201 N.W. 447 | Mich. | 1924
Plaintiff, whose Russian name appears in the following as the depositor, engaged defendants, private bankers at Detroit, to transmit money to Russia. At the banking office he made application, Exhibit 3, and received and accepted Exhibit 6. We quote:
City — Kiev. Amount — 10,000 rubles. Name of depositor in full — Nison Idel Kerszner. His age — 36. Father's name — Abram. Mother's name — Perl. If married, name of wife — Liena. Where born — Village, M. Dubova; Municipality, Uksanin; County, Uman; Province, Kiev. Occupation — Merchant. Signature of the depositor — Nison Idel Abramovech Kerczner. Dated: October 24, 1917.
"GOLDMAN BROS.
Foreign amount — Rs. 10,000. Per S.
"Our liability toward the sender to be no greater than the liability of the European P. O. toward us, all claims in case of loss of money to be adjusted only, when the amount is received by our correspondent from the European Post Office. In case this payment is returned by the European Post Office for any reason whatsoever, same to be refunded at the current rate of exchange prevailing on the date of return of such funds."
Defendants, following a required course, remitted to an international bank, an intermediary bank, in this case C. B. Richards Company of New York, who in turn remitted to the Russo-Asiatic Bank at Petrograd, which bank was the correspondent of all American banks when money was to be transmitted to Russia, directing said bank to deposit 10,000 rubles in the name of plaintiff in the bank at Kiev. The remittance of Richards Company was mailed, left on a Russian steamship for Russia and its known history ends there. It is intimated that the Reds got it. Defendants remitted $1,410, the value of the rubles, retaining $30 for the service.
Plaintiff's case, in the main, is planted on a claimed oral agreement, contemporaneous with the writings, by and between him and the defendants, that if defendants failed to give to him within three months a bankbook, showing deposit in his name of 10,000 rubles in the Kiev bank, they would pay him back $1,440. There is no claim of fraud, duress, or mistake. Plaintiff was well educated and intelligent. Plaintiff had verdict and judgment. Defendants bring error. *554
Defendants insist that plaintiff's testimony of the oral agreement varied and contradicted the written contract between the parties and therefore ought not to have gone to the jury. Plaintiff contends that the writing in question is a mere receipt and may be contradicted or explained. That a mere receipt may be contradicted or explained is elementary. But the fact that a receipt is incorporated within a written contract does not render the entire writing a mere receipt subject to be varied or contradicted by parol evidence. 22 C. J. p. 1138.
The written contract, accepted and acted upon by the parties, in so fax as it was put in written form, controls. Axe v.Tolbert,
Judgment reversed with direction to enter judgment for defendants, with costs.
McDONALD, BIRD, SHARPE, MOORE, STEERE, FELLOWS, and WIEST, JJ., concurred. *555