81 Mo. App. 201 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This is a suit that was brought before a justice of the peace on a promissory note and from the judgment in the circuit court, which was for defendant, plaintiff has appealed.
The undisputed evidence adduced at the trial tends to prove that Gilbert, a local agent of the plaintiff — an incorporated fire insurance company — solicited the defendant to take out a policy in plaintiff company for $800 on his farm residence, the premium thereon being twenty-four dollars, for a period of five years. The defendant was an illiterate man. He could neither read nor write. He could, however, write his name, and of this fact he informed plaintiff’s agent.
After the defendant had told plaintiff’s agent that he had the cash to pay the premium and did not wish to execute his note therefor, the latter thereupon presented to the former a paper which “he fixed up” and directed him where to sign his name to the same. Defendant did not know that he was signing a promissory note. This paper turned out afterwards not to be an order' but an application, with the note sued on attached. The plaintiff’s agent never offered to deliver the policy to the defendant. It appears that the plaintiff wrote the policy and mailed it to the defendant, but the defendant never received it. It further appears that a short time after the defendant applied for the policy he sustained a small loss .for which he thought the policy applied for afforded indemnity; that he gave the plaintiff’s agent notice of the loss and thereupon the latter informed him that he would get the former’s policy and lay in his claim for indemnity to the company. No notice was taken by plaintiff of defendant’s loss.
The plaintiff objected to the introduction of this evidence on the ground that it tended to change the terms, ajnounts, etc., of the written contract. The-rule is elementary that parol evidence can not be received to vary or change the terms of a written contract but this rule is not without exception. No one can be made a party to a contract without his consent. Although his signature may have been put to the writing by himself, yet if he did not know what he was signing but acted honestly under the belief that he was sign-
The court by an instruction for defendant told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that Gilbert; while acting as agent for plaintiff, falsely and fraudulently represented to defendant that the note sued on was an order for an insurance policy and induced defendant to sign it as such; and if 'they further believed that the defendant was illiterate and could not read and write, they should find for defendant. This expression of the law was substantially correct.
In Nicol v. Young, 68 Mo. App. 448, it was said that, “where one of the parties to the contract is an illiterate person and the other misreads or misexpounds it, so that the former is induced thereby to sign it, believing it was that which was read and expounded to him by the latter, when it differs materially thereform, this is such a fraud upon the part of the latter as would render the contract void, for the plain reason that the former never assented to it. Lithograph Co. v. Obert, 54 Mo. App. 240; Van Valkenburg v. Rourk, 12 Johns. 337.
Courts will not turn a deaf ear to one of the contracting parties who seeks to get rid of a contract when the other party is charged with fraud in reading it to him or in stating its nature or terms, or in leaving out terms agreed upon— Hutchins v. Pettingill, 30 N. H. 30 — or, inserting those not agreed upon. Aultman v. Olson, 30 Minn. 450. The act of Gilbert, the agent of the plaintiff, in writing the applica
In this view of the case it becomes unnecessary to notice the other instructions given for defendant and against the correctness of which the plaintiff has lodged a number of objections. An examination of these, however, has not convinced us that the court committed any error, in the giving of the same, that was prejudicial to the plaintiff on the merits, and, accordingly, we shall order an affirmance of the judgment.