155 P. 1158 | Okla. | 1916
Defendant in error, plaintiff below, brought suit in the district court of Le Flore county against plaintiffs in error, defendants below, on open account. Defendants answered, admitting the indebtedness, but pleaded in satisfaction thereof an agreement to offset against said account an indebtedness due from J.S. Terry, an officer of plaintiff, to the estate of Edmund McKenna, deceased, father of one of defendants. Plaintiff filed reply, denying the allegations in defendants' *203 answer, and setting up an agreement between the executrix of said estate and the creditors thereof, whereby all of the property of said estate, including the account due said estate by Terry, was to be turned over to a trustee for the benefit of said creditors. Trial was had to the court without jury, resulting in judgment for plaintiff, and defendants bring error.
At the trial plaintiff offered testimony in support of its allegations in reference to the agreement between the executrix and the creditors, and error is predicated upon the action of the court in the admission of such testimony, it being contended by defendants that said agreement was reduced to writing in its entirety as embodied in the notes executed to creditors of the estate and the deed of trust executed to a trustee by the executrix, while plaintiff says that the notes and deed of trust were only a part of the agreement, and had reference to the real property of said estate, while that portion with reference to the personal property and accounts due the estate was oral.
Upon the issue thus presented the court admitted the testimony complained of. In this there was no error.
In 2 Elliott on Contracts, sec. 1633, p. 946, it is said:
"The question usually is as to whether the parol evidence sought to be introduced contradicts or alters the written contract, or leaves it to stand unchanged and simply tends to establish an additional collateral agreement."
In Chapin v. Dobson,
"The rule prohibiting the reception of parol evidence, varying or modifying a written agreement, does not apply where the original contract was verbal and entire, and *204
a part only was reduced to writing; nor does it apply to a collateral undertaking; these facts are always open to inquiry and may be proved by parol." Juillard v. Chaffee,
The evidence complained of having been properly admitted, and the case having been tried to the court without a jury, upon controverted questions of fact, and the court having made a general finding in favor of plaintiff, there being competent evidence reasonably tending to support the decree of the court, that decree will not be disturbed in this court on the weight of the evidence, but will be given the same weight and effect as the verdict of a jury. Facour Bros. v. Moran,
The judgment is affirmed.
All the Justices concur. *205