121 So. 814 | Miss. | 1929
At the time of the making of the contract between the Brenard Manufacturing Company and the appellee, the notes were executed by the appellee to this company, and appear to have been originally attached to the contract and perforated for the purpose of detachment. This contract, among other things provides: "Upon your approval of this order and agency agreement deliver to me at your earliest convenience F.O.B. factory or distributing point, the articles mentioned below which I purchase on the terms and conditions herein set forth and no others, all of which I have read and found complete and satisfactory and in payment for which I herewith hand *803 you my notes aggregating five hundred sixty-five dollars which you are to cancel and return to me if this sole and complete agreement is not approved by you."
The order then provided for certain phonographs, with radio attachment, giving the number required, name and style, and retail price thereof to the appellee; the total retail price being eight hundred forty-three dollars, and the net price thereof five hundred sixty-five dollars, which included services and privileges stated therein. The contract then provided for the establishing of an agency in the appellee for a period of three years. It was agreed also that the appellee would reorder and replace such machines as fast as they were sold out by him, and that the Brenard Manufacturing Company would accept his customers' notes or installment paper, when properly indorsed to it, applying sixty per cent of each cash payment against such reorder, and mailing the remaining forty per cent to the appellee; that if the appellee's sales, under this agreement, did not amount to five hundred sixty-five dollars, the Brenard Manufacturing Company would either pay the difference in cash to appellee, or repurchase the goods purchased thereunder — if returned in good order — from him, and that the company would send to appellee a bond in the sum of five hundred sixty-five dollars to protect him in the conditions of the contract; that to make such agreement binding regarding the sale of such machines, appellee would agree to furnish within thirty days from the date of contract, fifty names and addresses of persons who might be interested in the purchase of phonographs of such line, with whom the Brenard Manufacturing Company was to take up correspondence, itself, and the appellee each sixty days was to furnish from ten to twenty-five additional names and addresses of persons with whom the Brenard Manufacturing Company was to take up correspondence in the appellee's name in assisting *804 him to establish the agency. The contract then provided: "In consideration of tying up territory and to protect you in your special methods and plans and in your expenditures this order cannot be countermanded or cancelled. No verbal or other agreement not appearing herein shall be binding upon you" (meaning the Brenard Manufacturing Company). This contract was signed as follows: "Stanley's Music Book Store, by E.A. Stanley. (Authorized Buyer)," and was mailed to the Brenard Manufacturing Company at its address, Iowa City, Iowa. Accompanying this contract was a form signed by the agent who procured the contract, representing that no verbal representations had been made not contained in the contract; and, by its terms, this contract was to become effective by the approval and acceptance of the Brenard Manufacturing Company.
The proof on the issue as to whether or not the appellant was abona-fide purchaser for value, we think, is sufficient to establish conclusively that he was a bona-fide purchaser for value, and that there was no evidence from which the court or jury could rightfully find that he was not such; but, independent of this provision of law, if the appellant should be treated as a purchaser with notice of the existence of the contract and all of its terms, still the finding should have been for the appellant.
The appellant requested a peremptory instruction, which was refused.
It will be noted from the provisions of the contract set forth above that the appellee stated that no representations had been made which were binding on the Brenard Manufacturing Company not written in the contract, and also that he ordered the goods upon the terms contained in the written contract, and no others. We think, therefore, if the appellant, Stevens, was charged with all notice of the terms of the contract, he would still be entitled to recover, because it would not be competent to vary the terms of a written contract by *805 parol evidence, or conversations with the agent. Under the proof, the agent's powers were limited to soliciting contracts which were transmitted to the Brenard Manufacturing Company for approval and acceptance; and the contract forwarded, signed by the appellee, represented to the company that no such representations had been made, likewise the agent in mailing and transmitting the contract to his principals stated that no representations had been made that were not contained in the contract.
In J.B. Colt Co. v. Odom,
In the case of Brenard Manufacturing Co. v. Sumrall,
There is no dispute as to the amount of the attorney's fees.
We therefore find that the court below erred in not granting the peremptory instruction requested by the appellant, and the judgment of the court below will be reversed, and judgment rendered here for the appellant.
Reversed and rendered. *807