Standard Oil Co. v. Myers

169 So. 312, 232 Ala. 662, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 25, 1936
Docket6 Div. 829.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 169 So. 312 (Standard Oil Co. v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Oil Co. v. Myers, 169 So. 312, 232 Ala. 662, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 333 (Ala. 1936).

Opinion

THOMAS, Justice.

The trial was had on the common counts.

Where a contract has been executed by the parties thereto and all that remains is the payment, of the amount due therefor under the contract, the party to whom the consideration is-due may maintain an action therefor in the form known as the common counts. Code, § 9531, forms 10 and 11.

The defendant says it is not indebted, and that it has paid plaintiff all sums due under the contracts alleged.

It is undisputed that at the inception of the parties’ dealings there was a written lease and an agency contract signed by the parties. The defendant claims modification thereof by subsequent contracts or agreements. This is denied by the plaintiff.

The trial court charged: “Now, it is the law that a party who signs his name to a written contract, and who can read and understand that contract, but who does not elect to read it, is bound by the terms' of it, just the same as if he did read it, unless through fraud or misrepre *664 sentations by the other party or its agents he was induced to sign it without knowing the true contents, in which event it would not be the contract of the party who had been defrauded.” Exception was reserved by the defendant to this portion of the oral charge, and it is here insisted that the evidence did not warrant such instruction, nor was it warranted under the reasonable tendencies of the evidence.

There was no error in overruling the objection that the question to Mr. Myers, “Mr. Myers, when you signed this paper, I will ask you to state — look at the paper. This is one, and then the rider that is on it. I will ask you to state whether or not you read this thing?” seeks to vary the terms of the contract, and in allowing plaintiff to answer”: “No, sir; I did not.” Such was not the effect of the question; it did not. come within the rule that obtains as to varying the terms of a written contract by parol testimony. Formby v. Williams, 203 Ala. 14, 81 So. 682.

The record recites the following in the course of examination of plaintiff- in this connection: ,

“When I put my signature on this paper and this writing, Mr. Carter brought it to me. I couldn’t say positive where I was when he brought it; I was at work right there at -the filling station, painting. * * ‡
“Q. Did Mr. Carter tell you what the paper was ? A. No, sir. I asked him this question. I said, what is it for?
“Thereupon counsel for defendant objected to that portion of plaintiff's answer, what he asked Mr. Carter.
“Thereupon the court overruled defendant’s said objection to said portiqn of plaintiff’s answer. To this ruling of the court counsel for defendant then and there in open Court duly and legally excepted.
“Thereupon the plaintiff testified further as follows:
“I asked Mr. Carter: ‘What was that?’ I said: ‘Mr. Carter, I am black and greasy. I never sign anything unless I read it.’ He said: ‘Mr. Myers, it wasn’t nothing but to give you a little more money.’ * * *
“Q. I will ask you this question: Yesterday you testified that you had made objections to Mr. Carter of the Standard Oil Company, and to Mr. Ashley, the Standard Oil Company’s driver, with reference to the fact that you were not getting your three cents commission and your one cent rent. Now, I will ask you to state to the jury whether or not he came before you made those objections or after you made the objections.
“Thereupon counsel for defendant objected to said question so propounded to plaintiff on the ground that it is not sufficiently confined as to the time the objections were made, that it extends over a period of two or three years.
“Thereupon the court overruled defendant’s said objection to said question. To this ruling of the court counsel for defendant then and there in open court duly and legally, excepted.
“A. It was afterwards.
“Thereupon counsel for plaintiff asked plaintiff the following question :
“Q. It was afterwards. What was it you said Mr. Carter said? * * *
“Q. The paper — the purpose of that paper— A. Giving you more money.
“Thereupon plaintiff testified further as follows:
“After he told me that it was for the purpose of getting more money, I signed that paper without reading it.”

In further examination -of plaintiff, the record recites the following:

“When Mr. Carter came out with this contract which I have stated on cross-examination that I signed-1 — Mr. Carter presented that contract to me for signature. He did not tell me what the contents of that paper were before I signed it. I did not read that contract. * * *
“Q. Did he read to you anything with reference to what was in the contract? For what it was for? * * *
“A. I asked him what it was, and he said: ‘Mr. Myers, it is just to give you some more money,’ and I said: T am black and dirty now and I am not going to read it, Mr. Carter; I will just take your word for it,’ and he said: ‘That is all right, Mr. Myers; I am in a hurry;’ and I just signed it.
“Thereupon plaintiff testified further as follows :
“I did not read the contract, not a word of it. I just signed it on the agreement that it was to get more money. I thought he was going to come across with thai back money that he wouldn’t pay. I stated that I also signed this one. He did not *665 -make any representation to me as to what that paper was before I signed it, only just to give me more money. He did tell ■me it was to give me more money. * * *
“Q. What did you state with reference to reading it or not? Did you read it? * * * A. I didn’t see a thing, only just to see how it read right there — like I told you awhile ago.
“Thereupon plaintiff testified further as follows:
“I did not read it, not a word of it. I signed it after he told me what it was. I am pretty busy at times in conducting my filling station there. Mr. Carter said: ‘Mr. Myers, that is what it was for, just to give you some more money, and I am in a hurry.’ And I believe he said: ‘You know I am not going to tell you nothing that ain’t right.’ And I signed it. * * *
“When Mr. Carter brought those papers •out there and I signed them, he didn’t leave what I signed there. They did not lie over at my place at all; only those two Mr. Koenig has got, the contract or lease we have here, and one which was the rent are the only two. I tell the jury when Mr. Carter brought those papers out there and told me what I said he told me, I just signed them and he took them on away with him, and they did not lie over at my place at all; if they did, I didn’t know it.”

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Bluebook (online)
169 So. 312, 232 Ala. 662, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-co-v-myers-ala-1936.