72 S.E. 74 | N.C. | 1911
Action tried on appeal from a justice's court. Plaintiffs sued on an instrument alleged to be a written contract bearing date 16 December, *30 1909, for the purchase of a gasoline tank with incidental appliances, at the price of $140. The tank was shipped from Fort Wayne, Indiana, on 15 December, 1909, and arrived at Littleton, N.C. some time in the latter part of the month, and was taken out of rail (36) road depot by defendant, as he stated, for purpose of saving storage. Defendant having denied liability, on issue submitted the court charged the jury that if they believed the evidence the plaintiff was entitled to recover the contract price, $140, etc. Verdict for same in plaintiff's favor. Judgment, and defendant excepted and appealed, assigning errors chiefly in the rulings of the court on questions of evidence. The written instrument purporting to bear date 16 December, 1909, expressed a definite order for the tank and appliances at the stated price of $140, and contained further stipulations as follows: "It is agreed by purchaser that this order shall not be countermanded and, when filled and due as per specifications and terms herein stated, that there shall be no defense for nonpayment. It is further agreed that in default of payment, S. F. Bowser Co., Incorporated, or their agent, may take possession of and remove said goods without legal process, unless such default be granted by special letter from S. F. Bowser Co., Incorporated." This paper-writing having been received in evidence without objection, plaintiff put defendant on the stand, who testified, on his examination in chief, that he signed the instrument and that he had not paid the price or any part of same. On cross-examination the witness was allowed to state: "The agent for the Bowser Company came into see me some time in December, 1909, and explained to me the uses and need for his gasoline tank. I told him that I thought it was a fine thing and would certainly like to have one, and that I would buy one if I could get permission from the town authorities to bury the tank under the street. The agent replied that there was no possible danger from the use of the tank, and that he could not see how the town authorities could object. I told him that I would buy the tank with the understanding that if I could not get permission from the town authorities I could not and would not accept the tank. (37) The agent replied that his factory was greatly overrun with orders, and that it would be impossible to ship the tank before 1 February, 1910, and that in the meantime I would have ample time and opportunity to see the town authorities and arrange to place the tank, and that if I could not do so, then I could countermand the order *31 and need not take the tank. All of this conversation and every word of it was prior to my signing the contract, though after signing the same we had general talk, but as to what was stated by either of us in the general talk, after signing the contract, I cannot and do not swear to. The agent left. Before the first day of January, 1910, the tank, which he had told me would not be shipped or could not be shipped until the first of February, 1910, arrived. I had not then seen the town authorities, not having had the opportunity to, and not expecting the tank before the time promised by the agent. I took the tank out of the warehouse to save storage charges and pending permission to plant the same by the town authorities. I immediately went to the street commissioner of the town of Littleton, who is the proper authority to give permission in such cases, and he positively refused to permit me to bury the tank in the street. I then asked my landlord if I might bury the tank under his building, and he refused me permission to do so. (I then wrote the Bowser Company that they had shipped the tank before the time agreed by their agent, and that I could not, after having tried, get permission from the town authorities nor from my landlord to place the tank where I could use it, and it was therefore valueless to me.) I went at once and shipped the tank back to the Bowser Company, prepaying freight, and have never been notified by the railroad that the shipment was refused." On objection by plaintiff, this statement was excluded, and in this ruling we think there was error.
The general principle insisted and relied upon by plaintiff is undoubted, that oral evidence will not be received to contradict or vary a written contract. In Ray v. Blackwell,
While this position is unquestioned, it is also fully understood that although a written instrument purporting to be a definite contract has been signed and delivered, it may be shown by parol evidence that such delivery was on condition that the same was not to be operative as a contract until the happening of some contingent event, and this on the idea, not that a written contract could be contradicted or varied by parol, but that until the specified event occurred the instrument did not become a binding agreement between the parties. It never in fact became their contract. The principle has been applied with us in several well-considered decisions, as in Pratt v. Chaffin, 136; N.C. 350;Kelly v. Oliver,
There is error, and defendant is entitled to have the cause tried before another jury.
New trial.
Cited: Jeffords v. Waterworks Co.,
(40)