117 Ga. 1001 | Ga. | 1903
The Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company applied to the judge of the superior court for an injunction to restrain Mrs. Harris and one Bray, alleged to be her agent, from interfering with the plaintiff in the erection of a telephone and telegraph line across the-lands of the defendant Mrs Harris. The de
“Witness: J. H. Cheney.”
Mrs. Harris offered evidence tending to show that the agent of the plaintiff, who induced her to sign the contract, represented to her that the telephone and telegraph line would be erected along or near to a public road which traverses her land, and that she signed the contract believing this representation to be true, and with the understanding that the line would be so constructed. The plaintiff objected to the introduction of this evidence, on the ground that it sought to vary by parol the terms of the written contract between the parties. The overruling of this objection constitutes one of the plaintiff’s assignments of error. We think this objection was well taken and should have been sustained. The familiar rule, that ambiguities in written contracts may be explained by parol evidence, -has no application to the present case. The written contract signed by Mrs. Harris was not ambiguous. The mere
Judgment reversed.