Clyde Everett Equipment Co. v. Brockton Perforating Machine Co.

27 Mass. App. Dec. 66
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 1, 1963
DocketNo. 23167
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Mass. App. Dec. 66 (Clyde Everett Equipment Co. v. Brockton Perforating Machine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clyde Everett Equipment Co. v. Brockton Perforating Machine Co., 27 Mass. App. Dec. 66 (Mass. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

Murphy, J.

This case came to us on a report established by the Appellate Division.

This is an action of contract, in which the plaintiff alleges that the defendant owes the sum of $194.08 for repairs to a bulldozer made on September 29, 1959. The answer is general denial, payment, denial of agency and that the plaintiff is not qualified to do business in Massachusetts, and therefore precluded from maintaining the action. The court found for the defendant.

At the trial the defendant stated in open .court that the labor and materials were furnished by the plaintiff to the defendant and that there was no dispute as to price, that it waived any defense of agency and also waived the allegation in its answer that the plaintiff was not qualified to do business in Massachusetts. The only question the defendant raised was that of payment, claiming that the parties agreed that the plaintiff was to share the cost of any and all repairs made to the bulldozer on a fifty-fifty basis.

There was evidence to show that on May 27, 1959 the defendant purchased from the plaintiff a used, as is, International TB-9 [68]*68Crawler Tractor with Bucryurus Erie Dozer shovel for $3200.00 plus trucking. At that time a written agreement was executed.

The court made special findings in part as follows:

"The defendant purchased a used bulldozer from the plaintiff for $3200.00, prior to the purchase the parties hereto agreed that the cost of any repairs made to the bulldozer were to be pro rated between said parties on a fifty-fifty basis.
Upon two separate occasions, not including the claim made in this action, the plaintiff made repairs and accepted as payment one-half of the charges made for labor and materials or parts furnished.
In the present instance the plaintiff made reparis and furnished parts in the amount of $388.16, pursuant to the agreement between the parties the defendant paid the plaintiff the sum of $194.08, or one half, on the so-called fifty-fifty basis, and therefore the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this action.
The plaintiff filed thirty-one requests for rulings, as numbers one and two allowed, as numbers three through thirty-one denied in view of the special findings. Some of these requests are correct statements of law but are inapplicable as there was no credible evidence presented to support them. I find for the defendant.”

Based on the statement by the defendant in open court, the theory upon which the case was tried, and the answers to interrogatories where the defendant makes no claim of defective or unsatisfactory materials, [69]*69we consider as waived, the requests numbered, three through six and seventeen through thirty-one, which concerns warranties. Obvously they are not material to the question presented here and were not the basis of any finding by the court. (G. L. c. 106, §2-316-3a, also c. 106, §2-315) Under this statute the buyer assumes all the risk when buying a used article, as is.

We will consider requests numbered 3 — 16, as follows:

7. The court must rule that the written instrument executed by the plaintiff was complete in itself, showing on its face that it denoted a complete legal obligaron and1 contained all the conditions of a contract of sale, giving the name of the buyer of the used1, as is TB-91 Crawler Tractor with Bucryurus Erie dozer shovel and of the seller, the serial, engine and dozer shovel numbers, the price paid and the terms, as is, under which the International TB-9 Crawler Tractor with Bucryurus Erie Dozer was sold.
8. Where the defendant accepted the contract of sale executed by the plaintiff as the final statement definitely fixing the terms of the agreement it was bound by the written contract, even if it did not sign it.
9. Where a writing shows on its face that it includes the whole agreement of the parties and comprises all that is necessary to constitute a contract it is presumed that both parties have placed the terms of their bargain in this form to prevent misunderstanding and dispute, intending it to be a complete and final statement of the [70]*70whole transaction and all their stipulations relating to its subject matter are to be found within the written contract.
10. The written contract governs the rights of these parties and testimony as to contemporaneous oral agreements differing from that shown on the invoice, even though admitted without objection cannot be considered.
11. Extrinsic evidence even though admitted, cannot control words of a document purporting to express the whole transaction.
12. As a matter of law the invoice must be taken as intended to accomplish the very purpose of the so-called paroi evidence rule, that of fixing beyond all question the rights of the parties to this agreement in accordance with its terms and to preclude resort to extrinsic evidence.
13. Where what is given by one to another purports on its face to set forth terms of a contract, one who receives it, whether he reads it or not, by accepting it assents to its terms and is bound by any limitations of liability therein contained in the absence of fraud.
14. Where a jurai act is embodied in a single memorial all other utterances of the same parties on that topic are legally immaterial for the purpoee of determining what are the terms of their act. 13. The acceptance of the paper which purports to be a contract sufficiently indicates an assent to its terms, whatever they may be, and it is immaterial that they are in fact unknown.
16. The acceptance of a paper which purports to be a contract sufficiently indicates an assent to its terms, whatever they may be.

[71]*71The written instrument executed by the plaintiff was complete in itself, showing on its face that it denoted a complete legal obligation and contained all the .conditions of a contract of sale, giving the name of the buyer of the used, as is, International TB-9 Crawler Tractor with Bucryurus Erie Dozer, and of the seller, the serial, engine and dozer shovel numbers, the price paid and the terms as is under which the tractor was sold. And the defendant is bound even though he didn’t sign it. (Glackin v. Bennett, 226 Mass. 316, 320)

The substantial question is whether or not the agreement on which the defendant relies is independent of and collateral to the written sales contract with the plaintiff. If it was independent and collateral to the sale the requested rulings were properly denied. On the other hand, if it was not independent or collateral, but was a part of the sales contract, then any such evidence upon which the judge based his finding should have been excluded.

Where the agreement of two parties has been put in an unambiguous written form which they consider as final, this final form is the contract and evidence of negotiations leading up to this final form is inadmissible. The agreement merges promises made during the negotiations and nothing not contained in that final agreement can be relied on. (see Meers v. Smith, 199 Mass. 319; Fairfield

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Bluebook (online)
27 Mass. App. Dec. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clyde-everett-equipment-co-v-brockton-perforating-machine-co-massdistctapp-1963.