Nicol v. Young

68 Mo. App. 448, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 377
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 11, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 Mo. App. 448 (Nicol v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicol v. Young, 68 Mo. App. 448, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 377 (Mo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is an action that was brought before a justice of the peace to recover a month’s rent. In the circuit court, to where the cause was removed by appeal, there was a trial before a jury, where the plaintiff had a verdict. The defendants filed a motion to set the same aside, which was sustained, and from that order the plaintiff has appealed.

facts The plaintiff gave in evidence a certain contract respecting the lease and sale of certain real property which was signed by both plaintiff and defendants. The defendant, Mary E. Young, was called as a witness in behalf of the defendants and testified that she did not read the contract before she signed it, but that it was read over to her by Mr. Pendleton who wrote it. ’ She was asked whether Mr. Pendleton attempted to explain to her the contents of the contract, and answered that he did. She was then asked what, if anything, was said about the time she was to move from the premises. To this question counsel for plaintiff objected, for the reason that the [452]*452evidence sought was in violation of the rule that a written contract can not be contradicted, altered, or explained by parol. Counsel for defendant stated that they “proposed to show that it was explained to Mrs. Young at the time she signed the contract as being contained therein, that if she moved into those premises .a certain length of time, she would have thirty days in which to get out without paying any further rent.” The court said: “You mean something was read that was not in the contract?” Counsel for defendants replied: “It was explained to her, something that was not in the contract at that time; for instance, she could stay in three months and pay three months’ rent.” The court thereupon rejected the defendants’ offer and sustained plaintiff’s objection. This ruling of the court is assigned for error.

cevidence? written and parol. It appears from the testimony of the plaintiff that she and defendant Mary E. Young requested a Mr. Whitlow to write the contract, but he was unable to do so; but Mr. Pendleton, a lawyer who was present, stated that he could write it; that plaintiff and defendants both agreed that Mr. Pendleton should write the contract, which he accordingly did. Now, assuming, as we must, that defendants could make good their offers of proof, should the same have been admitted? It seems to be the defendants’ contention that the contract was misread and misexpounded to them by Mr. Pendleton. It does not appear that the defendants were illiterate persons. The rule is elementary'that parol evidence can . , «tit, not be received to alter, vary, or contra-diet a written contract. Greenl. on Evid., sec. 321; Koehning v. Muemminghoff, 61 Mo. 403. This rule, however, is not of universal application, as we shall presently see.

[453]*453A-Fiiiiterate peis°n. Where one of the parties to a contract is an illiterate person and the other misreads or misexpounds it, so that the former is induced thereby to sign it, believing that it is that which was read and expounded to him by the latter, when it differs materially therefrom, this is such a fraud upon the part of the latter as would render the contract void for thé plain reason that the former never assented to it. Lithograph Co. v. Obert, 54 Mo. App. 240; Van Valkenburg v. Rouk, 12 Johns. 337. Courts will not turn a deaf ear to one of the contracting parties who seeks to get rid of a contract when the other party is charged with fraud in reading the contract to him, or in stating its nature, or terms, or in leaving out terms agreed upon. Hutchins v. Pettingill, 58 N. H,. 30; or in inserting those not agreed upon: Aultoman v. Olson, 34 Minn. 450. And this is true where the complaining party can not read, or if so, with difficulty. Bigelow on Fraud, 525, 526, and cases there cited. Common prudence requires that a person who can read should read an instrument before he signs it, and if he does not exercise such prudence and is deceived, there is no legal fraud, but if he does exercise such prudence and is deceived, then there is such fraud as the law will relieve. Robinson v. Glass, 94 Ind. 208; Hawkins v. Hawkins, 50 Col. 558.

T-i-Tconfidenuai relations. And the rule is, both at law and in equity, that one of sound mind must exercise ordinary prudence in conducting negotiations and executing instruments. 2 Pomeroy, Eq., sec. 893; 1 story,-Eq., sec. 200a; 2 Kent, Com., sec. 485; 94 Ind. supra, and cases there cited. And while it is true that where one signs an instrument, he must read it if he can read, or have it read, if he can not, yet this rule does not operate when a trick or artifice is resorted to for the purpose of preventing him from [454]*454reading or having read to him the instrument. If a known trust and confidence is reposed in the person making the representation and there is a relationship justifying such trust and confidence, then the person to whom the representations are made may rely upon them. So one who occupies the relation of agent, or any like relation, is required in all negotiations and contracts to state all matters within his knowledge fully and truly and to make no statements that are not true in every material particular. 1 Whart. Contr., sec. 254. So the principal may rely on the statement of his agent or confidential adviser, as to the contents of any written instrument presented to him for signature by a third person. So one is guilty of fraud who knowingly procures an agent or confidential adviser to falsely represent the contents of a writing and thus prevents it from being read. Robinson v. Glass, supra; Lennington v. Strong, 111 Ill. 152.

Recurring further to the question of whether or not, where one of the contracting parties can read and does not read a contract before signing, but relies for his knowledge of its contents and nature upon the reading of the other party and in consequence thereof he is deceived, such party can have any relief, we may quote the pertinent language used by the New York court, of appeals in Savings Inst. v. Benedict, 87 N. Y. 40, which is to the effect: “It is certainly not just that one who has perpetrated a fraud should be permitted to say to the party defrauded, when he demands relief, that he ought not to have believed or trusted him. Where one sues another for negligence, his own negligence contributing to the injury will constitute a defense ,to the action; but where one sues another for a positive, willful wrong, or fraud, negligence, by which the party injured' exposed himself to the wrong or fraud, will not bar relief. If the rule were otherwise, [455]*455the unwary and confiding who need protection of the law the most would be left a prey to the fraudulent and artful practice of evil doers.” This case, with the other New York cases to which it refers, is not in harmony with those previously hereinbefore cited by us, in respect to the question whether a contracting party who can read and fails to read the contract which he signs and in consequence thereof is deceived and induced to sign it by the misreading or misexpounding of it by the other party, is thereby guilty of such imprudence as will avoid the contract. While this divergence may be noted, it is really unimportant, since the defendants had a right, as we think, to rely on the reading and expounding of the contract by Mr. Pendleton, who was their attorney, and therefore they were not negligent in not themselves reading the contract before signing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wells v. Adams
88 Mo. App. 215 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1901)
Pheonix Insurance v. Owens
81 Mo. App. 201 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 Mo. App. 448, 1897 Mo. App. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicol-v-young-moctapp-1897.