Citation Numbers: 10 Ala. 548
Judges: Ormond
Filed Date: 6/15/1846
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
We are strongly inclined to think, if indeed we might not say entirely satisfied, that upon the merits, this case is with the plaintiff in error, upon the proof, and the necessary inferences and presumptions arising from the admitted facts of the case.
Here was a large sale of real and personal property, at which a considerable crowd of persons were assembled to purchase. The terms of the sale were posted up in a conspicuous place, from which it appeard that all purchases under $5 were to be paid in cash, and a credit on sales above that amount. Nothing was said as to the kind of money
The only explication of these facts, as connected .with the relief sought, is, that ,the trustees meditated a fraud, and intended, to hold out inducements to the persons present to buy, which the written terms of the sale did not justify, and this is the effect of the allegations of the bill.
We shall not consider the propriety of the rejection, by the chancellor, of the testimony of Hair and Bliss, because, independent of their evidence, the result of all the testimony supports the answers. Although there is some diversity between the witnesses of the respective parties, there is not a greater discrepancy than is usually found in such cases.
The auctioneer certainly knew what he was authorized to "say, and what he djd in fact say. He says, that Hair did not request or authorize him to make any statement, but whilst the sale was progressing, stopped him, called the attention of the persons present,' and remarked to them, “that he had no doubt but that Tombigby rail road money would be taken in payment for property then selling, if presented in time, as it was selling to pay a debt due the Tombigbee bank.” Hair then told him to proceed with the sale. He adds, I then proclaimed, that Tombigbee money would be taken, and now was the time to get bargains, &c. Now in all this, it would seem, no one should have been deceived. The auctioneer did not intend the commission of a fraud, nor is it so charged, or that he had combined with the trustees for that purpose.
Among the great number of witnesses examined, as might have been expected, when witnesses undertake to detail declarations of others, a considerable discrepancy is found. Seven swear positively, that Hair agreed unequivocally, to receive in payment the rail -road notes, whilst five others say that he made no positive promise, but stated it as probable, and added that he should require notes for specie, or good money. It is worthy of remark, that three of these were purchasers of property at the sale, who executed their notes for money, and have paid, or expect to pay them in sound funds. Others heard no declaration made by Hair, and some speak of the general understanding of the crowd. Upon the entire testimony, conceding that all the witnesses are equally entitled to credit, we think the complainant has failed to establish the case made by the bill. There are two considerations growing out of the facts, strongly corroborative of this view.
It is evident that Hair designed to enhance the price of the property by the statement which he made, and there can be as little doubt, that with sanguine persons it had that effect. But if he had made a positive agreement to receive the rail road paper, its effect on the sale would have been unequivocal. Yet we find the witnesses differing about its effect; some estimating it at fifty per cent., some at twenty-five per cent., some merely saying it had the effect of enhancing the
The other consideration is thé execution of the notes in the usual mode, with a deed of trust to secure their prompt payment, some time after the sale, without objection, or explanation, that they were not to be paid in money, though on their face they called for it. This is a proceeding so unusual in the ordinary transactions of mankind, that it requires to be explained. The least that can be said of it is, that it strongly fortifies the proof of the plaintiff in error.
Passing from this to the law of the case, we think it equally conclusive against the relief sought. Where parties enter into a contract, and reduce its stipulations to writing, the written memorial of the contract, is the sole expositor of its terms, which cannot be varied by parol testimony, unless it be clearly made to appear, that by mistake, it does not speak the true intent of the parties, or unless the party has been induced to enter into it, by the fraudulent representations of the other. Paysant v. Ware & Barringer, 1 Ala. 164, where this question was fully discussed, and the authorities cited at length.
It is not pretended that there was any mistake in the execution of the notes for the purchase money, or in the deed of trust securing its payment, and the only ground insisted on, is, that the contract is tainted with fraud, because, as alledg-ed, Hair, the trustee, and the auctioneer in his presence, and hearing, proclaimed at the sale of the property, that the notes of the Tombigbee rail road company, would be received in payment. Why was not this promise inserted in the written contract, which the parties some weeks afterwards executed, as the evidence of its stipulations ?
The bill is very full in charging the fraudulent representations at the sale, and that they were the inducements to the purchase, but there is no satisfactory explanation given, of the motives, or inducements, which led to the execution of
Now it is most apparent, there is no fraud charged in the consummation of this contract. The well established rule is, that all previous parol stipulations, are merged in the written contract; the exceptions to the rule is, where the contract has been entered into by surprise, or mistake, or has been obtained by fraud. Where the fraud consists in the false representation of the value, quantity, quality, or title, of the property sold, if it be such a case, that the vendee may safely rely on the representations of the vendor, for information, he may be excused for not insisting on their insertion in the written evidence of the contract; because the contract is full and complete without such insertion. Such was the case of Boyce v. Grundy, 3 Peters, 219, where the contract was avoided because of the want of title, and of false representation in regard to the overflow of the land, by the Mississippi river. The court say, 11 there is no attempt to vary the written agreement; the relief is sought upon the ground, that by false suggestions, and immoral concealment, the party seeking relief, was entrapped into an agreement, in which he would not otherwise have involved himself. This is not denying that the agreement in the record was the agreement entered into, but insisting that it was vitiated by fraud,” &c.
But where, as in this case, the representations relied on to avoid the contract, do not relate to the article sold, but to the medium of payment, a plain and direct offer is made, to vary the terms of the written contract by parol evidence. ' It may perhaps well be doubted, whether this can be done in any possible state of the case, but certainly it should at least appear,
The utmost effect which can be ascribed to the allegations of the bill is, that when the party executed the notes, and trust deed, he expected to be permitted to discharge the notes in the rail road company paper, in consequence of the representations made at the sale. There was nothing done, or said, by the plaintiffs in error at the time, to warrant such an expectation, or belief, and any promises, or declarations, they might have previously made, must be understood as merged in the contract, when reduced to writing and signed. To permit him now to overturn a solemn promise for the payment of money, by proof of a previous promise to receive payment in worthless paper, would be to destroy the rule of evidence, that a written promise cannot be varied by parol — it would in its consequences, put an end to the sanctity of all written contracts.
This rule may possibly operate harshly in particular cases, but that its general results axe most beneficial cannot be doubted. Its wisdom is shown in this particular case. It is not asserted that any inducement was held out to the defendant in error, which were not offered to all others in attendance at the sale, and yet we find, that several of those who purchased at the sale, understood that they were to execute their notes for the payment of money, and that it was a mere
The decree of the chancellor must be reversed, and a decree be here rendered dismissing the bill.