39 Ga. App. 187 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
This was a suit by Mrs. W. C. Pool against E. Tris Napier and E. Tris Napier Company, a corporation, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff in falling through the floor of a dwelling house occupied by the plaintiff with her husband and rented by the husband from the defendants, the cause of action being grounded upon the alleged neglect of the defendants to make necessary repairs. The defendants demurred generally and special! y, the court overruled the demurrers, and exceptions were taken. The plaintiff recovered a verdict for $2,000, after which the defendants made a motion for a new trial, which was refused, and the case was then brought to this court.
Without setting forth the allegations of the rather lengthy petition, or the numerous grounds of the demurrers, we may say that we have carefully considered the same, and have concluded that under the rulings made in Stacie v. Harris, 111 Ga. 149 (36 S. E. 615), and Miller v. Jones, 31 Ga. App. 318 (120 S. E. 672), the petition set forth a cause of action and was not subject to any of the demurrers.
While the stipulation above quoted was in reference only to windows and the porch roof, Mr. Poole testified: “I rented this house for another year, beginning October, 1926. At that time I told him the windows were in bad shape, the flooring, there were four or five planks that looked like they were decaying. . . It was agreed that he was to fix the flooring when I signed these notes. The note that Mr. Napier prepared did not contain the whole contract I made with him. It did not profess to embody all the repairs Mr. Napier agreed to make. I don’t think it embodies anything but the windows and the leaks. He wrote what was in the note and handed me the notes to sign, and I says, ‘ I can’t sign the note,’ and he says, Why ? ’ and I says, ‘ It don’t call for what you. agreed to do ’; and we had an argument of half an hour before I signed the note; Mr. Napier did not tell me that was all he intended to do. He said he would send the carpenter out there and do what ought to be done to the house. That was the part of the
It is insisted for the plaintiffs in error that the evidence as above outlined disclosed that the parties had reduced to writing what appeared to be a valid contract of renting, and that since it contained specific provision for certain repairs to be made by the landlords, it should be taken as embracing the final and whole agreement of the parties upon that subject, and as excluding any prior or contemporaneous parol agreement to make other or additional repairs. It is contended that the evidence of the plaintiff’s husband as to a verbal agreement to repair the floor was inconsistent with the written terms of the contract, and that, although this evidence was admitted without objection, it should have been disregarded, out of respect for the parol-evidence rule. This is one of the theories upon which it is argued that the verdict was without evidence to support it, and contrary to law.
We can not agree that the verdict should be set aside upon the grounds stated. Irrespective of whether the contentions of the plaintiffs in error might be sustainable in other circumstances, it does not appear, from the evidence, that the writing purported to contain all the stipulations of the contract. We say this because the notes were not introduced in evidence, and, with the exception of the one provision which a witness read out while testifying, the record fails to show anything specific as to their contents which would be material to the question under consideration. A contract may be partly in writing and partly in parol, and that which is in parol may be proved, where it appears from, the face of the instrument or from the attendant circumstances that the writing was not intended to embrace the entire agreement between the parties, and where that which it is sought to show as a collateral verbal agreement does not in any way conflict with or contradict what is contained in the writing. Forsyth Mfg. Co. v. Castlen, 112 Ga. 199 (6, 7) (37 S. E. 485, 81 Am. St. R. 28); Pryor v. Ludden, 134 Ga. 288 (67 S. E. 654, 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 267); Bond v. Perrin, 145 Ga. 200 (6) (88 S. E. 954).
Mr. Pool testified that he did not think the note from which he read embodied anything “but the windows and the leaks,” but so far as appears there may have been other provisions showing affirm
The defendants prepared the notes and were presumably acquainted with their contents, and the fact that no objection was made to the evidence regarding the verbal agreement to repair the floor would seem, in some measure, to indicate that this evidence was admissible. “Evidence is presumed to be admissible unless some objection is made which shows the contrary.” Jasper County v. Butts County, 147 Ga. 672, 673 (95 S. E. 254).
Furthermore, the testimony of Mr. Pool, to the effect that the notes which contained the stipulation as to the windows and leaks “did not profess to embody all the repairs Mr. Napier agreed to make,” was not a violation of the parol-evidence rule, but was secondary evidence as to the contents of the writing, and, having been admitted without objection, should not be absolutely ignored, where the instrument itself was not introduced in evidence for construction by the court.
If we are correct in the conclusion just stated, there was no merit in any of the exceptions to the court’s charge; and the same would also be true of an assignment upon the refusal of a request to charge. It may be further said of the request, however, that it was not accurately adjusted to the facts, and could have been refused for that cause. It was framed upon the hypothesis that Mr. Pool '“refused to sign rent notes for a new term of renting, unless and until the repairs which were to be made were enumerated in one of the notes, and [that] Mr. Napier refused to have any other items of repairs mentioned in the note.” According to the testimony, neither Pool nor Napier so refused, but, on the contrary, the notes were finally executed with one item of repairs omitted, though fully agreed to.
But, in addition to his evidence as set out above, the witness Pool, who was the tenant, testified: “What caused the plank that broke with my wife to fall through was that the water had leaked on it until it decayed the sill under it. I went underneath the house after she was hurt. I saw signs of decay; the sill was rotten. That could have been seen by anybody making an inspection of the porch. I could not see that defective condition of the plank that broke with Mrs. Pool from the top of the flooring.” There was evidence to the same efEect from Mrs. Pool, as follows: “I did not know that the part of the floor that fell with me was dangerous before I fell through. There was nothing about that plank that broke in, the top surface, to indicate to a careful person that it was dangerous to step on the part of the porch that fell in. In regard to the floor as a whole, there were other planks that gave evidence of weakness four or five feet from where I fell [italics ours]. I did not walk on that part of the porch. After I was able to get up and walk around, I did not ascertain what caused the plank to break. I saw the plank that broke. It had decayed underneath; it was not decayed at all on the top surface.”
