Piretti v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.

120 N.Y.S. 782
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedJanuary 21, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 120 N.Y.S. 782 (Piretti v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piretti v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 120 N.Y.S. 782 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GIEGERICH, J.

The plaintiffs sue to recover the agreed price of certain advertising published by them in a journal of which they are the proprietors. On April 23, 1908, an agreement, pursuant to which the publication was commenced, was entered into between the defendant and the former proprietors of the paper, to whose rights the present plaintiffs have succeeded. At that time the defendant signed and delivered to the plaintiffs’ assignors a writing in the following form:

“$18.75 per issue. Memorandum.
“Please insert in the New York Athletic Club Journal our advertisement, to occupy the space of lower half third cover, twelve insertions, and thereafter until stopped, for which we will pay $18.75 monthly.
“Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.,
“by W. A. Wells, N. Y. Branch.
“New York, April 23, 1908.
“This memorandum is complete in itself and is not to be interpreted or amended by any oral statement or explanation.”

A like paper was signed on behalf of the then proprietors of the paper and was delivered to the defendant. Publication of the advertisement was then commenced, and was continued until it had been published 12 times. The defendant paid for the first 6 insertions, but refused to pay for the last 6, and this action is brought to recover the sum so in dispute.

At the trial, the plaintiffs proved the written agreement, the publication, and the nonpayment of the balance claimed. Counsel for the defendant, upon cross-examination of one of the plaintiffs’ witnesses, asked the witness to identify a letter, dated October 7, 1908, from the publishers to the defendant, and upon the identification being made offered the letter in evidence. Counsel for the defendant objected to the introduction of the letter on the ground that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial; but it was received, and the plaintiffs’ exception was noted. The letter was as follows:

“October 7, 1908.
“Mr. W. P. Berrien, Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 233 West 58th Street, N. Y. City—Dear Sir: In reply to your favor of the 5th inst., in which you have requested us to discontinue your advertisement, beg to say that we are at a loss to understand the request, as you have neglected to state any reasons. We are confident that we have carried out our part of the contract, and see no reason why we should not insert the advertisement until expiration of same, April, 1909, as the rate given you was on a yearly basis, and not six months.
“Very truly yours, New York Athletic Club Journal,
“T. M. Tibbitts, Editor.”

This letter contained nothing of importance, and its introduction could have done no harm; but following its reception in evidence the defendant’s counsel, continuing his examination of the same witness, procured him to identify a letter, dlated October 8, 1908, sent by the defendant in reply to the letter reproduced above, and then offered it in evidence. The same objection, ruling, and exception were made [784]*784and noted as in the case of the previous letter. This second letter read as follows:

“New York, Oct. 8, 1908.
“Mr. F. M. Tibbitts, Editor New York Athletic Club Journal, Central Park South, New York, N. Y.—Dear Sir: We have yours of the 7th relative to our notice of the 5th to discontinue our advertising, and would advise you that your representative, with whom our agreement was made,’ in the presence of three witnesses, conceded the privilege of cancellation at the end of either three, six, nine months, or one year, and that the rate of advertising for any of these periods would be for the rate which you have charged us for to date. Under these conditions, you will therefore see that the agreement is observed; also, as per our instructions of the 5th, that the advertisement is canceled.
“Yours very truly, Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.,
“by W. P. Berrien.”

This letter having been received, counsel for the defendant procured the identification by the same witness of a letter, dated the following day, and sent by the editor of ’the publication in reply to the defendant’s letter of October 8th. The same objection, ruling, and exception were made and noted. The last-mentioned letter read as follows:

“October 9, 1908.
“Mr. W. P. Berrien, Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 233 West 58th St., New York, N. Y.—Dear Sir: In reply to your favor of the Sth inst., in which you state that there was an agreement by which you could cancel your contract for advertising in the New York Athletic Club Journal at the end of either three, six, or nine months, or one year, beg to inform you that the arrangement was for a cancellation at the end of three months, and if you did not do so the advertisement was to run the full length of the contract (one year). It is our intention to continue the contract until expiration of same, and we shall be pleased to receive an acknowledgment of this letter at your convenience.
“Very truly yours, New York Athletic Club journal,
“F. M. Tibbitts, Editor.”

Having introduced these letters, the defendant’s counsel then proceeded to examine both the plaintiffs’ witness and! his own concerning the oral agreement made at the time when the written memorandum was signed, with the result that the witnesses, respectively, maintained that that agreement had been what they had respectively stated it to have been in their letters of October 8tíi and 9th. The trial justice evidently believed the version testified to by the defendant’s witnesses, and accordingly rendered judgment for the defendant.

The fact that the defendant was thus permitted to introduce in evidence in its own behalf its letter of October 8th would perhaps justify a reversal of the judgment; but, as the trial was had without a jury, it may be more satisfactory to pass over that point, and consider the more fundamental questions involved in the case, d suppose there can be no question that the agreement which the written memorandum purported to express was sufficiently complete to bring the writing within the so-called paroi evidence rule. That rule forbids any addition to or contradiction of the terms of a written instrument by testimony purporting to "show that at or before the signing of the written paper other, further, or different terms were •orally agreed upon by the parties—provided, -always, that the written [785]*785instrument appears, on its face, to express an agreement complete in all essential terms. This is not a mere rule of evidence. It is a rule of the substantive law. Lese v. Lamprecht, 196 N. Y. 32, 36, 89 N. E. 365; Stanton v. Granger, 125 App. Div. 174, 177, 109 N. Y. Supp. 134; Pitcairn v. Philip Hess Co., 125 Fed. 110, 61 C. C. A. 657. When parties sign a memorandum expressing all the terms essential to a complete agreement, they are to be protected against both the doubtful veracity of interested witnesses and the uncertain memory of the disinterested concerning the terms of their agreement. And the only way in which they can be so protected is by holding each of them conclusively bound by the terms of the agreement as expressed in the writing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 N.Y.S. 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piretti-v-firestone-tire-rubber-co-nyappterm-1910.