delivered the opinion of the eourt.
The appellant, the Texas Company, Incorporated, complains of a decree overruling its demurrer to the bill filed against it by Frederick Northup, appellee; cancelling a lease from Northup to the company, dated March 12, 1927, and perpetuating an injunction against the appellant restraining it from occupying or interfering with the premises described in the lease—certain wharf property at Sharps, Virginia, in the county of Richmond—'but permitting the company to remove its equipment from thе premises within sixty days.
This is a general statement of the facts upon which the appellee relies to support the decree
It became necessary on March 1,1927, to enter into a new sales agreement. Thereupon a new sales agreement was presented to Northup for his signature at the same time with a new lease of the wharf property to the
It seems, therefore, quite apparent, without the necessity of referring to the parol evidence, and solely from a reading of these three nominally separate contracts, that they are parts of a single agreement for the purchase and distribution by Northup of Texas Company’s products at Sharps, Virginia—a joint enterprise.
The sales contract is for one year and is thereafter subject to cancellation by either party upon thirty days’
He shows that he realized that his supply of gasoline and oils would soon be exhausted, and that if he failed to receive his anticipated supply at the end of the month his business would suffer greatly. Before signing the lease, however, and because of this threatened dеstruction of his business, he went to the city of Norfolk, Virginia, and consulted the company’s district sales manager, Mr. Thompson, who assured him that it was apparent that the true consideration for the lease was the sales agreement, and that it would be inconsistent to assume that the Texas Company would desire to continue to hold the wharf property after the sales agreement had been terminated. And he shows that it was then and there verbally agreed that Northup was to have the sole distribution of the Texas Compаny’s products in the territory, and he sought to show that he should also have the right to terminate the lease when the sales agreement was terminated. He shows that he signed the lease under this condition and upon this
The company, on July 30, 1928, gave notice to Northup cancelling the sales contract and the license, but made no reference then to the lease. Whereupon Northup sent the company notice cancelling the lease and received in reply from the attorney of the company a letter denying his right to do so, the reason therefor being thus expressed: “The lease itself constitutes a complete agreement based on a valid consideration, and is not subject to cancellation by reason of the tеrmination of an entirely separate and distinct contract.”
Tbe question presented for determination here is whether the Texas Company has the right to continue to occupy the premises owned by Northup- at Sharps wharf as his lessee for the unexpired term of the lease, notwithstanding the fact that it has cancelled the contemporaneous sales agreement and the license contract. The trial court, as has been stated, held that the company had no such right and cancelled the lease.
The bill of the appellee alleges fraud in the procurement of the lease and failure of consideration therefor, and that the company is seeking to obtain an unconscionable advantage which the court of equity should restrain. The bill, among other things, alleges: “That in terminating the contract NFK-X-350, dated March 1, 1927, the Texas Company has violated its verbal agreement with your complainant by which he was to have exclusive distribution of Texas products, to-wit, in all of the Northern Neck of Virginia frоm the Rappahannock river to the Potomac river and running from
It is contended for the company that the lease dated. March 12, 1927, which the appellee claims the right to have cancelled by the court on the ground of fraud, is a complete contract on its face, and that the charge of fraud in the bill is not sufficient to permit the introduction of parol testimony set out in the bill to vary the terms of the contract, and that therefore the demurrer of the petitioner should have been sustained; that the answer of the petitioner is a complete and full denial of the allegations of the bill, and that upon the submission of the cause on the bill, demurrer, answer, and affidavits, the injunction should have been dissolved and the bill dismissed.
The initial as well as the decisive question in the case then is, whether or not the lease for five years is to be construed as a separate and complete contract which cannot be affected by parol testimony, and whether the rights of the parties thereunder solely depend upon the construction of its precise language without any consideration either of the parol testimony showing the circumstances under which it was executed or of the other contemporaneous written contracts, i. e., the sales contract and the license agreement executed at the same time.
Only because of the earnestness and insistence of counsel do we deem it appropriate to make these citations which clearly demonstrate the sound rules which determine this question against the company.
