Duffey v. Scientific American Compiling Department

1912 OK 96, 120 P. 1088, 30 Okla. 742, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 191
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 16, 1912
Docket1420
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1912 OK 96 (Duffey v. Scientific American Compiling Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duffey v. Scientific American Compiling Department, 1912 OK 96, 120 P. 1088, 30 Okla. 742, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 191 (Okla. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion by

ROSSER, C.

The defendant in error, hereinafter called plaintiff, was the publisher of a set of books, known as “the Americana.” The plaintiff in error, hereinafter called •defendant, on the 17th day of July, 1908, ordered a set of this work from the plaintiff; the order being in the following form:

“July 17th, 1908.
“Gentlemen: Please ship to me, one complete set of The Americana, in sixteen (16) volumes, bound in three-quarter Morocco, which I agree to accept and for value received, pay you at Chicago, 111., $6.50 per volume. Title and ownership in said books not to pass to me until full amount of contract is paid. This order is unconditional, except as noted hereon. Payable one vol. a month. Check payable to Scientific American compiling department. Received on account ■ — -. M. V. Power, Representative. Name, J. E. Duffey. Business or profession, -. Mailing address, Western Supply Co. Ship books to Tulsa. City,-.. State,-. It is understood by me that ■‘The Americana’ is a general reference work, and that delinquency in six months payments shall cause full amount of con-, tract to become due and payable.”

This contract was made upon a printed form, and across the face of it was written, in ink, the word “future.” On the 1st of October, 1908, plaintiff tendered the books to the defendant, and' he refused to receive them, whereupon the plaintiff sued him for $104, the purchase price.

*744 The defendant answered with a general denial of the contract, and of the indebtedness, admitting the tender of the books, and then answered further as follows :

“Defendant, further answering plaintiff’s bill of particulars, alleges that he did, on or about the T7th day of July, 1908, enter into an agreement in writing with said plaintiff corporation for the sale of a certain set of books consisting of 16 volumes, but that said agreement was a conditional agreement, and that the same was to have no valid binding effect until said corporation plaintiff should correspond with said defendant, and should receive specific instructions from said defendant to ship said books; that said plaintiff never corresponded with said defendant, and wholly disregarding said conditional agreement shipped said books to said defendant without his consent or request. Defendant further alleges that it was expressly agreed by and between said plaintiff and defendant that, in case said defendant should at no time desire to accept said books, then said agreement above mentioned should have no force and effect, but should be null and void; and that this agreement was signed under such express conditions.”

Defendant at the trial offered himself as a witness, for the purpose of proving the allegations in the answer. The plaintiff objected to his testimony, for the reason that he sought to vary the terms of a written agreement by parol testimony. The court sustained the objection, and, the defendant offering no further evidence, the court, over the objection of the defendant, instructed the jury to find for the plaintiff for the full amount of the purchase price of the books.

The first assignment of error is upon the action of the court in- excluding the testimony of the defendant as to the condition upon which. the contract was signed. This action of the court was proper. Mr. Wigmore, in his work on Evidence, at section 24-35, states the rule thus:

“Where an obligation is embodied in a single document, the very essence of the obligation is its validity and enforcement. Hence an agreement, alleged to have been a part of the transaction that the obligation should not be used as binding or enforceable can never be permitted to be shown, for the writing necessary determines that very subject to the contrary; in the ordinary phrase, it is necessarily inconsistent with the writing.”

*745 See Ryan v. Cooke, 172 Ill. 302, 50 N. E. 213; McNinch v. Northwest Thresher Co., 23 Okla. 386, 100 Pac. 524, 138 Am. St. Rep. 803.

It is not necessary to cite and compare the numerous conflicting authorities upon the question of admissibility of parol testimony with relation to written instruments. The authorities have gone very far in holding it competent, for the purpose of showing that the delivery of the instrument was conditional, or that it never took effect at all. 17 Cyc. 642, and cases there cited. But in all the cases sustaining this position the condition was something extraneous to the contract itself. In this case the making of the agreement is admitted, and the defendant’s plea in effect is that he had a right to change his mind. Parol evidence cannot be admitted to show that a written contract was not a contract at all. A man cannot be heard to say: “To be sure, I made this written order; but I made it subject to the condition, resting in parol, that you must not act on it until I make another written order to the same effect.” The law will not countenance such paltering. Defendant does not plead that the order was not to be sent in by the agent until further instructions, but that it was not to be filled until he gave another order.

Defendant claims that because the word “future” was written across the face of the contract he had the right to offer the evidence for the purpose of explaining its meaning. While the point is not decided, if he had offered evidence consistent with the contract, his position might be tenable. But the effect of his answer was that he had not become liable, and never would become liable. Pie did not offer to prove that the goods were to be shipped at some future date which had not yet arrived; nor did he offer to prove that the goods were to be shipped within a reasonable time in the future upon his order, and that the reasonable time had not yet elapsed. His contention was entirely inconsistent with the'contract. He could not destroy the written contract under the mask of explaining a latent ambiguity.

The second contention of defendant is that plaintiff, having reserved the title to the books until they were paid for, could not *746 maintain an action for the price, but that its recovery should have been limited to damages 'for the breach of the contract to purchase. But an examination of the record shows that the defendant did not present this question in the trial court, either by a demurrer to the bill of particulars, or by an objection to the evidence, or by a request for instructions, or in the motion for a new trial. The defense claimed in the trial court, and the ofaly one, as appears by the record, was that the contract w'as subject to the condition that it was not to become effective until plaintiff should correspond with defendant, and receive specific instructions to, ship the books; and that if he never wanted the books shipped that they were not to be shipped at all. Having taken that position in the trial court, and having been defeated, he cannot in this court make the defense that the contract price was not the proper measure of recovery. Herbert v. Wagg, 27 Okla. 674, 117 Pac. 209, and authorities there cited; Wattenbarger v. Hall, 26 Okla. 815, 110 Pac. 911; Harris v. First National Bank, 21 Okla. 189, 95 Pac. 781; Overstreet et al. v.

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Bluebook (online)
1912 OK 96, 120 P. 1088, 30 Okla. 742, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffey-v-scientific-american-compiling-department-okla-1912.