101 Wash. 324 | Wash. | 1918
This appeal is from a judgment upon a promissory note. The complaint of the plaintiff is the usual form upon a promissory note, dated March 30, 1914, due on the 12th of April, 1916, and executed by the defendants. The answer of the defendants admits the making and delivering of the note and alleges affirmatively, in substance, that, prior to the making of the note, the plaintiff and one H. Victor Owens, who was the son of the makers of the note, agreed by contract in writing that the plaintiff would deed to H. Victor Owens and his father, H. K. Owens, a farm in the state of Oregon, known as the Gladmar Farm; that, in exchange therefor, H. Iv. Owens and son agreed to deed to the plaintiff a farm in Thurston county, Washington, known as the Jenks Farm, and certain residence property in Seattle; and also to execute and deliver to the plaintiff a mortgage on the Gladmar Farm in the sum of $4,800, payable as provided in the promissory note described in the complaint; that, pursuant to and in execution of said agreement, plaintiff executed and delivered a deed to the Gladmar Farm to H. K. Owens, and H. Victor Owens executed and delivered a deed to the plaintiff for the Jenks Farm; that H. K. Owens and wife executed and delivered a deed to the residence in Seattle, and executed and delivered to the plaintiff the note sued upon, secured by a mortgage on the Gladmar Farm for $4,800; that, by mutual consent, the deed to the Gladmar Farm was taken in the name of H. K. Owens in trust for H. Victor Owens, and that the note was not to be the personal obligation of the defendants, but was signed as a part of the mortgage and to evidence the terms upon which the mortgage was to be payable, and it was mutually understood and agreed that the making of said note was without further and other consideration. It was further alleged that the Jenks Farm, owned by H. Victor Owens, was conveyed
The answer thereupon alleged a counterclaim to the effect that the exchange of the properties was brought about by misrepresentations on the part of the plaintiff in regard to water rights which were fraudulently represented to be appurtenant to the Giadmar Farm; that the defendants relied upon the fraudulent representations and were induced to exchange properties thereby ; that there were no water rights appurtenant to the Giadmar Farm; and that the defendants had been damaged in the sum of $12,500. In reply to these allegations, the plaintiff admitted the contract for the exchange of properties as alleged in the answer, but denied all the other allegations. Upon these issues the case went to trial.
After the plaintiff had introduced the note in evidence and rested, the defendants offered to prove that the Jenks Farm, in this state, was owned by H. Victor Owens, the son of the defendants; that there was a $4,800 mortgage upon this farm; that the note and mortgage mentioned in the answer upon the Giadmar Farm were given merely in exchange for the mortgage upon the Jenks Farm; that the mortgage upon the Jenks Farm of $4,800 had not been paid by the plaintiff, and that there was no consideration for the note on that account. The trial court sustained the plain
The contract for the exchange of the properties was in writing. It provided that the plaintiff, Frank B. Rhodes, should convey the Grladmar Farm, in Oregon, to the defendants for the Jenks Farm and the residence property in Seattle, and that, as a part of the consideration, the defendants should execute a mortgage on the Grladmar Farm to the plaintiff for $4,800. The exchange of the properties was made pursuant to this contract, and the note sued upon was given to the plaintiff and secured by a mortgage upon the Grladmar Farm. The written contract is explicit that this mortgage should be given. The note upon its face is a plain promissory note, and neither the note nor the contract express any conditions which might avoid either the note or the mortgage. The offer of proof made by the defendants clearly is an attempt, by oral evidence, to vary the terms of the note and the written contract by showing that the note sued upon was a note subject to be defeated by a condition subsequent. In the case of Post v. Tamm, 91 Wash. 504, 158 Pac. 91, we said:
“The rule is well settled that, in the absence of fraud or mistake, a contemporaneous oral agreement limiting or exempting the maker of a note from liability cannot be shown as a defense to an action upon the note. In Anderson v. Mitchell, 51 Wash. 265, 98 Pac. 751, it was said:
“ ‘It has been repeatedly held by this court that, in the absence of fraud or mistake, it is incompetent for one who signs a promissory note as principal to set up an independent collateral agreement limiting or exempting him from liability . . .’ (Citing authorities.)
“The rule which permits oral testimony for the purpose of showing that a note had never been delivered, and was not intended to take effect until the happening of a certain event, is not here applicable. That rule*328 relates to a condition precedent. In the absence of the condition being performed, there is no valid delivery of the note, and hence no obligation as between the parties.
“In this case the execution and delivery of the note is admitted and the obligation thereof recognized; and, for the purpose of defeating it, reliance is placed upon a contemporaneous oral agreement by which a condition not precedent, but subsequent, was offered to defeat liability. If a contemporaneous oral agreement providing for the surrender of the note upon the happening of a condition subsequent could be used to defeat recovery upon a note, the rule which provides that a note or other written contract cannot be varied or modified by such an agreement would be abrogated. ’ ’
We think it is plain that the rule in that case is applicable here, and the trial court was right in excluding the offered evidence. One of the cases upon which the appellants rely is Ware v. Allen, 128 U. S. 590. That was a case where there was a condition expressed in the note which provided that, if the condition was not complied with, the note was void. In that kind of a case it is plain that oral evidence would be admissible to show that the note never became effective, and the court so held in that case. But in the case now before us, there was no condition, either in the note or in the contract, that the note should not become effective at once; and the appellants now seek to show that there was an oral agreement outside of the note at the time the note was executed, and that it was given in lieu of another obligation which the holder of the note was required to pay and which he has not paid. If the appellants may show this contemporaneous oral agreement, then they may, by oral evidence, vary the terms of the note and the written contract, which clearly cannot be done under the rule in Post v. Tamm, supra.
We find no error, and the judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Ellis, C. J., Holcomd, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.