In view of this evidence, it should not be held as a matter of law that the particular defect was patent or that it was such that under the ordinary rule governing the relation of landlord and
While the evidence shows that the parties did agree specially as to certain matters, such as repairing windows, stopping leaks on front porch, and “fixing the floor,” it can not be said absolutely under the evidence that such special agreement, as to these subjects, was intended to be exclusive, or that as to the floor it included more than the repair merely of the “four or five planks that looked like they were decaying.” It was in evidence that Mr. Napier promised that “he would send the carpenter out there and do what ought to be done to the house.” This was to imply that as to the general condition of the premises the common duty of a landlord as declared by law would stand without change and be applicable as between the parties. The evidence authorized the inference that the plank that broke was another and different plank from those mentioned in the negotiations which .culminated in the second contract, and, more than this, that it actually gave way because of a rotten sill. In these circumstances it became a legitimate inference that the defect complained of was a matter as to which the rights and liabilities of the parties would be governed by such general, rule rather than by the terms of the special agreement.
In other words, while it is seen that as to certain particular subjects there was an agreement tending to vary what might otherwise have been the duty of the landlords, yet the cause of the controversy could have been found to lie jn a different subject, with reference to which the duty as to repairs was to be determined by implication of law.' Indeed, the special agreement seems to have had the effect of increasing, instead of limiting the liability of the landlords; but as to the matter upon which the cause of action was predicated their obligation appears to have been neither greater nor less than that implied by law. At least this is the case as the jury could have found it to be, under the evidence.
The petition suggested nothing as to a special agreement. But . since as to the duty of the landlords we must hold that the allegations were supported by the evidence, it is unnecessary to determine whether in such a case there would be a fatal variance between the allegata and the probata should it appear that the duty claimed to have been breached arose only by an express undertaking.
Where the landlord is in such position as to be chargeable with such duty, it is immaterial that the facts creating such responsibility as to knowledge may have arisen at the making of the lease contract and before occupancy thereunder, or that no later notice was given. Compare Williams v. Jones, 26 Ga. App. 558 (106 S. E. 616); Marr v. Dieter, 27 Ga. App. 711 (4) (109 S. E. 532).
Under the facts of this case the question of whether the period from September 21 until October 27 was a reasonable time within which defendants should have performed the duty to make the repairs was one for determination by the jury. Bearden Mercantile Co. v. Madison Oil Co., 128 Ga. 695 (3) (58 S. E. 200).
It does not appear from the evidence as a matter of law that the plaintiff could have avoided the injury by the exercise of ordinary care. Stack v. Harris, 111 Ga. 149 (36 S. E. 615); Miller v. Jones, 31 Ga. App. 321 (120 S. E. 672).
In one of the grounds of the motion for a new trial it is com
According to the testimony of the plaintiff’s husband, the contract was made with Mr. Napier, and the evidence did not demand the inference that he was acting solely as agent for the Napier company. Strachan Shipping Co. v. Hazlip-Hood Cotton Co., 35 Ga. App. 94 (132 S. E. 454). On the other hand, the jury were authorized to find that he was a party to the contract. As to the other defendant, there was the stipulation, “E. Tris Napier Company agrees to put fastenings to windows, where needed, and to stop leaks on front porch.” Presumably this company would not have agreed to make these repairs unless it was a party to the renting. It was not necessary for the plaintiff to show that the defendants were joint or common owners of the property; for if they leased the house as contended, ownership would be immaterial, in view of the issues made. Strickland v. Stiles, 107 Ga. 308 (3) (33 S. E. 85).
There was no contention by counsel for the plaintiffs in error, either in the argument or in the briefs, that the evidence failed to show the authority of Mr. Napier to represent the company in making the rent contract, although the point has been made in the motion for a rehearing wherein it is further insisted that the question was inherent in the general grounds of the motion for a new trial. The thing previously urged was that the stipulation contained in one of the notes as quoted above should be taken as constituting the entire.contract upon the subject of repairs, and both of the defendants relied upon this as their principal ground of defense.
But to look to the matter upon its merits, it appears that there was a ratification, even if no original authority. Mr. Napier purported to act for the other defendant in preparing the rent contract and in placing therein the stipulation referred to. The tenant occupied the premises under the contract as thus made and presum
Even as to a wilful trespass committed by an agent, the Supreme Court has said that, although the agent may have exceeded his authority in so doing, his act was capable of ratification, which could be implied from the acts or silence of the principal, and that where once made it could not be revoked. Byne v. Hatcher, 75 Ga. 289 (3). See further, in this connection, Ellis v. U. S. Fertilizing & Chemical Co., 64 Ga. 571 (4); Crockett v. Sibley, 3 Ga. App. 554 (2) (60 S. E. 326); Civil Code (1910), §§ 3601, 3603, 4416; 2 C. J. 470, 521; 21 R. C. L. 919, § 99.
From all the facts and circumstances the jury were authorized to infer not only that Mr. Napier had authority to enter into the agreement upon the terms' shown by the evidence, but that having such authority the notice which he received in making the contract was such as to bind both himself and the other defendant, and to make each of them liable for any negligence in failing to discover and repair the defect.
There being evidence tending to show that the plaintiff’s in
The court did not err in refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.