Anderson v. Owens

205 F.2d 940, 14 Alaska 353, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2694
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 29, 1953
Docket13313
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 205 F.2d 940 (Anderson v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Owens, 205 F.2d 940, 14 Alaska 353, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2694 (9th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

POPE, Circuit Judge.

The Owens partners bought a tug from the Anderson partners. This suit was for breach of warranty of the condition of the tug. The dealings leading up to the contract of sale and purchase took, place at Seattle, Washington, although all the parties were residents of Alaska. The senior Anderson and A. E. Owens carried on the negotiations. Anderson had brought the tug to Seattle for repairs. It had been ¡purchased a year previously as a war surplus vessel. He met Owens at Seattle and negotiations followed which are described in the findings of the trial court as follows :

*941 “7. J. C. Anderson stated that the vessel was in fair condition with the exception that the crankshaft pin for No. 5 cylinder was scored and that the forefoot or the stem was damaged from striking a log on the trip to Seattle, but that the vessel did not leak. Anderson further stated that the vessel could be put in first class shape for $5,000.

“8. The defendants offered to sell the vessel to the plaintiffs for $25,000 in its then condition or for $30,000 repaired.

“9. On April 1, 1947, A. E. Owens, on behalf of the plaintiffs, agreed to purchase the vessel for $25,000 and elected to make his own repairs.

‘TO. A written agreement was executed on April 1, 1947, but the agreement did not refer to the condition of the tug.”

By way of conclusions the court found that “The defendants made express warranties in regard to the condition of the vessel T. P. 100”; that the plaintiffs, ap-pellees here, were induced to purchase the vessel in reliance thereon, and that the warranties were breached and the plaintiffs damaged thereby in the sum of $24,478.86.

The evidence shows that after preliminary negotiations between Anderson and Gwens, both parties went to the office of Owens’ attorney at Seattle and an agreement in writing was drawn and executed. With respect to this Owens testified as follows: “Q. Did you eventually make any agreement in regard to the purchase of this boat? A. Later on we did. We made an agreement to purchase the boat for twenty-five thousand dollars; five thous- and dollars cash, and two thousand dollars a month until the balance was paid off. Q. Was that agreement reduced to writing? A. It was.” The agreement so drawn and executed is a complete and formal one. It states the desires of the parties to sell and purchase the boat; that Anderson had not yet received the bill of sale, but that delivery of the appropriate documents is to be made as soon as the bill of sale has been procured. It describes the vessel with particularity; states the purchase price; provides for a down payment of $5000, and subsequent installments of $2000 per month plus interest; it arranges for the execution of a new note constituting the balance of the purchase price to be secured by a mortgage upon the vessel, the note and mortgage to be substituted for a then existing mortgage; it provides for insurance upon the vessel with loss payable provisions for the benefit of the holder of the note and mortgage; for immediate delivery of the boat, and for deposit of the down payment of $5000 in escrow with Owens’ attorneys, the same to be delivered upon receipt of the Government bill of sale. The agreement contains no warranties with respect to the condition of the boat.

Anderson claims that the sale was without warranties; that he sold the boat “as is”; that he left it to Owens to say whether he would buy the boat in its then condition for $25,000, or whether he would pay $30,-000 with an agreement by Anderson to repair it, and that Owens chose to pay the $25,000 and make his own repairs. It was understood by both parties that some repairs were required. The claim of Owens was that in the negotiations which preceded the execution of the written agreement, Anderson made the warranties as to the extent of the required repairs. It is these warranties which the trial court held were breached.

It is obvious that the primary question to be determined is whether the written agreement between the parties constituted an integration of their agreement so that the parol evidence of prior negotiations, upon which the court based its findings of warranties, was immaterial and inadmissible. Appellees say that the appellants are in no position to make any such contention for the reason that the evidence of the negotiations which preceded the execution of the writing came in without objection and hence these matters were before the court and judgment can be based thereon.

It is conceded by both parties that the transaction in question is covered by the law of Washington where the negotiations took place and the agreement was made. While the law of that State upon the point has not always been clear, yet the later decisions of the Supreme Court of Washington hold that the parol evidence rule is not a *942 rule of evidence but one of substantive law, and hence where that rule applies, the terms of a written agreement may not be altered or modified by parol evidence of prior or contemporaneous oral negotiations, whether that evidence be objected to or not. Jackson v. Domschot, 40 Wash.2d 30, 33, 239 P.2d 1058, 1060; 1 Preugschat v. Hedges, Wash. 251 P.2d 166.

We proceed then to inquire whether the parol evidence rule must be applied here, and whether the trial court could properly find that there were express warranties in the sale of the boat. The question is whether in the circumstances, the prior negotiations between the parties were embodied, that is, integrated in the writing. That depends upon the disclosed intent of the parties and is a question for the court.

In the case of Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Nicholas, 2 Wash.2d 128, 97 P.2d 633, at page 635, that court, after a discussion of the decisions of other courts, proceeded to make the following statement of the test of integration: “While this doctrine has been very generally followed, some courts have held that the intent' of the parties controls, and that in determining their intent, the nature of the alleged oral agreement not embodied in the contract, and the matter of whether or not such an agreement would ordinarily have been embodied in the written instrument had the parties in fact made such an agreement, are entitled to great weight. In 3 Williston on Contracts 1834, § 638, is found the following: ‘The test of admissibility is much affected by the inherent probability of parties who contract under the circumstances in question, simultaneously making both the agreement in writing which is before the court, and also the alleged parol agreement;’ * * *. In the case of Thompson [Thomson] & Stacy Co. v. Evans, Coleman & Evans, 100 Wash. 277, 170 P. 578, 580, it was held that a written contract for the sale of grain sacks was not ambiguous or incomplete merely because it did not by its terms designate the place whence the sacks were to come, it being held that parol evidence that the sacks were to be shipped from British Columbia was inadmissible.

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205 F.2d 940, 14 Alaska 353, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-owens-ca9-1953.