10 Ga. App. 362 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
1. This was a suit on a note given for the purchase-price of a horse. The suit commenced by attachment and levy upon the horse. The defendant admitted the execution of the note, and that the plaintiff was the holder thereof. The defense relied upon was fraud by the plaintiff, which entitled the defendant to have the sale rescinded. The plea alleged, that the agent of the plaintiff, who sold the horse to the defendant, represented, at the time of the sale, that the horse was eight years old; that the defendant was ignorant of horses and did not know how to determine their age by inspection or examination, and that when he purchased the horse he relied absolutely on the agent’s statement as to its age, and paid $50 cash and gave to the plaintiff the note sued on; that two or three days thereafter he discovered that the horse was from fifteen to sixteen years of age, the discovery being made through information given to him by a person who had previously owned the horse; that upon this discovery the defendant went at once to the
Two controlling questions are made. The others are immaterial. A demurrer, on the ground that the plea set up no defense, but attempted to vary, alter, and contradict the terms of a written contract, was overruled, and exception was taken to this ruling. The purchase-money note contained the following express warranty: “This note is for the purchase-price of one sorrel mare about eight j^ears old, name Hattie. Weight about 1435 pounds. The above-described property is sold without any guarantee as to its kind or quality, and is purchased by the maker of this obligation with the understanding that no warranty shall be implied as against the seller.” It is insisted that this excluded the parol warranty that the horse was eight years old at the time of the sale. Even if this contention was true, the plea set up fraud and demanded a rescission for the fraud. It is only in the absence of fraud, accident, or mistake that a written contract which appears to be a complete and certain agreement between the parties will be conclusively presumed to contain all the terms and conditions of the contract, which can not be varied or contradicted by prior or contemporaneous verbal representations or statements. Bullard v. Brewer, 118 Ga. 198 (45 S. E. 711); Fleming v. Satterfield, 4 Ga. App. 351 (61 S. E. 518). There is quite a difference between an attempt to contradict the terms of a contract by parol testimony under a defense that the contract has been breached, and an effort to have the contract rescinded because of fraud in its procurement. Pryor v. Ludden, 134 Ga. 288 (67 S. E. 654). In this case, however, the written contract itself contained the express warranty that the horse was “about eight years old.” The whole warranty should be construed together, and if there is an apparent contradiction between this
2. The next point relied upon by the plaintiff in error was that the defendant, at the time he purchased the horse and before he signed the note sued upon, not only had full opportunity to examine the horse, but in fact did examine her and discovered the defect set up in his plea; it being contended that the age of the horse was a patent defect, discoverable by inspection, and that he was distinctly told by friends, who at his request examined the horse, that the representation as to her age was not true, but that on the contrary the horse was twelve or fourteen years old; and that notwithstanding these facts and with full knowledge of the falsity of the representation as to the age of the horse, he nevertheless accepted the horse, made a payment of $50 thereon, and gave the note sued on .for the balance of the purchase-money, and this conduct of his amounted to a waiver, although the warranty as to age may have been express. It is contended that where an express warranty is set out, the purchaser is not bound to examine
While we have discussed these questions of law made under the evidence, we are impressed with the fact that regardless of them, in the absence of any material error of law, the verdict, which in effect declared a rescission of the sale because of this fraud, was substantially just and fair to both parties. The undisputed evidence shows that the plaintiff sold the horse to the defendant for $265, $50 cash, and the balance in the note sued upon. The plaintiff levied his attachment upon the horse for the purchase-money and had it sold under a “ short ” order of sale, and bought it in for $185. This would make $235 that he got for the horse, or $30 less than the amount that the plaintiff had agreed to pay. Even if we concede that the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict for this $30, resolving every issue in- his favor and standing upon the strict letter of the law, yet when the evidence shows that the horse was in fact at least fourteen years old, and not eight, we think the plaintiff got full value for his property. The jury, in allowing the defendant $25 by way of recoupment, were probably moved to do