Armour Fertilizer Works v. Hyman

113 S.E. 330, 120 S.C. 375, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 25, 1922
Docket10966
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 S.E. 330 (Armour Fertilizer Works v. Hyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armour Fertilizer Works v. Hyman, 113 S.E. 330, 120 S.C. 375, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 150 (S.C. 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

Action for balance of $2,964.53, and interest and attorney’s fees, alleged to be due the plaintiff by the defendant on a promissory note given by the defendant to Tuscarora Fertilizer Company on account of the purchase of fertilizers in the year 1917, and subsequently transferred and assigned to the plaintiff for value. The defendant by his answer admitted the execution of the note and the unpaid balance thereof, and set up a counterclaim thereto for the *377 sum of $1,595.77, due to him on account of discount, or commissions, on said fertilizers, by virtue of an alleged agreement made with the said Tuscarora Fertilizer Company, and averred his readiness and willingness to pay any balance due on said note after being allowed credit for such discounts and commissions. He later made his formal offer, as provided by law, to allow judgment to be taken against him for the balance $1,368.76, with interest and costs. The plaintiff by its reply denied all the allegations of the defendant’s counterclaim. The Circuit Judge, Hon. H. F. Rice, directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed. From judgment on verdict, defendant appeals.

The exceptions raise one question, the determination of which, we think, is practically decisive of the appeal: Was the trial Judge in error in refusing to permit defendant to establish the counterclaim set up in his answer by parol testimony ?

It is stated in the record that the issues “made by the pleadings were the ownership of the note and the defendant’s counterclaim.” Appellant’s counsel in his printed argument states that “the defendant in his answer admitted the note and also the contract.” It is therefore not disputed that the note sued upon ■ was, as alleged in the complaint, one of a series of notes given by the defendant, A. Hyman, pursuant to the provisions of a written contract entered into December 19, 1916, with the Tuscarora Fertilizer Company, fixing the price, grade of fertilizer, and the time at which promissory notes were to be given by Hyman for all goods taken by him under the contract .and not paid for before the execution of the notes. By the terms of the contract it was expressly provided that the Tuscarora Fertilizer Company was to pay Hyman “as a commission and as full compensation for all services, and for storage, cartage, collecting, insuring, and for (his) guaranty of *378 payment on time sales and for all other expenses,” a sum equal to the amount received “from the sale of said goods in excess of the prices named in this contract.” Other stipulations made by the fertilizer company in the written contract were (section 20) that “no agreement not expressed in this contract shall be binding upon us, and it is hereby certified by you that there is no agreement, verbal or otherwise, other than herein specified,” and (section 21) that “all settlement prices, given by us to yo.u hereunder, and terms and conditions set forth herein, shall be absolutely final unless mutually changed by supplementary agreement in writing, agreed to by you, and executed by one' of our division managers.’’ Among the stipulations to which the defendant Hyman agreed is the following:

“In consideration of the commission which I am to receive-as named and set out in said contract, I agree to all the terms, obligations, and conditions therein set forth.”

In the body of the note was the following clause:

“For value received, in accordance with a contract between the payee and maker of this note on consignment of fertilizer.”

The counterclaim alleged, in substance, that there was an independent verbal agreement between the Tuscarora Fertilizer Company and the defendant, Hyman, entered into prior to or at the time of the execution of the written contract referred to in the complaint, whereby the fertilizer ■company agreed to allow said defendant a certain discount or commission per ton on all fertilizers shipped to the defendant, and that it was by reason of said agreement to allow a discount or commission upon the prices named in the contract, and upon no other consideration whatsoever, that he accepted and entered into the said written contract.

Appellant contends that the admission of the parol testimony offered to support defendant’s counterclaim in the case at bar would not have infringed *379 the general rule; that parol evidence is inadmissible to contradict or vary the terms of a valid written instrument, in that the testimony “was offered, not for the purpose of impairing, altering, or in any way otherwise interfering with the written contract upon which the plaintiff based its claim, but solely for the purpose of showing that, by reason of the breach by the plaintiff of another distinct and independent agreement, the plaintiff had become liable to pay the defendant the damages alleged in the answer.” Chemical Co. v. Moore, 61 S. C. 166, 39 S. E. 346. That the purport of the verbal agreement upon which the counterclaim was based, whereby the fertilizer company was alleged to have agreed to allow the defendant a certain discount or commission per ton upon the fertilizer consigned under the written contract was directly to vary, contradict, and impair the terms of the written contract, fixing the price of fertilizers, prescribing the commission of defendant, certifying that there was no other agreement, verbal or otherwise, and stipulating that the settlement prices given thereunder should be final unless changed by supplemental agreement in writing, would seem too clear to admit the discussion. Lewis v. Wilson, 108 S. C. 48, 93 S. E. 242; Arthur v. Brown, 91 S. C. 316, 74 S. E. 652; Cline v. Farmers’ Oil Mill, 83 S. C. 204, 65 S. E. 272; Asbill Motor Co. v. Chaplin (S. C.) 112 S. E. 921, decided at this term. The note sued upon was an outgrowth of the written contract, and by its express terms was referable to the contract. The exceptions (1, 2, and 7) assigning error in the exclusion of the parol testimony offered to establish the counterclaim are overruled.

If the testimony directed to the proof of the alleged counterclaim was properly excluded, it follows that the testimony offered by defendant as to the usages of the fertilizer trade, with particular reference to the payment of commissions and discounts on fertilizers sold *380 (exceptions 3 and 4), was inadmissible. The only possible relevancy of such testimony would have been to support the allegations of the counterclaim. If the counterclaim could not be established by the direct testimony of Hyman as to the alleged verbal agreement, it is quite clear that it could not be supported by testimony of corroborative import as to the usages of the trade. See, generally, Fairly v. Wappoo Mills, 44 S. C. 242, 22 S. E. 108, 29 L. R. A. 215; Coates v. Early, 46 S. C. 220, 24 S. E. 305; Kentucky Wagon Mfg. Co. v. People’s Supply Co., 77 S. C. 92, 57 S. E. 676, 122 Am. St. Rep. 540; Forbes v. Pearson, 87 S. C. 67, 68 S. E. 964; Bailey v. Savannah Guano Co., 106 S. C. 50, 90 S. E. 317.

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Related

Wilson v. Landstrom
315 S.E.2d 130 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1984)
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24 S.E.2d 74 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1943)
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142 S.E. 593 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1928)
Marston v. Rivers
136 S.E. 222 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)
J.B. Colt Company v. Britt
123 S.E. 845 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.E. 330, 120 S.C. 375, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armour-fertilizer-works-v-hyman-sc-1922.