66 Miss. 360 | Miss. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
The court did not err in permitting the defendant Greenewald to testify that the contract made between the firm and the agent of the plaintiff was for the purchase of a soda fountain then represented by the agent to be in stock and capable of immediate shipment. The testimony did not tend to contradict the written agreement but to apply it to its subject-matter. There is nothing in the agreement or order of shipment indicating that the plaintiff was to manufacture for the defendant a soda fountain, but because he was a manufacturer and known to be such by the defendants, he assumed that the shipment was to be as soon “as possible” after the fountain should have been made by him, and because it was so shipped that the defendants were by their contract bound to accept. The plaintiff thus unconsciously appeals to the same principle from which his objection seeks to preclude the defendants, viz.: that a contract shall be interpreted by the. circumstances and conditions ■under which it was entered into. It is not competent to contradict or vary the written words which the parties have selected as the exponent of their contract, but where the language used is sus
The judgment is affirmed.