8 Pa. Super. 84 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1898
Opinion by
This suit was brought by the payee of a promissory note against the maker. The defense set up was that the plaintiff had been the owner of a restaurant, furniture and fixtures, situate in East Liverpool, Ohio, and had sold the furniture and fixtures to one Anderson for $1,000. Of this $600 was paid in cash and a first chattel mortgage' given for the balance. Five hundred dollars of the cash payment was borrowed from the defendant, who held a second chattel mortgage as security. Anderson did not succeed in the business and it was alleged that the plaintiff induced the defendant (with the consent of Anderson) to buy the furniture and fixtures, rent the building from the plaintiff, cancel both obligations of Anderson and give the note in suit, under a parol agreement that if the defendant did not succeed in the business he should have the right to return the property to the plaintiff, whereupon the note was to be delivered up or canceled. The defendant testified that in pursuance of this agreement he gave the note, took possession of the restaurant, and gave the business a full and fair trial; and, failing to succeed, turned over the furniture and fixtures to the plaintiff, who took possession of them, and that the note was thereby satisfied according to the agreement under which it ivas given. This alleged agreement was denied by the plaintiff, and the testimony touching the whole was submitted to the jury. The learned court instructed the jury that if they found that the parol agreement as alleged by the defendant was entered into at the time of the execution of the note, and this was fully established to their satisfaction, and that the “ note was signed under such an inducement and with such an understanding between the parties at the time .... and following that, you are satisfied that the defendant did return this property and extinguished or satisfied the note in that way,” the verdict should be for the defendant; otherwise the verdict to be for the plaintiff for the full amount of the note and interest. Under these instructions, which were given with ample discussion of the law and the evidence, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant.
The plaintiff contends that the court erred in admitting proof of this contemporaneous parol agreement, and that it was not competent to affect the terms of the instrument sued on or to
The defense in the present case amounts, substantially, to payment, by the fulfilment of an agreement entered into by the parties to the note at the time it was made. This agreement is entirely consistent with the terms of the note, and both may be enforced concurrently and effectively: Insurance Co. v. Williams, 155 Pa. 405; Coal & Iron Co. v. Willing, 180 Pa. 165; Shaeffer v. Sensenig, 182 Pa. 634. The question of altering the terms of the note by proof of a parol contract does not arise in this case. The questions presented here re
This covers the questions raised by the specifications of error, they are all overruled and the judgment is affirmed.