Tilley v. Bartow

62 So. 330 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913

WALKER, P. J.

— The judgment entry in this case, after reciting the rendition of a verdict finding in favor of the defendant on his plea of set-off and assessing his damages at the sum of $78.80, shows that the court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant for the sum of $78.80 and the costs of suit. No tenable theory has been suggested, and none has oc curred to us, on which we could be justified in treating the judgment as one adverse to the appellant ( the plaintiff below) and of which he can complain on appeal; the record presenting for review no ruling made in the course of the trial affecting the amount recoverable by him under the evidence adduced. It seems that the judgment as rendered was one which was a subject of objection, not by the party in whose favor it Avas rendered, but by his adversary, who won in the verdict but lost in the judgment entered on it, and that the lack of correspondence betAveen the verdict and the judgment could properly he complained of by the latter, but not by the former.

But, assuming that the appellant can be heard to complain of the Arerdict, though it was not made the basis of a judgment against him, still the complaint *641made against it cannot be sustained. The assumption ■indulged bj the appellant is that the relations and rights of the parties were governed exclusively by the written contract which he offered in evidence. The fault in this assumption is that it ignores the existence of evidence in the case which was introduced without objection and which had a tendency to prove that the dealings between the parties were had under a contract different in material respects from the one disclosed by that writing.

It is not to be doubted that the original agreement evidenced by the writing was subject to be altered or modified by the mutual consent of the parties to it, and that a stipulation in it requiring changes to be made in writing did not stand in the way of the parties ending the written contract by making a new verbal one which contradicted it; neither the old nor the new contract being within the influence of the statute of frauds. —Prestwood v. Eldridge, 119 Ala. 72, 24 South. 729; Security Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Riley, 157 Ala. 553, 47 South. 735; Jones on Evidence, § 442.

The testimony of the defendant was such as to furnish support for a finding that his services for the plaintiff were rendered under a contract entitling him to a salary of $175 a month, whether he wrote any insurance or not; that he rightfully terminated the contract because of the plaintiff’s failure to pay the salary Avhen due; and that the unpaid balance due him as salary was the amount awarded to him by the verdict. We cannot assent to the suggestion made in the argument of the counsel for the appellant that that testimony does not show that the original contract was modified or a new one made, but merely shows the version of the witness as to how the contract was construed after it was entered into. The witness, after stating that he *642complained to the plaintiff: several times that the contract as written did not state the agreement between them, proceeded to detail a conversation he had with the plaintiff in which it was distinctly stated and agreed to that the defendant was to be paid $175 per month as a salary, whether he wrote any business or not. That conversation shows the understanding then reached by the parties to it as to the terms on which one of them was to render service to the other.

We are of opinion that the verdict was supported by evidence submitted without objection for the consideration of the jury, and that it has not been made to appear that the court was in error in refusing to set it aside.

Affirmed.

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