Garrow v. Carpenter

1 Port. 359
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1 Port. 359 (Garrow v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrow v. Carpenter, 1 Port. 359 (Ala. 1835).

Opinion

By Mr. Justice Thornton :

This cause is brought up by writ of error, to a decree of a chancellor dissolving an injunction and dismissing a bill, filed by the plaintiff in error against the defendants, who were ad-[369]*369Ininistrators of one Benjamin H. Hall. It appears that a written contract was executed between the said Hall, in his < life time, and the firm of Dameron and Williams, undertak - ers and builders in the city of Mobile,- and the plaintiff as their security ; by which contract it was stipulated, that the said Dameron and Williams should erect certain store houses in the said city for the said Hall, to be completed by the first of November, 1821, for which the said Hall obliged himself to pay to the said Dameron and Williams the sum of three thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars, on or before the said first of November, 1821, provided the said houses should then be ready for delivery; and provided further, that if not finished by the said time, the payment of said sum of money should be suspended until they were completed; and the said Hall should be compensated by, the said Dameron and Williams, or their said security, the plaintiif, such reasonable damages as the said Hall might sustain by reason of the non- ' completion of said buildings, according to the-contract. Upon this contract Hall instituted an action at law against the’ plaintiif, and recovered as damages accruing to him for the non-completion of the houses, the sum of one thousand and seven dollars, to enjoin which the bill of the plaintiff was filed.

The bill charges, that before the signing by him of the contract above mentioned, it' was understood and agreed between the said Hall and the said Dameron and Williams and the said plaintiif, that in case the said Dameron and Williams should be unable to build and finish said stores, according to the agreement, that then, and in that case, he should complete and finish said stores himself, and the said Hall should pay unto him the said sum of three thousand eight hundred and jifty dollars, after deducting therefrom such damages as the said Hall might sustain, in case the said build* , ings should not be completed by the said first of November, 1821. The bill further,charges, that the said Dameron and Williams failing to complete the said buildings, assigned the* [370]*370Written contract to the complainant, who proceeded at his owtr í costs and charges to complete the same, and delivered them - up to the defendants’ intestate in April, 1822. That the said Hall refusing to pay him the sum agreed- to be paid as aforesaid, he commenced an action at common law against him, upon the written agreement and upon the verbal contract, to which said action, after the death of Hall, the defendants were made parties.; and that during its pendency, viz : at the September term, 1828, the case was referred to arbitrators, and continued on reference from term to term, until at last it was abated upon the declaration of the insolvency of the estate' of their intestate by the said defendants. The answer of the defendants denies the fact of any such verbal contract made with their intestate. They allege that Dameron and Williams were greatly embarrassed, if not wholly insolvent, when the contract was made with them by their intestate, and that they were largely indebted to him, which was the main inducement to make the said contract, in order' to save this debt. They admit that the plaintiff procured an assignment of the written contract from Dameron and Williams, and also, that suit was commenced on the same, which was terminated in the manner as stated in the complainant’s bill. They assert that letters of administration were committed to them on the thirteenth of September, 1824, and that the claim of the plaintiff was never duly presented ; and insist as a defence, on the statute of non-claim. The proof takSn is only the depositions of three witnesses, all of which were read on the trial in the court below, without any objection being made, either to the mode of taking them, or to the competency of the witnesses, and of course the case will now be considered on the testimony in the record, There is abundance of testimony that Dameron and Williams, after putting up. the frames of the buildings, failed in their circumstances, and surrendered the work with the written contract to Gar-row, who completed it'as above stated. That the value of the work done by Dameron and Williams, before they aban[371]*371doned it, was something like eight hundred dollars, being two hundred dollars less than the damages recovered from Gar-row as their security, by the intestate. There is one positive witness who sustains the allegation, respecting the parol agreement, which is relied on by the complainant. There are some other facts proved in the cause, which have been dwelt upon in the argument, but which to my mind, furnish very little ground for presumption, either on, one side or the other — such as the insolvency of Dameron and Williams, and the indebtedness to the intestate Hall. They might have furnished a motive to him, for entering into the written contract'; so, on the other hand, those very circumstances, if known to Gar row, might have been powerful .reasons with him, why he would not have incurred such a hazardous responsibility as his becoming security imposed, without at the same time, the counter indemnity, which the agreement he relies upon, afforded. So, Hall’s declarations that he was ready to pay whenever the buildings were done, and that it was immaterial to him to whom he paid ; though they were Well calculated to inspire the complainant with ardour in the prosecution of the work, may have been artfully intended for that purpose only ; and however deceptive, furnish no very strong corroboration of the statements in the bill.

Having thus stated the substance of the bill, answer, and proofs, so far as I consider necessary to a decision of the case, I will proceed to examine the questions belonging to it.

The first which presents itself is, whether the contract set up by the complainant, even if proved, can be regarded, on account of its supposed effect, to vary or contradict'the written instrument, which was signed by the parties to it. The general rule is well established, that a written contract cannot be varied, contradicted, or even explained by'parol evidence. But if any contemporaneous contract be made, even in some sense on the same subject matter, which can be so separated from the written one, as that it will not appear to have been [372]*372intended to form a constituent part of it, and does not alter, contradict, or explain it, however it may depend upon it for its very existence, I can see no good reason, why such parol contract should not be upheld. Their mere juxtaposition, is surely no fatal objection. Let us then examine these two contracts, and see if that set up by this bill must be annihilated by the force of the admitted rule, in the written contract Hall obligated himself to pay to Dameron and Williams, a certain sum of money, for certain work to be done by them, against a certain day ; and requires the plaintiff to be security for any damages which he may sustain by a delay in the completion of the. work beyond that day ; he suspending payment until its completion.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Port. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrow-v-carpenter-ala-1835.