Fentress v. Steele & Sons

66 S.E. 870, 110 Va. 578, 1910 Va. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 S.E. 870 (Fentress v. Steele & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fentress v. Steele & Sons, 66 S.E. 870, 110 Va. 578, 1910 Va. LEXIS 98 (Va. 1910).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by Steele & Sons upon motion pursuant to the statute to recover of the defendant, B. B. Fentress, $3,262, the price and value of certain machinery sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendant; and at the trial of the cause, on a joinder of the plea of the general issue there was a verdict and judgment for the amount of the debt, with interest as fixed by the verdict of the jury, which judgment we are asked to review and reverse.

For convenience, we shall speak in this opinion of the plaintiffs below, defendants in error here, as Steele & Sons, and the defendant below, plaintiff in error here, as Fentress.

On August 7, 1906, Fentress, of Norfolk city, Va., being desirous of erecting a brick plant in said city, wrote a letter to Steele & Sons, of Statesville, N. C., dealers in brick machines, requesting a quotation of the price of a brick plant such as Fen-tress wanted, and after some correspondence a representative of Steele & Sons called on Fentress and had an interview with him in regard to the matter. By letter of August 24, 1906, Steele & Sons wrote Fentress making to him a distinct and definite offer to furnish him a certain plant, such as he wanted, at a stipulated price, and after further correspondence Fentress wrote Steele & Sons accepting their offer as set forth in a letter of Steele & Sons to him of August 24, 1906. In this correspondence, Fentress’ letters to Steele & Sons were written by him as an individual and upon his private letter head, bearing only his name; and the letters of Steele & Sons were addressed to B. B. Fentress individually, and there is no suggestion in any of this correspondence that Fentress was acting for another or in any other capacity than on behalf of himself individually.

On November 26, 1906, when Fentress was ready for the machinery or plant he wrote Steele & Sons on his private letter paper, signed by him as an individual, requesting shipment of the plant, giving certain shipping instructions; and the plant [581]*581was shipped in accordance with these instructions direct to Fen-tress; the bill of lading for same being, on December 1Y, 1906, sent direct to him. At this time a memorandum of the shipment was made by Steele & Sons in the name of R. B. Fentress, but later, in March, 1907, the account was formally charged on their books against “R. B. Fentress, Norfolk B. Co., Norfolk, Va.”; it being explained in the evidence in this case that at that time Steele & Sons supposed Fentress called his brick yard the Norfolk Brick Co.—i. e., they thought it was a trade name, and as such, or as a designation of address, they added the words “Norfolk B. Co.” to the charge against Fentress.

On June 21, 1907, no payment having been made for the plant Steele & Sons wrote the “Norfolk, Va., Brick Co.” (thinking that the name under which Fentress was trading), requesting a settlement of the account, and this letter was replied to by Fentress on June 24,1907, in which he for the first time (so far as the correspondence goes to show) stated that the Norfolk Brick Co. was a corporation, and suggested that Steele & Sons accept notes of-the “Brick Co.” in settlement of the account. With respect to that suggestion, quite a correspondence followed between Fentress and Steele & Sons, the result being that on September 21, 1907, the Norfolk Brick Co. sent to Steele & Sons its three notes for $1,087.33 each, which were accepted by Steele & Sons; but it is insisted on the part of Steele & Sons that at the time of the acceptance of these notes there was no such understanding, expressed or implied, with Fentress, that he was to be released from liability to Steel & Sons on the original contract made with him; and certainly no express contract to that effect appears in the correspondence leading up to the taking of these notes by Steele & Sons, while H. O. Steele, who seems to have conducted the correspondence on the part correspondence, and positively, that he did not intend at any of his firm, testified at the trial of this ease with respect to the time to release Fentress from the obligation of the original contract, and that he regarded Fentress as the debtor.

The said notes were not paid at maturity, and this action [582]*582followed, resulting, as stated, in the judgment to which a writ of error was awarded by this court.

It was insisted hy Fentress at the trial, that what occurred between him and a representative of Steele & Sons in an interview on August 18, 1906, was competent and relevant testimony with respect to the issue as to what was the contract between the parties, but the court refused to allow this evidence to go to the jury, for the manifest reason that the correspondence in evidence set forth the entire contract between the parties, no reference being made therein to any oral negotiations which were to be considered as entering into and forming a part of the contract; and.this ruling of the presiding judge was plainly right. Throughout this correspondence there is not a reference to the Uorfolk Brick Company, nothing to intimate that it does not evidence the understanding of the parties, or that Steele & Sons were to look to anyone for the cost price of the brick plant they delivered to Fentress other than Fentress himself. Unlike the case of Strause v. Richmond Woodworking Co., 109 Va. 724, 65 S. E. 659, Fentress conducted his correspondence with Steele & Sons in his individual capacity, and without reference to the liability of anyone other than himself for the purchase price of the brick plant, which was delivered to and accepted by him; and without reference to any negotiations other than by correspondence that were to enter into and form a part of the contract, or of the evidence of the contract; while in the Strause case there was not only enough in the correspondence to show that oral negotiations were to be considered in determining what the contract was, as to who was to be bound for the purchase price of the articles ordered by Strause “for American Shock Binder Corp.,” but the articles were actually delivered to the corporation, and there was no intimation of a purpose on the part of the vendor company to demand payment of Strause until the corporation, from which part payment had been received, became insolvent. Here Fentress set up no claim that he was not hound hy his contract evidenced by the correspond[583]*583ence -with Steele & Sons to pay for the brick plant shipped to and received by-him until the brick company he organized and capitalized had become hopelessly insolvent.

In 17 Cyc., p. 716, the law is stated to be, that if the written agreement imports on its face to be a complete expression of the whole agreement—that is, contains such language as imports a complete legal obligation—it is conclusively presumed that the parties have introduced into it every material term, and parol evidence cannot be admitted to add another term, although the writing is silent as to the particular one to which the parol evidence is directed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 S.E. 870, 110 Va. 578, 1910 Va. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fentress-v-steele-sons-va-1910.