In 6 Ruling Case Law, section 240, page 850, we-find this comprehensive and clear statement: “When
One general rule relied upon for the appellant company is that parol evidence is not admissible to connect writings and that “in general the memorandum or agreement must contain either in itself or by clear reference all the terms of a complete contract, аnd that if any essential term is absent it is insufficient and cannot be cured by parol evidence,” 15th English Ruling Cases, 358, note-, 26th Ruling Case Law, section 318, page 680.
There is, however, a qualification of this rule which is well settled, namely, that such reference in one paper to another need not be explicit, but that it is sufficient if it is fairly traceable.
In Beckwith v. Talbot,
In White v. Breen,
There is quite a collection of cases and a logical discussion of this question in Searles v. Gonzalez, 191 Calif. 426,
The case of Nickerson v. Weld,
In the case of Ford v. Norton, (1927), 32 N. M. 518,
It seems to us then manifest that for the purpose of determining the rights of the parties under this lease and the relief to be accorded under the pleadings and proofs in this case, all three documents, the sales contract, the license agreement and the lease, must be considered together as the written evidence of an entire contract for the promotion of the common purpose, that is, the sale and distribution by Northup of the products of the Texas Company, for mutual profit and advantage. The various provisions of these contracts should not be so construed as to leave appellant company in possession of the leased property, the wharf, at a nominal rent after ifc has exercised its rights to terminate the sales and the license agreement. What then is the relief to which the appellee is entitled?
That the substantial failure of consideration for a contract may justify its rescission under certain circumstances can hardly be doubted, Kessler v. Parelius,
It is said in 4th R. C. L., section 14, page 500, that while mere failure of consideration, partial or total, without fraud or bad faith is not sufficient to justify a court of equity in rescinding an executed contract, it is nevertheless noted “that failure of consideration is, as a rule, not a ground for equitable relief or interference, nevertheless where a person has been induсed to part with a thing of value for little or no consideration, chancery will seize upon the slightest circumstances of oppression, fraud or duress for the purpose of administering justice in the case in hand.” Citing Kronmeyer v. Buck, 258 Ill. 586,
That there will be a total or substantial failure of consideration to the apрellee here, should he be denied relief which he seeks, is manifest.
Jt has frequently been said, and this is not questioned, that an improvident contract, or one based upon inadequate consideration, will not be set aside for these reasons alone, unless, as the rule is generally stated, the improvidence or inadequacy is so great as to furnish of itself convincing evidence of fraud.
Judge Thompson, in Nelson v. Betts,
There are many instances, however, in which such relief has been granted in which the consideration was shown to be so grossly inadequate as to show fraud.
Lord Thurlow said as to this: “An inequality so strong, gross and manifest that it must be impossible to state it to a man of common sense without producing an exclamation at the inequality of it,” is sufficient. Gwynne v. Heaton, 1 Bro. Ch. 1, 9; 28 Rep. 949.
In Wintermute v. Snyder, 3 N. J. Eq., 496, Chancellor Vroom said: “Still there may be such unconseionableness, such palpable and excessive inequality in a bargain as to induce equitable interference.
In Osgood v. Franklin, 2 Johns. Chy. (N. Y.) 24,
Judge Story says that “Such inadequacy should be made out as would (to use an expressive phrase) shock the consсience and amount in itself to conclusive and decisive evidence of fraud.” Story’s Eq. Jur., page 256.
Lord Hardwick in Chesterfield v. Janssen, 2 Ves. 155, 23 Rep. 82, 18 E. R. C. 289, states the test to be: “Such (bargains) as no man in his sense and not under delusion would make on the one hand, and as no honest and fair man would accept on the other.” 9 C. J. 1175.
The conclusion here is irresistible for equity considers substance rather than shadow; reality rather than form.
If the company, in originally presenting and insisting upon the execution of the lease, then intended it to be construed as separate and severable without any reference to the circumstances and inducements under which it was executed, and if the purpose of so drawing the lease was to enable it to cancel the sales and license contract without cancelling the lease, and so to retain the wharf property owned by the appellee for the nominal rent of $25.00 a year while the appellee owner was at the same time obliged to pay the taxes upon the property and otherwise to maintain it, then this, under the circumstances, was duress and actual fraud in the procurement of the lease, which justifies
Affirmed.
