Moffitt v. . Maness

9 S.E. 399, 102 N.C. 457
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 399 (Moffitt v. . Maness) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moffitt v. . Maness, 9 S.E. 399, 102 N.C. 457 (N.C. 1889).

Opinion

Shepherd, J.

(after stating the facts). Whatever effect the non-production of the bond may have upon the character of the judgment which should be rendered (and of this we will speak hereafter), there was clearl}1 enough in evidence to warrant the charge of the Court and the verdict, of the jurj".

No exception was made to the admission of the mortgage alone, and no special instructions were asked in reference to the absence of the bond. So, in passing upon the exception as to the exclusion of the parol testimony offered by the defendant, we must assume that such a bond was signed, sealed and delivered by the defendant to the plaintiffs’ testator.

*459 The answer denies the execution of the bond and mortgage, and sets up no equitable defence whatever; we must, therefore,- determine the question in its legal aspects alone.

There is, we fear, too great a tendency to relax the well settled rules of evidence against the admissibility of parol testimony, to contradict, vary or add to, the terms of a written contract, and it is thought that the courts, in their anxiety to avoid probable injustice in particular cases, are gradually construing away a principle which has always been considered one of the greatest barriers against fraud and perjury. ,

Even the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, which, perhaps, has gone further than any other in this direction, sounds the.alarm, and Bell, J., who delivered the opinion of the Court in Benwick Ex'rs v. Benwick, 3 Harris, 66, says: “Were the door opened still wider for the admission of all the loose dicta of the parties, running, it might be, as in this instance, through along course of years, the flood of evil would become so great as to sweep before it every barrier of confidence and safety which human forethought, springing from experience, is so sedulous to raise against the treachery of memory and the falsehood of men. To avoid, therefore, what would really be a social calamity, it is recognized as a settled maxim that oral evidence of an agreement, entertained before its execution, shall not be hoard to vary or materially affect it. * * * If any dicta or even decision in hostility to this axiom are to be found, they must be ascribed to the strong desire we are all apt to be swayed by, to defeat some strongly suspected fraud in the particular case. But these occasional aberrations but lead to the more emphatic re-annunciation of a principle found to be essential to the maintenance of that certainty in human dealings, without which commerce must degenerate into chicanery, and trade become another name for trick.”

*460 In speaking of the higher dignity and the inviolability of written evidence, Taylok, J., in Smith v. Williams, 1 Mur., 426, elegantly remarks, that “ the writers on the law of evidence have accordingly, in arranging the degrees of proof, placed written evidence of every kind higher in the scale of probability than unwritten, and, notwithstanding the splendid eloquence of Cicero to the contrary, in his declamation for the poet Archias, the sages of our law have said that the fallibility of human memory weakens the effect of that testimony, which the most upright mind, awfully impressed •with the solemnity of an oath, may be disposed to give.

“ Time wears away the distinct image and clear impression of facts, and leaves in the mind uncertain opinions, imperfect notions and vague surmises.”

Impressed with the warning thus given by these able Judges, we will proceeed to an examination of the question before us.

Here is a bond, containing an absolute promise to pay to the obligee a certain sum of money, and without the slightest suggestion of fraud, mistake or accident, either in the pleadings or testimony, it is proposed-to show that it was not an absolute promise to pay a definite sum, but that it was agreed that it should cover whatever should be found to be due upon a settlement. It cannot, it seems to me, be doubted that the proposed testimony materially contradicts and varies the terms of the writing. The most specious reasoning is incapable of reconciling them. The bond is a solemn declaration that so much is now due. The testimony offered is that the sum mentioned is not due, but is to be determined upon a future settlement. This is clearly in the “ teeth ” of the writing. In Maham v. Sherman, 1 Black., 380, the language of the Court is as follows : “ They set up a verbal contract, made at the time the note was executed, varying the terms of the note. The note is for the payment of a certain sum, on a specified day. A *461 verbal contract, contemporaneous with the note, is relied, on to show that the note was not to be paid till a certain account should be adjusted and the amount credited on the note. That would be making the promise conditional, which, upon its face, is absolute.”

In Erwin v. Saunders, 13 Am. Dec,., 520, the defendants, the makers of the note, “offered to prove that the note was given conditionally, to be. void if it should be shown that Saunders, then in insolvency, had included-in his inventory the amount due Erwin — the amount of the note.” The evidence was held lo be inadmissible.

In Dyar v. Walton, S. E. Reporter, vol. 7 (which is a case directly in point), the Supreme Court of Georgia says: “ The defence, when analyzed, resolves itself into an effort to vary a written contract by parol, and to show the consequence of gross negligence. If, at the time the..notes and mortgages were given, there was an agreement entered into that they should be varied by the result of subsequent examination, that agreement ought to have been embodied in the written contract, or in some other writing, whereby to establish it. The omission to do either *is decisive of this branch of the defence. There is no allegation in the plea, and no indication in the evidence, that this agreement was intended to be embraced in any writing, or that it was left out by fraud or mistake. Its effect, if allowed to have any, would be to overrule the writings executed as the result of the settlement, and to re-open the settlement altogether.”

These authorities, upon the pleadings in this case, fully sustain his Honor in rejecting .the testimony. But the defendant strenuously insists that the entire contract was not reduced to writing, and that his case is governed by the principles laid down in Manning v. Jones, Busb., 368; Daughtry v. Boothe, 4 Jones, 87; Twidy v. Saunderson, 9 Ired., 5, and a long line of decisions collected in Ray v. Blackwell, 94 N. C., 10, and ending with Cumming v. Barbee, 99 N. C., 332.

*462 We think that a careful examination of these cases will show that, even where the contract lies partly in parol, that part which is in writing is not to be contradicted.

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9 S.E. 399, 102 N.C. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moffitt-v-maness-nc-1889.