212 N.W. 125 | Iowa | 1927
The defendants E.M. and Jennie E. Sabin executed the mortgage in question to the appellant, to secure *1363 their notes in the sum of $13,000. Thereafter, E.M. Sabin entered into a written contract with E.W. Dennstedt for 1. EVIDENCE: the sale of the mortgaged premises to the parol as latter, who, in the contract, assumed payment of affecting the mortgage. The conveyance of the land in writings: pursuance of this contract was made by the oral Sabins to the appellee A.L. Dennstedt by contradic- warranty deed, in which the grantee assumed and tion of agreed to pay the mortgage. The appellee mortgage- subsequently conveyed the land to the defendant assumption Curley by a deed in which the grantee also clause. assumed payment of the mortgage. Judgment for the amount due under the mortgage was asked against the mortgagors and against the appellee and Curley on the assumption clauses in the respective conveyances to them. The relief prayed was denied as against the appellee, and it is from this judgment that the plaintiff appeals.
The appellee claimed, and, subject to objection, introduced parol evidence to show, that the Dennstedt Land Company, a corporation, was the real purchaser of the land from Sabin; that the contract therefor was made in the name of E.W. Dennstedt, and the deed taken in the name of appellee as a mere matter of convenience; that the latter had no interest in the land and received no consideration for the agreement in the deed to assume and pay the mortgage; that the corporation contracted to sell the land to Curley, and he executed a conveyance thereof in pursuance of such contract; and that he received no part of the consideration therefor. There is no contradiction of this testimony. The only question upon which the testimony is in conflict is as to whether Sabin had knowledge that the corporation was the real purchaser of the land. The controversy is over the competency of the evidence and its sufficiency to relieve appellee from liability on the assumption clause in the deed to him. It should be observed that the Sabins, the grantors in the conveyance to appellee, make no claim under the assumption clause therein. The only party seeking to enforce any liability as against the appellee is the mortgagee, who was not a party to the agreement.
It is a well settled doctrine, frequently applied to such contracts as the one in question, that the rule that the terms of a written contract cannot be altered or contradicted by parol evidence cannot be invoked either by or against a stranger to *1364
the contract; that it has "no application in controversies between a party to the instrument on the one hand and a stranger to it on the other; for the stranger, not having assented to the contract, is not bound by it, and is therefore at liberty, when his rights are concerned, to show that the written instrument does not express the full or true character of the transaction. And where the stranger to the instrument is thus free to vary or contradict it by parol evidence, his adversary, although a party to it, must be equally free to do so." Aultman E. T. Co. v.Greenlee,
"As against a stranger to the contract, a party thereto may assert that the agreement was other or different — in any respect and to any extent — than that which the writing imports."
In Shult v. Doyle, supra, we said, speaking of the relation of the mortgagee to a contract whereby the purchaser of the land from the mortgagor assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage:
"As to the plaintiff herein, his rights are subordinate to the real agreement entered into, as between the defendants. His rights are purely legal. They do not arise out of any equity. They spring alone from the express agreement of the parties, made in his behalf as a third person. Peters v. Goodrich,
Appellant relies upon Beeson v. Green,
Appellant also relies upon the doctrine that one who contracts for an undisclosed principal binds himself. The difficulty with the application of this doctrine to the facts in hand is that the one invoking it is a stranger to the contract. 2. PRINCIPAL Whatever might be said of the appropriate AND AGENT: application of this rule at the instance of the undisclosed grantors in the deed, in case the real purchaser agency: was not disclosed, it cannot aid one who was not liability of a party to the contract. In this view, it agent: becomes unnecessary to determine whether the non-applica- Sabins were advised that the Dennstedt Land bility of Company was the real purchaser, the only rule. disputed question of fact in the case.
In argument, counsel discuss the question of consideration for the assumption clause in the deed, and whether it was incumbent on the appellant to plead and prove a consideration therefor. In the view we take of the case, it is unnecessary 3. REFORMATION that we consider these questions. The evidence OF INSTRU- on behalf of the appellee established without MENTS: in contradiction that he was not the purchaser of general: the land; that by the purchase he acquired no non-neces- interest in it; that there was in fact no sity to agreement that he should assume and pay the reform. mortgage. As against the appellant, it was not necessary that there be a reformation of the deed in order to relieve the appellee from liability under the agreement appearing in the deed; for, as we have seen, he had a right, as against the mortgagee, notwithstanding the writing, to show the facts.
In Shult v. Doyle, supra, the land was sold on contract to one who by the contract agreed to assume and pay the mortgage. This purchaser sold the land on contract to parties who therein agreed to take it subject to the mortgage. Both transactions were consummated by conveying the land "across" from the first vendor to the last vendee by a deed in which the grantees assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage. The grantees asked a reformation of the deed. We said:
"So far as the plaintiff [the mortgagee] was concerned, they [the grantees] had no need of equitable relief. As against *1366 him, they had a right to introduce parol evidence, to vary and contradict the writing upon which he predicated his case."
When it is determined, either as a result of the reformation of the writing or on competent evidence, where reformation is not necessary, that there was no agreement on the part of the appellee to assume and pay the mortgage, it is the end of the controversy. As bearing on the question see, also, Rogers v.Castle,
We do not have before us, and express no opinion upon, the question of the right of the grantor in such a situation to recover, in a proper case.
We reach the conclusion that the judgment below was right, and it is — Affirmed.
EVANS, C.J., and STEVENS and FAVILLE, JJ., concur.