54 S.E.2d 401 | Ga. | 1949
1. A distinct collateral oral agreement, not inconsistent with a written contract, is not necessarily merged therein, and one contract may be the consideration of another, the inducement to its execution, and an independent oral agreement which has been so induced may be proved and enforced though not referred to in the written contract.
2. Where as an inducement and consideration for the execution of a written contract for the sale of land, together with certain tourist cabins thereon, the sellers orally agreed with the buyers that they would not thereafter compete with them in renting tourist cabins in the area as described in the petition here, such oral agreement was separate and distinct from and not inconsistent with the written contract, and was enforceable in equity. The present petition as amended, setting forth such facts, a breach of the oral agreement, and alleging damages, stated a cause of action for injunction and the recovery of damages, and the court erred in sustaining the general demurrer.
3. The statute of frauds is not applicable to the oral agreement relied on, for the assigned reason that it was not alleged that it was to be performed within the space of one year, since it was shown that it was promptly and fully performed by the petitioners and accepted by the defendants, thus meeting the requirements of the Code, § 20-402 (2).
4. Where it was alleged that the defendants began in January, 1948, to violate their agreement not to compete in the renting of tourist cabins, and the present action was filed in August, 1948, it could not be said as a matter of law that the plaintiffs in error were guilty of laches in not instituting the present action sooner.
5. The alleged oral contract was not subject to the objection that it was to vague and indefinite to be enforceable, in that, as contended, it did not set out definitely the portion of the defendants' property in which it was agreed by them not to compete with the petitioners in renting tourist cabins.
The prayers were: (1) that the defendants be enjoined from carrying on a tourist-cabin business where tourists and others are entertained as transients within the area named in the petition; (2) that they be enjoined from maintaining offices and advertising signs for the purpose of detracting from the petitioners' business within the same area; and (3) that the petitioners recover damages, nominal and actual, caused by the breach set out in the petition.
The defendants filed general and special demurrers to the *710 original petition, and after amendment the demurrers were renewed and other grounds were added. The grounds of general demurrer were as follows: 1. No cause of action is set out against the defendants, and no grounds for equitable relief are shown. 2. The alleged agreement in parol by the defendants that, if the petitioners would buy the property and business of the defendants for the consideration of $7500, they would not carry on the business of renting tourist cabins in the area named was violative of the statute of frauds and void because not in writing. 3. The contract relied upon is too vague and indefinite to be capable of enforcement, in that it fails to set out definitely the portion of the defendants' adjoining property agreed not to be used "for a tourist camp cabin." 4. The petition as amended shows that the petitioners were guilty of laches, in that they sat by and permitted the defendants to construct two tourist cabins and to actually operate the same on January 30, 1948. 5. The petition as amended undertakes to set up a parol contract on the part of the defendants not to build and operate cabins on their property, thus seeking to engraft by parol additional terms upon a written contract without first seeking to reform the same. 6. The petition as amended shows that the petitioners have an adequate remedy at law.
The court, without ruling on the special demurrers, sustained the general demurrer and dismissed the petition, and the exception here is to that judgment.
The defendants filed what they termed a "cross-bill of exceptions," but in which they do not affirmatively except to the judgment of the court, but say that, "In the event that the said order is to be interpreted as overruling the defendants' special demurrers, the defendants then and there except and now except and say that the judgment of the court overruling the defendants' special demurrers is error, as being contrary to law, and the defendants say that the court should have sustained all of the defendants' special demurrers." In the brief of the defendants in error, it is said that, "If counsel for plaintiffs is correct, as we believe he is, that such is not the case [that the court passed on and overruled the special demurrers], the cross-bill will, of course, be disregarded by the court."
1, 2. Parol evidence is inadmissible to add to, take from, or vary a written contract. The attendant circumstances surrounding its execution, ambiguities, and the verbal portion of a contract which is in writing only in part may be shown by parol. Code, § 20-704 (1). The facts here alleged do not come within the operation of this rule, in that the verbal agreement alleged is an independent and complete contract within itself and forms no part of the written contract. Neither does it alter in any respect the writing. It is collateral to, independent of, and distinct from the written contract. Though it be designated as a collateral contemporaneous agreement between the parties, its independence and its lack of inconsistency with the written contract cause it not to become merged with the written contract.Forsyth Mfg. Co. v. Castlen,
3. The statute of frauds is not, as contended in one ground of general demurrer, applicable here for the assigned reason that it was not alleged that it was to be performed within the space of one year. It is shown by the petition as amended that the agreement to enter into the written contract was promptly and fully performed by the petitioners and such performance accepted by the defendants, thus meeting the requirements of the Code, § 20-402 (2).
4. Where it is alleged that the defendants began in January, 1948, to violate their agreement not to compete in the renting of tourist cabins, and the present petition was filed in August, *712 1948, it could not be said as a matter of law that the petitioners were guilty of laches in not instituting the present action sooner, as contended in one ground of general demurrer.
5. In one ground of general demurrer it is urged that the oral agreement relied upon is too vaguer and indefinite to be enforceable, in that it fails to set out definitely the portion of the defendants' adjoining property embraced in such agreement. The petition as amended alleged that the property purchased was cut from a tract of land owned and occupied by the defendants, and that, adjacent to the property so purchased, the defendants operate a store, filling station, and cafe. It then alleges that, "Without the good will of the business and the lack of competition in the territory immediately adjacent to this property and upon the remaining land occupied by the defendants, the plaintiffs would not have purchased the property at any price, and the sellers were so informed. As an inducement to get the plaintiffs to buy this property and business for the monetary consideration named, the defendants orally agreed that they would not again carry on the business of renting tourist cabins in the area named in competition with the plaintiffs so that the only tourist-camp business in the immediate vicinity would be that purchased by the plaintiffs." The words, "in the area named," obviously refer to the preceding words, "territory immediately adjacent to this property and upon the remaining land occupied by the defendants," and sufficiently identified the area in which the defendants were not to compete in renting tourist cabins.
The defendants in error concede that, if, as determined by this court, the trial judge did not pass upon the special demurrers their cross-bill of exceptions should not be considered, and, accordingly, it is dismissed.
Judgment reversed on the main bill of exceptions. Cross-billof exceptions dismissed. All the Justices concur, except Wyatt,J., who dissents from the judgment on the main bill. *713