustained. This 'contention is, however, inconsistent with the averments of the complaint. No parol agreement is set out, no consideration for such agreement is alleged, and the breach set forth is alleged to be of the covenant in the written lease. In each paragraph of the complaint reference is made to the written contract and the stipulation as to insurance as a covenant. It is clear that the word “covenant,” as here repeatedly used, was intended and understood by the pleader In me sense of a written promise, and does not refer to any parol agreement. DeBolle v. Ins. Co., 4 Whart. 68, 33 Am. Dec. 38. If a parol stipulation was made concerning insurance after the first year, it was made as a part of the transaction then in hand, which is conclusively presumed to have been closed at the -signing and delivery of the written contract, in that the written lease upon its face appears to be complete, and to express the full contract of the parties. The stipulation as to insurance is not concerning a matter separate and independent of the written contract, and must therefore be found, if at all, in one of the items and terms of the contract. Dutton v. Gerrish, 9 Cush. 89, 55 Am. Dec. 45; Thompson v. Libby, 34 Minn. 374, 26 N. W. 1. To permit this stipulation to be proven by parol would be to permit an additional term to be grafted upon the written contract, which would as effectually change the contract expressed in the writing as if the stipulation were in direct contradiction of its terms. Cliver v. Heil (Wis.) 70 N. W. 346. It is stated as the settled general rule that all parol negotiations between the parties to a written contract anterior to or contemporaneous
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.