Fralick v. Mercer

148 P. 906, 27 Idaho 360, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 47
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 148 P. 906 (Fralick v. Mercer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fralick v. Mercer, 148 P. 906, 27 Idaho 360, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 47 (Idaho 1915).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

— This action was brought to recover from the defendant, who is appellant here, the sum of $1174.06 damages for an alleged breach of a written contract to furnish a certain number of railroad ties. The written contract declared on was attached as an exhibit to the amended complaint and made a part thereof.

By the answer the defendant virtually admitted that he entered into a contract with the respondent to furnish him a certain number of railroad ties at certain prices, and admitted that he signed the contract set forth as an exhibit to the complaint, and avers that said contract was presented to him by the respondent and he (the appellant) kept it in his possession without signature for about three weeks, when the respondent inquired of him what he had done with it and why he had not signed and returned it to him, and appellant replied that he had not signed the contract and did not intend [363]*363to do so, because he could not furnish- the ties therein mentioned at the prices therein stated; that thereupon respondent stated to appellant that he need not furnish all of the ties mentioned in said contract, but that it would be satisfactory if he would furnish as many as he was able to and could furnish, and requested appellant to sign said contract, and thereupon appellant stated to respondent that he would sign the contract and furnish all of the ties he could for the prices mentioned in the contract, but would not furnish all of them, provided there would be no damage suit brought by respondent against appellant for failure to furnish all of the ties mentioned in said contract. Thereupon respondent promised and agreed that there would be no damage suit brought by him against appellant by reason of his failure to furnish all of the ties called for by said contract, and that appellant could furnish just such number of ties as he saw fit under said contract. Thereupon appellant signed said contract as of the date it was prepared and thereafter delivered to respondent a part of the 50,000 ties called for by said contract.

On motion of respondent this affirmative defense was stricken out. The case was thereafter tried to a jury and during the trial counsel for appellant stated to the court that he desired to submit an amendment to his answer. Thereupon the court advised appellant’s counsel to prepare the amendment at the noon hour and submit it in writing. Upon the convening of court, after the expiration of the noon hour, appellant presented to the court an amendment to his answer, and asked that the same be substituted in lieu of paragraph 1 of said answer, which had been stricken out. The proposed amendment to the answer, in addition to incorporating therein the written contract referred to in the answer and all of the affirmative matters theretofore stricken out by the court on motion of counsel for plaintiff, contained the further allegation that after the verbal agreement had been entered into between the respondent and appellant concerning the signing of the contract, and after appellant had proceeded to furnish some of the ties to respondent, appellant and respondent agreed that appellant should not furnish any [364]*364other or further ties under said agreement than those already furnished. The court thereupon refused to allow said amendment.

The case was thereafter tried to a jury and a verdict was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $1,123.78, and judgment was entered for that amount. This appeal is from the judgment.

Several errors are assigned which refer to the action of the court in sustaining respondent’s motion to strike out appellant’s affirmative answer and defense, and in refusing to allow appellant to amend his answer, and in giving and refusing to give certain instructions.

The first question presented is as to the action of the court in striking out defendant’s affirmative defense. In that affirmative defense was set up a contemporaneous oral agreement made prior to the signing of said contract, whereby it was agreed that the defendant need not comply with his part of said contract.

The well-established general rule is that a plea or answer setting up a parol contemporaneous agreement inconsistent with the written contract sued on is bad on demurrer, or may be stricken out on motion. (See 9 Cyc. 733, and authorities there cited; Fitzgerald v. Burke, 14 Colo. 559, 23 Pac. 993; Thisler v. Mackey, 65 Kan. 464, 70 Pac. 334; Jacobs v. Shenon, 3 Ida. 274, 29 Pac. 44; Tyson v. Neill, 8 Ida. 603, 70 Pac. 790; Newmyer v. Roush, 21 Ida. 106, Ann. Cas. 1913D, 443, 120 Pac. 464.)

In Burke v. Dulaney, 153 U. S. 228, 14 Sup. Ct. 816, 38 L. ed. 698, the supreme court of the United States held that a written contract cannot be contradicted or varied by evidence of an oral agreement between the parties before or at the time of such contract. In that case it appears that the promissory note sued on had never been delivered as- a present contract, and in a case of that kind parol evidence may be introduced to show that the delivery of the contract was only conditional and not delivered as a present contract. In the ease at bar the contract was delivered and a number of thousand ties delivered under it in accordance with its terms.

[365]*365Here the defendant by said affirmative defense alleged that he entered into an oral agreement with the plaintiff that he need not comply with the provisions of said contract in case he would sign it, and the court was clearly right in striking out any such an attempted affirmative defense, under the rule above stated.

It is next contended that the court erred in refusing to allow the appellant to amend his answer during the trial. The court was in the midst of the trial at the time the request to amend the answer was made. The court thereupon permitted the attorney to prepare his amendment, and upon presentation of it, it was ascertained that said amendment contained in part as a defense the identical contemporaneous oral agreement that had theretofore been stricken out, and as a further defense was averred an alleged oral release from the contract sued on, that said release was voluntary, etc.

The oral contemporaneous agreement above referred to, which was first alleged as a defense, was clearly inconsistent with the defense sought to be plead by the amendment, since the amendment plead an oral agreement releasing the defendant from the conditions of said contract. In the amendment it is averred that on or about the 1st of June, 1913, plaintiff, at the village of St. Maries, informed and notified the defendant that he need not deliver any more or other ties under said contract, and that defendant thereupon informed plaintiff that it was agreeable for him not to furnish any more or other ties under said contract, and it was there agreed that he need not furnish any more ties under said contract.

If the defendant had been released entirely from the provisions of said contract by a subsequent oral agreement made on or about the 1st of June, 1913, it was certainly remarkable that he did not plead that in his own original answer as a defense, instead of pleading the contemporaneous oral agreement that he did plead as a defense.

We think the court did not abuse its discretion in denying appellant’s motion to amend, for such an amendment would change the whole theory of the defense.

[366]*366This court held in Small v. Harrington,

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Bluebook (online)
148 P. 906, 27 Idaho 360, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fralick-v-mercer-idaho-1915.