45 Barb. 171 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1865
It is objected that the contract now in question having been made by Robert F. Silliman, alone, with the defendants, a joint, action can not be maintained by the plaintiffs.
The Code, section 111, provides that all actions shall be brought in the name of the real party in interest. For business convenience the title to.the property sold to the defendants was in the name of one. of the plaintiffs. The sale,
The position taken, that the hill of sale was in the nature of a deed, and that no one hut a party to the instrument can maintain the action, is likewise untenable. As before remarked, the action is not on the bill of sale, but upon a contract distinct from it, and which is dependent upon evidence outside of the bill of sale. I think, therefore, that the action was properly brought in the name of the plaintiffs.
It is further insisted that the contract of sale, being consummated by a writing, could not be varied by parol. And' as the bill of sale contained no stipulation that the defendants should pay the expenses incurred on the trip, nor any stipulation that the defendants should receive the freights earned ujaon that .trip, the plaintiff should not have been allowed to prove that the defendants agreed to pay the expenses. of the trip, nor that the defendants puchased the freights as well as the boat.
The decision of this question must depend upon the fact whether the bill of sale can be regarded as containing the whole of the contract. Several authorities are cited by the defendants to sustain the position contended for, but I think they are clearly distinguishable from the present case.
In Mumford v. McPherson, (1 John. 414,) the action was for a breach of warranty in the sale of a ship. There was a bill of sale of the property, and it was held that no action would lie on a parol warranty made at the time of the sale; where no fraud was alleged. The warranty here was connected with the sale itself, and a part of it. It related to the title to the property, and as that was reduced to writing, the instrument extinguished every thing resting in parol.
In Van Ostrand v. Reed, (1 Wend. 424,) the action was for a breach of contract in the sale of a right for constructing and vending a thrashing machine, and the same general principle is laid down as in the last two cases above cited.
In Filkins v. Whyland, (24 N. Y. Rep. 338,) a bill and receipt given on the sale of a horse was held to be a mere receipt, and not a contract or bill of sale, so as to exclude paroh evidence of a warranty of soundness of the horse by the vendor. The learned Judge says. “I am not inclined to dispute the proposition, that where there is a formal contract of sale, or a bill of sale, as it is sometimes called, the instrument by its own force vending the property and affecting a transfer of the title, which is executed by one party and accepted by the other, is to be treated as the contract of sale.” There is no doubt of the correctness of the' doctrine here laid down; but it will be readily seen that neither this nor any of the other cases cited is an authority for holding that where title to personal property is transferred by a bill of sale, there may not be an independent verbal agreement in regard to the disposition of the property antecedent to its actual delivery. The bill of sale, it is true, transfers the title, and, so far as relates to the title, the written instrument merges all preceding negotiations, and parol evidence can not be introduced
In all the cases cited, the question involved related to the title to the property. It is not so in the case at bar; but the subject of controversy is in regard to an outside arrangement which does not affect the title to the property.
The distinction, it seems to me," is very apparent. The boat was sold for a price agreed upon, and a bill of sale stating the consideration, was executed and delivered, which transferred the title. At the time of the sale the boat was not in the immediate possession of the owner so as to be susceptible of actual delivery, btit engaged in transporting merchandise on the canal. It was performing a contract which was but partially executed, and could not be delivered until its arrival at the termination of the route. The plaintiffs had paid, or were bound to pay, the expenses of the trip, and had received no returns, and the parties agree separately and apart from the contract of sale, in reference to the trip and its expenses, that they will transfer to the defendants all the earnings upon payment of the expenses actually incurred by them.
I think that such an agreement has nothing to do with the transfer of the title to the boat, or the sale of it. It only relates to the earnings. It could not well have been placed in the bill of sale, and would have been entirely inappropriate in such an instrument. It was an independent, separate and distinct agreement outside of " the sale, and disconnected from it, and stands by itself a separate contract as to the earnings.
Suppose a man by a written contract disposes of his real estate and executes a deed, would not a verbal contract with the grantor for the use of the premises be valid and effectual ? Clearly it would.
If the defendants are correct in the position that the bill of sale covers the whole contract, then there would be no
In Whitbeck v. Waine, (16 N. Y. Rep. 532,) it was held that an executory agreement, verbal or written, for the performance of distinct and separable provisions, is not merged or superseded by a subsequent written contract in execution of only a part of such provisions, without other evidence of an intent that it should be extinguished. The action was brought to recover money alleged to have been overpaid by the plaintiff upon the purchase of a farm from the defendant; a deed of the premises had been executed, and the objection was taken that the contract was merged in and extinguished by the deed. Denio, J. who delivered the opinion of the court, held that the general rule of evidence that a written contract executed between parties supersedes all prior negotiations and agreements upon the same subject, is not apjfiicable where the last contract covers only a part of the subjects embraced in a prior one.
Applying the principle here enunciated to the case at bar, how does it stand? The parties made a contract for the sale of the boat, and also in reference to the trip upon which it was then engaged. The bill of sale was executed to pass the title, covering only a portion of the contract, which left the remaining part to be enforced and executed according to law. (See also Renard v. Sampson, 12 N. Y. Rep. 561; Bogart v. Burkhalter, 1 Denio, 125.)
The bill of sale was one thing, and. the contract in regard to the affreightment quite a different matter. The writing did not supersede the agreement as to the trip of the boat at the time of the sale, and the evidence given was clearly admissible.
There is no exception to the finding of the referee that the defendants received the freights accruing from the trip ; and if there had been, I am inclined to think that it was of no consequence, so long as they were entitled to them whether
As. there was no error on the trial, the judgment entered on the referee’s report must he affirmed.
Hogeboom, Miller and Ingalls, Justices.]