Beach v. . Raritan Delaware Bay R.R. Co.

37 N.Y. 457, 5 Trans. App. 113
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 37 N.Y. 457 (Beach v. . Raritan Delaware Bay R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beach v. . Raritan Delaware Bay R.R. Co., 37 N.Y. 457, 5 Trans. App. 113 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

The Defendants, by objections to evidence, and by request for instructions- fo- the jury, insisted that the telegram sent by the Plaintiffs at Catskill, on Monday, the 19th .of March, 1860, to Mellen (the lessee of. the. barge) in blew York, is to be: taken as the only legal evidence of the contract for the barge! made with the Plaintiffs,, and that therefore all proof -of -the .oral negotiations or agreement made by Mellen -with the Plaintiffs .at Catskill, on the Saturday -previous—March-17th—was inadmissible, and should be disregarded-. .

This claim is important, because if the use in which Mellen-was, permitted-by the terms, of the letting to-employ.--the-barge was limited to an employment, thereof in the slip as a receiving-or-storing barge, it.was so limited by the oral treaty of-Saturday,: the telegram being entirely silent on. that ■ subject j and-importing, if anything in relation to the use is to be .inferred from -it, that Mellen was at liberty to.use her for any-proper purpose for which vessels of that description are-usually employed.

The rule of law invoked by the Appellants is, -that where the contract of the parties is reduced to writing,-all'prior .-and . contemporaneous oral -negotiations or agreements- are merged, and. oral testimony is not admissible to either contradict, enlarge, or,if free from ambiguity, explain.it.

To this rule both parties assent. • Whether it is applicable to the present case, and operates to exclude the oral testimony, is the question in contest. - -

*118 When and to what extent dispatches sent by parties to each other by telegraph are to be treated as written contracts, or written evidence of their contracts, must depend upon the circumstances in which they are sent, and the intent and object for which they are transmitted and received.

Treating them, most favorably to the view urged by the Appellants, they can have no higher or more conclusive effect than a letter sent by mail, in the same terms, would have.

The first question then is, was this telegram, according to the intent and understanding of the parties at the time when it was sent and received, the expression of the contract of the Plaintiffs?

This question is always an open one in’ regard to communications between parties, whether oral or written. If there is doubt upon that question, it may properly be left to the jury, and it was left to them in the present case.

For the determination of that question, it is competent to show the circumstances under which, and the purposes for which, it was sent, though it may not be competent to show, by paroi, that in regard to its unambiguous provisions, the parties did not intend to contract according to its tenor.

And it is certainly competent to show that it was sent for the mere purpose of fixing one of the details of a proposed agreement, upon which the minds of the parties had not before concurred.

For example, a telegram is sent in these terms: “Ton may have the horse for $25.”

It seems to be a provision of the rule referred to, that because such a dispatch, or such a communication by letter may, if unexplained, import a sale of the horse for $25, the owner may not show that the parties had previously met at a remote place and negotiated touching a hiring of the horse for six months, to be used as a coach-horse, and had parted with an understanding that a dispatch stating the price required should be sent to him.

Or suppose an oral application were made for the use of a horse, for four months, in light work before a pleasure-wagon, and the parties failed to agree upon the period or price of the service, but *119 separated with an understanding that the mind of the owner upon these two particulars shall be communicated either in writing or by telegram. Thereafter a dispatch or writing is sent in these terms : “ We consent that you have the horse for three months for $30.”

These examples are probably no more illustrative of the subject than the case before us, as claimed by the Respondents; but I apprehend that in neither of them is it doubtful that the owner may show that the letter or dispatch was not sent or received as an expression of the whole contract, and to that end may prove that it was sent in answer to a previous either written or oral communication made to him, which should be read or taken with such reply in order that the whole contract may appear.

It would be a strange inconsistency if, where an entire negotiation is conducted by letter, the proposition of the one party may be read to determine the meaning of the acceptance by the other; but if such proposition be oral, and a written reply be, for convenience, asked, the reply must be taken to bind the writer, "without any reference to the proposition, or any aid therefrom, in particulars where the reply is silent—or, in other words, if the reply closed the door to inquiry, provided, if construed alone, it would be capable of receiving a legal signification.

Hr. Greenleaf, in defining that written evidence of a contract (vol. 1, § 275) to which the rule before mentioned is applicable, states it is “ not everything which is in writing, but that only which is of a documentary and more solemn nature, containing the terms of a contract between the parties, and designed to be the repository and evidence of their final intenticmsP

In Jeffery v. Walton (1 Stark. R. 267), where a written memorandum stated the period of the hiring of a horse, and the compensation, Lord Ellenborough said: “ The written agreement merely regulates the time of hiring, and the rate of payment, and I shall not allow any evidence to be given in contradiction of these terms; but I am of opinion that it is competent .for the Plaintiff to give in evidence suppletory matter, as part of the agreement.”

And in Potter v. Hopkins (25 Wend. 417), where the writing *120 did not on its face purport to be a complete agreement, it was held, that though binding so far as was expressed in terms, paroi evidence was competent to show the whole contract.

The distinct ground upon which I place my opinion is, that where a proposition on one side is submitted, whether verbal or written, calling for an answer based on such proposal, the answer, though in writing, need not necessarily recite all the terms and conditions embodied in the proposal.

It is to be read in connection with the proposal to which it is a reply, and the whole together constitutes the contract between the parties.

Such -written reply is no doubt conclusive, so far as the terms are expressed, but no further.

In such case the reply is neither made or received, nor understood to be, the expression of the whole contract.

This is in entire harmony with the rule as stated by Denio, J., in Renard v. Sampson (12 N. Y. 566).

For more full illustration let me suggest further examples— thus:

On the 31st of August, in an oral negotiation, A.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.Y. 457, 5 Trans. App. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beach-v-raritan-delaware-bay-rr-co-ny-1868.