Schwartz v. Zaconick
This text of 68 So. 2d 173 (Schwartz v. Zaconick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
SCHWARTZ
v.
ZACONICK et al.
Supreme Court of Florida, Special Division B.
Herbert U. Feibelman, Miami, for appellant.
Ella Jo Stollberg, Hollywood, for appellees.
PATTERSON, Associate Justice.
This cause was commenced in the court below by the appellant, Schwartz, to foreclose a mortgage given by the appellees, the Zaconicks, to secure their note dated April 13, 1948, in the face amount of $7,000 with interest at six per cent payable semi-annually. The bill was filed December 20, 1949 alleging default in the interest payments due in October of 1948 and April and October of 1949, and claims acceleration *174 of the note under provisions in the mortgage deed. The Zaconicks' answer sets up the defenses of failure of consideration and that the note was not in default by reason of a contemporaneous oral agreement between the parties to the note and mortgage that the provisions for interest would not be operative unless the property covered by the mortgage should be sold by mortgagors to third parties.
The defense of failure of consideration is set out in an extensive account of the relations between the parties involving the settlement and discharge of a claim which Schwartz had against the Zaconicks arising out of the loss of certain jewelry entrusted to the Zaconicks by Schwartz. The answer alleges that such claim had been settled and discharged by an exchange of properties between the parties and the simultaneous execution of the note and mortgage to adjust the differential of the exchange to the amount of the agreed settlement, but that inasmuch as Schwartz had brought action to recover the original claim thus settled, the consideration of the note and mortgage had failed. With their answer, the Zaconicks interposed their counterclaim to enjoin Schwartz' action at law on the jewelry claim and to declare their rights under the compromise and settlement alleged.
Certiorari from an order denying motion to dismiss the counterclaim was denied in this court.
Schwartz' contention is that the note and mortgage were given merely to equalize the exchange of the properties referred to in the answer and had no relation to any settlement or compromise of his claim against Zaconick. He denies the alleged oral agreement with respect to interest and challenges its legal efficacy in any event.
On the issues so made the Special Master heard testimony filling nearly six hundred pages of this record, at the conclusion of which he found that the exchange of properties and the simultaneous execution of the note and mortgage sued on did in fact constitute an executed settlement and discharge of the pre-existing claim of Schwartz against Zaconick on the jewelry loss. In addition, he found that there did in fact exist an oral agreement made contemporaneously with the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage, "that as between the parties, the interest requirements of the note were inoperative, but in the event of the sale of said property, such interest payments were to be operative in the event the purchaser assumed the mortgage." The Master obviously was not impressed with the good faith of Schwartz' dealings with the Zaconicks or with his testimony in this cause. He finds that Schwartz' conduct and evidence "are not only a fraud on the court, but also border on perjury." Further, he says: "Even though the oral agreement as to interest be treated as ineffectual, Schwartz should not be allowed to progress this foreclosure suit and seek to penalize Zaconick with heavy litigation expenses, attorney's fees and the like. Were I compelled to decide the legal effect of this oral agreement, I should hold that under the circumstances of this case, equity should recognize it." He recommended that Schwartz' prosecution of his law action against the Zaconicks be permanently enjoined and that his mortgage foreclosure be dismissed. Exceptions to the Master's report were overruled and the final decree appealed from declared and affirmed the discharge of Schwartz' claim on the jewelry loss, permanently enjoined the prosecution of his action thereon, and dismissed his mortgage foreclosure without prejudice to enforce payment of the principal when due.
Our examination of the record discloses sufficient substantial evidence to support the Master's findings on all questions of fact. We have considered all assignments of error and find no merit in them except that which challenges the recognition of the oral agreement with respect to interest, made contemporaneously with the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage. This is the only question left for us to decide and brings to us for consideration the ancient and familiar rule of exclusion that a contemporaneous oral *175 agreement may not be availed of to vary the terms of a formal written instrument. The rule itself cannot be disputed, but appellees urge upon us that the oral agreement involved here is not excluded by the rule, and cites us to sections of Wigmore's discussion of the subject beginning at section 2400 of Volume 9. Wigmore's account deals with the difficulty the courts have sometimes experienced in the terminology and in the proper understanding and application of this familiar rule. The rule does not necessarily exclude extrinsic proof of the true consideration of an instrument, nor that its delivery is conditional, nor that there exists a contemporaneous independent agreement amounting to a separate transaction. Although the principle of the rule is settled, a consideration of its limitations has led more that one writer to say that "few things are darker or fuller of subtle difficulties." However, we encounter no such difficulty in the case before us. The note expressly provides for interest at six per cent payable semi-annually. The oral agreement seeks to impose a condition on that which is expressly unconditional by the terms of the instrument itself. With respect to negotiable instrument, Wigmore, in section 2444, says:
"(1) An extrinsic agreement as to the mode of payment, or the amount of payment, must be, by the foregoing test, ineffective, since the parties have expressly dealt with those matters in the the instrument. Although an agreement to concede a credit or counter claim, as offsetting the obligation of the instrument, would be a separate transaction and therefore valid, yet the distinction between the two may sometimes be hard to draw.
"(2) An extrinsic agreement as to the time of payment is for the same reason ineffectual; although an agreement of renewal, which may practically be equivalent, is in theory an agreement for an independent transaction and should be recognized. An agreement subjecting the obligation of the instrument to any condition or contingency, whether in time or otherwise, is ineffective, because the terms of a negotiable instrument are expressly unconditional; if it be said that the law would not permit the condition to be inserted and that thus it must be extrinsic if at all, the answer is (according to the second canon above stated) that there would then have been no peculiar necessity for resorting to the form of a negotiable instrument."
See also Anderson v. Ax, 104 Fla. 294, 139 So. 798; Knabb v. Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 144 Fla. 110, 197 So. 707; Beasley v. Beasley, 206 Ala. 480, 90 So. 347.
Clearly the oral agreement involved here is excluded by the rule and cannot be given effect under any legal rule or principle cited to us.
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