Beam Motor Car Co. v. Narer

118 A. 401, 141 Md. 187, 1922 Md. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 A. 401 (Beam Motor Car Co. v. Narer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beam Motor Car Co. v. Narer, 118 A. 401, 141 Md. 187, 1922 Md. LEXIS 96 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment obtained by the ’appellees, who were plaintiff’s below, against the appellant. That company and Allen AM. Beam, Jr., were defendants, lmt., by an instruction of the lower court, a verdict was rendered for Air. Beam. The declaration contains the common counts, and the defendants filed the two general issue pleas. AATilliam Id. Rarer purchased of the Beam Motor Car company a sedan ear for <$5,975, on which he paid $1,000, and was allowed $1,025 for a Ford ear. He also paid $121 on account. of insurance. He was not satisfied with the sedan ear, and, after some negotiations between them, the company agreed to take bade the sedan and sell him an open car. Air. Rarer testified that Air. Beam told him they would not allow him for the Ford car, and ho replied that if that was the case he would not. take any, as he did not want two cars, and Mr. Beam then said that if he (Beam) did not sell the Ford car in two weeks, he would allow him $800 for the Ford car. The agreement to allow him the $800 is not admitted, hut Rarer signed an order for a Premier motor car on May 31, 1920, which in part was as follows:

*189 “Stylo of car, 7 passenger Blue Touring Standard Catalogue Equipment unless
oilier wise noted.
“Price of ear f. o. b. factory...............$4,600.00
“Freight and war tax..................... 250.00
“Price on extra equipment................
“Total.............................$4,850.00
“Allowance on car.......................
“Xot total ..........................$4,850.00.”
Tlu order was accepted by the company on May lltli, 1D20. On the same day a conditional sale agreement was signed by the parties, at the head of which was the statement:
“Selling price ..........................$4,850.00
“Freight and charges.....................
“Finance charges ....................... 518.00
“Time price ............................ 5,868.00.”

There is in the record, at the head of a. note, what is called “Schedule of Payments," showing $857.58, payable in each of ten months, beginning one month after date, except that tin last one is $857.57. A note under seal was signed by William II. Xarcr and Catherine Xarer, who was his wife, for $8,575.84, payable at the times stated in the “¡Schedule nf Payments" to the Beam .Motor Car Company or order, at flu office of the Finance and Guaranty Company. It is agreed that title to the ear was to remain in the legal holder of the note until fully paid. That note' was assigned to the Finance and Guaranty Company by the Beam company. The purchaser was credited with some- payments made when he purchased the sedan ear and some others allowed, which, as we understand, reduced the amount to the $8,575.84 in the note. When the first payment became due the purchaser demanded tin* allowance of $800 for the Ford car and offered to pay the balance ($57.58), which he said he had in his picket. At that time Mr. Beam denied that he had agreed *190 to pay for the Ford'. They had some argument about it, and Beam told Rarer he would hold both cars — Rarer having -left for some purpose the one purchased at the garage of the Beam company. A few days later Beam called him up and offered to pay him the $300 for the Ford car, but he replied, “I don’t want anything to do with you; I don’t want any dealings with you whatever. He said, ‘If you want the $300 for your Ford car, come over and I will give it to you”; I said, ‘Ho, all I want is my Ford car’; he said, ‘All right, you can have that,’ so I went and got my Ford car.” After-wards the company notified Rarer that it would sell the Premier car on his account, and later it did sell it and sent him a statement, in which it was claimed the balance due was $95.20.

This suit was brought by Rarer and his wife on the theory that-they had rescinded the contract for the Premier car, and could recover the money paid. We do not understand why Mrs. Rarer was made a plaintiff, as he was the purchaser, but no point was made about that. They recovered a judgment for $600 against the company, from which judgment this appeal was taken. Three bills of exception are in the record, but the first is not pressed — leaving for our consideration the second, for the refusal to strike out certain testimony admitted subject to exception, and the third, which embraced the rulings on the prayers — the court having rejected the defendant’s first, third, fourth and fifth prayers, but in their brief their exception to the fifth is waived.

Tn the second exception there is a motion to strike out “all testimony relating to the terms, stipulations and agreements connected with the purchase of the Premier touring car and particularly to all parol evidence of the alleged agreement on the part of the defendant to sell the Ford truck for $300 within two weeks, or to allow $300 therefor, because said testimony contradicts the terms of the written agreement between the parties thereto,” but the motion was overruled. The first part of that motion is very general, as it would *191 require the court to hunt through the record to see what testimony had been admitted subject to exception, and whether all of it was objectionable, even if some be conceded to have been, but the material part is in reference to the Ford truck. The documentary evidence shows that in the contract of sale and purchase of the Premier car there was no provision by which the defendant undertook to sell or pay for the Ford truck, but on the contrary it would seem to show affirmatively that it was not intended to make that a part of the agreement. As we have seen above, in the order for the automobile there are statements of the price of the car, freight and war tax, making a total of $4,850, and then there is an item of “allowance on car,” the amount of which is left blank, and below the net total of $4,850 was again given. Ro sufficient excuse was given for the plaintiffs not seeing that, or knowing what it was before they signed the order, which distinctly states that “no agreement, verbal or otherwise, not embodied herein, will be recognized as binding.” In what is called “Conditional Sales Agreement” the selling price is again stated, and then the balance due was given in the note, which is signed by the plaintiff, with a schedule of monthly payments as shown above.

At the most, therefore, the alleged agreement as to the $300 was a collateral one, and not a part of the contract under which the Premier car was purchased, and we find nothing in the record to authorize the plaintiffs to rescind the contract of purchase because of the non-payment by the defendant of the $300 for the Ford truck. In Brantly on Contracts, 415, it is said by that author: “It is not every breach of contract, or failure exactly to perform, which justifies a rescission.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 401, 141 Md. 187, 1922 Md. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beam-motor-car-co-v-narer-md-1922.