Harrison v. Morton

35 A. 99, 83 Md. 456, 1896 Md. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 17, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 A. 99 (Harrison v. Morton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Morton, 35 A. 99, 83 Md. 456, 1896 Md. LEXIS 79 (Md. 1896).

Opinion

Fowler, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the eighth of December, 1894, Walter H. Harrison, the appellant, claims to have entered into an agreement under seal with the appellee, Franklin J. Morton. By the. terms of this agreement Flarrison was to assign to Morton a certain invention for a machine to make barrels and kegs, for which application had been made to the Patent Office by Henry Campbell, the inventor. Harrison alleged himself to be the owner of this invention by virtue of an assignment from the inventor. By the terms of this alleged agreement Morton was to pay Harrison the sum of one hundred thousand dollars in consideration of the sale and conveyance to him of all Harrison’s rights under said assignment from the inventor, within -ten days after the issuing by the United States of letters patent for the invention, and also as part of the consideration for said sale and conveyance Morton was to transfer to Harrison a certain number of full-paid and non-assessable shares of a corporation to be formed by the former, who was also to pay Harrison a sum equal to forty per cent, of the gross royalties upon sales of the patented machines under patents issued by the Government. On the 8th of P'ebruary, 1895, Harrison sued Morton in covenant on the agreement of the 8th December, 1894, alleging in his narr. ownership of the patent under assignment from the inventor, the sale and conveyance thereof to Morton, and the consideration therefor as above mentioned, the assignment to Morton, and the issuance and delivery to him of letters patent and acceptance thereof by him, and his failure to comply with said agreement. Harrison claimed as dam-ages $300,000. To this narr. Morton pleaded, first, non est factum ; second, fraud ; and third, undue influence in pro[472]*472curing his signature to the agreement sued on. He also pleaded three additional pleas on equitable grounds, first, that there was no consideration for the alleged contract; second, that at the cíate of the alleged contract Harrison was not the owner of and had no valid title to said invention and machine; third, that at the time of said alleged assignment to Morton of the patent, Harrison, the plaintiff, was not the owner and had no valid title to the same. The defendant also filed a plea of set-off and a bill of particulars thereof, amounting to over $31,000. The case was tried before the Court without a jury, and resulted in a verdict for defendant for $35,091.65.

A number of questions which we do not feel called on to consider here were discussed at the hearing by counsel for both parties. The character and standing of the parties in the city of Baltimore, and the career of one of them as illustrated by former litigation in the Courts of this State are not necessarily, or indeed, at all involved in this controversy. We are concerned with the exceptions which we find in the record, and shall proceed to discuss therh with as much brevity as their proper consideration will permit.

The third and fifth exceptions have been abandoned.

The plaintiff had offered evidence tending to prove that the contract sued on was valid, binding and operative, and that in pursuance thereof the defendant had paid certain sums of money and had done certain acts. When the defendant was examined as a witness he was asked whether before the contract was executed he had any conversation with the plaintiff, and if so, what he had agreed upon and on what terms, in connection with that patent device ? The objection of the plaintiff to the asking of this question was overruled, and this constitutes the first exception. The objection appears to be two-fold. First, that no parol evidence of prior agreements are admissible to vaiy or alter the written contract sued on, and second, that the proposed question, so far as it was asked for the purpose of eliciting testimony upon the issue of fraud and undue influence in [473]*473procuring the signature of the defendant to said contract, was irrelevant because there was no such issue in the case, the Court below having found, and so declared by plaintiff’s second prayer, which was conceded by the defendant, that there was no legally sufficient evidence in the cause to show such fraud. In regard to the first ground of the objection all difficulty would seem to disappear when we remember that the issue is, not as to the construction of a contract, or what the contract is, but whether there is any contract in existence. The defendant pleaded non est factum, and evidence which tended to show that the money paid and acts done by the defendant were paid and performed not in pursuance of the alleged contract, but in execution of another contract, and at the same time to show that although the alleged contract was signed by both parties, it had never become operative because never delivered, would clearly be admissible.

The rule which excludes parol testimony when offered to vary or contradict a written instrument can, of course, have no application here, for the testimony objected to was offered not to vary or contradict the contract, but to prove it had no existence. Guardhouse v. Blackburn, L. R., 1 P. & D. 115. In the case of Pym v. Campbell, 6 El. & Bl. 374, Erle, J.,said: “The distinction in point of law is that evidence to vary the terms of an agreement in writing is not admissible, but evidence to show that there is no such agreement at all is admissible.” To the same effect Ware v. Allen, 128 U. S. 596. And in regard to the second ground of objection, it may be said that it does not appear that the testimony objected to was offered to show fraud, but to establish the defendant’s contention that the contract, although signed by both parties, was not to be valid and binding until the defendant should so determine, and that in the meantime he was to hold it “in trust.” And in point of fact, he appears to have held possession of the paper until it was produced in the Court below upon the demand of the plaintiff. What we have said in regard to the first exception applies also to the fourth.

[474]*474The second exception was taken to the refusal to rule out a question put to the defendant in regard to an arrangement by which he agreed to, and did, advance $2,500 to enable the plaintiff to exploit a North Carolina gold mine, and the representations then made by the plaintiff to the defendant in regard to money the plaintiff owed the defendant. The testimony in regard to the gold mine was offered for the purpose of explaining the circumstances under which the defendant, according to his testimony, determined, with the assent of the plaintiff, that the contract, the cause of action here, should never be considered operative. It was by a speculation in this gold mine with the money borrowed from the defendant that the plaintiff promised to pay the deendant some $25,000 then due, and when, instead of paying this, or any sum, the plaintiff drew a draft on the defendant for $1,175, the defendant thereupon determined to exercise his option of declaring the contract inoperative. The object of the plaintiff was to show the contract was valid, and he had offered much evidence in support of his contention, and therefore the defendant had a right, as we have already said, not only to show the contraiy, if he could do so, but also the circumstances under which his alleged right to declare the contract void was exercised. As we have said, the testimony admitted certainly tended to that end.

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Bluebook (online)
35 A. 99, 83 Md. 456, 1896 Md. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-morton-md-1896.