12 Ind. App. 203 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1895
The appellee sued to recover damages for injuries to five mules, sustained by reason of their being put into a defective car.
The second paragraph sets up a written contract.
The court, in its special finding, found in favor of the appellant upon the second paragraph and for the appellee upon the first.
The appellant questions here the sufficiency of the first paragraph, claiming that it does not sufficiently allege performance of the contract by appellee.
An examination of the complaint fails to disclose any condition precedent unperformed by appellee, or any failure to aver any fact upon which appellant’s liability depends. We may add that the demurrer is in such form as to test the sufficiency, not of each paragraph separately, but of the entire complaint. Meyer v. Bohlfing, 44 Ind. 238; Cooper v. Hayes, 96 Ind. 386.
The special findings show that appellee delivered and appellant received the mules for shipment under a parol contract to carry them to Louisville, they were placed in the car, and the injury happened, without any written contract of shipment, and, so far as the findings disclose, without any suggestion or expectation of one. After the defect in the car had been discovered, and the injury had occurred, the mules were transferred to another car, when a written contract for their carriage was signed by the parties. Under this finding the contract of shipment was complete and binding upon both parties and the breach occurred before any written contract was entered into. Notwithstanding the prior parol contract, the parties had a right to change it and make a new written contract which would govern as to the rights of the parties from that time forth, but this would not destroy the right to recover damages for a prior breach of the parol contract, unless there was an express provision to
While a written contract merges into itself all prior parol negotiations with reference to that contract, it by no means necessarily merges into itself all other contracts actually entered between the parties, even though relating to the same property. Especially is this true when the first contract has been not only made but broken before the second is consummated. Pittsburgh, etc., R. W. Co. v. Racer, 10 Ind. App. 503; Harrison v. Missouri, etc., Railway Co., 74 Mo. 364; McAbsher v. Richmond, etc., R. R. Co., 108 N. C. 344; Cleveland, etc., Railroad Co. v. Perkins, 17 Mich. 296.
The right of the parties to change a contract of shipment is expressly sustained by Toledo, etc., R. R. Co. v. Levy, 127 Ind. 168.
The fact that the court did not set out in its findings the terms of the written contract did not injure the appellant since the finding was in its favor on the issue as to which this contract was pertinent.
The conclusions of law were in our judgment right and the damages not excessive nor the finding without sufficient evidence under well established rules of law.
It is objected that the freight should have been deducted from the damages allowed. It is sufficient answer to this to say that there is nothing in the evidence to indicate that the freight charges were not paid.
There is nothing in our holding which in any degree conflicts with the decision of the Supreme Court in Lake Shore, etc., R. W. Co. v. Bennett, 89 Ind. 457, where it is said: "When, therefore, the court found, as it did, that appellee’s cattle were delivered to and received by the appellant under a special contract, which was at the time duly executed by the parties, it would seem that such finding would be an end of the case, as stated in the
Judgment affirmed.