Waldorf v. Simpson

15 A.D. 297, 44 N.Y.S. 921
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 A.D. 297 (Waldorf v. Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waldorf v. Simpson, 15 A.D. 297, 44 N.Y.S. 921 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

Parker, P. J.:

I am of the opinion that the contract between the defendant Simpson and the Wrought Iron Range Company must be found in the papers which were executed by both, at the time the range in question was delivered. The memorandum put in evidence by defendant, without reference to the notice printed in red ink on its back, is, in effect, a bill of sale of the range, in which the terms of the sale are fully stated. By those terms the defendant is to give his note for sixty-nine dollars, bearing even date therewith, and to become due June 1, 1895, and the range is not to be transferred by defendant until fully paid for, and no receipts, discounts or offsets are to be accepted against such note of sixty-nine dollars. The company, on its part, guarantees the proper working of the range, as therein particularly stated, and to furnish for a period of five years, free of charge, any parts of the range which, with ordinary usage, get out of repair.

It is also expressly provided in such agreement as follows : “ This is the only agreement or stipulation recognized in the purchase and sale of said range, and no alteration of above conditions, or erasure by salesman, is authorized, or will be recognized by said company.” When defendant Simpson received this agreement from the company and signed a duplicate thereof, we must presume that he knew the contents thereof. Without including the printed notice on the back of such paper as part of the contract, or charging defendant with knowledge of its contents, nevertheless, as to the terms of the writing which he then signed, he must (in the absence of any proof of a fraudulent concealment) be held to have understood them, and to be bound by the contract therein expressed. “A contractor must stand by the words of his contract, and if he will not read what he signs, he alone is responsible for his omission.” (Upton v. Tribilcock, 91 U. S. 45, 50; Chu Pawn v. Irwin, 82 Hun, 607, 610; Moran v. Mclarty, 75 N. Y. 25.) He was, therefore, not only notified in plain print, but he signed an agreement to the effect that the note which he must give for the range was a sixty-nine dollar note, and that any change from that price made by the sales[300]*300man, either by agreement, alteration or erasure, was in direct violation of such salesman’s powers as an agent, was utterly without authority, and would be inoperative as against the principal from whom the purchase was made. It cannot be said that the agreement which he then signed was the paper as altered by the salesman from sixty-nine dollars to sixty-four dollars, because he contracts in the very paper itself that such alteration is without authority and of no effect. And his acceptance and execution of that bill of sale and his retention of the range were an election on his part to make the purchase on the terms contained in the printed and unaltered contract.

It makes no difference that this written contract was not shown him until after the selling agent had agreed to let him have the range for sixty-four dollars, and he had executed the note under such an arrangement When he was called upon to execute that writing he discovered the only terms upon which the principal was willing to sell. He was notified that the principal had but one price, and that the agent had no authority to make any other; and it was his duty thereupon to have recalled his note and refused to take the range unless he was willing to give the price and accept the terms, as printed in the bill of sale tendered him.

He did not recall his note, but retained the range and executed the agreement, thus securing to himself the benefit of the seller’s guaranty, and obligating himself not to transfer the range till paid for. Clearly, he took and held the range under that bill of sale, and the contract between himself and the seller was as printed therein. All the talk on the part of the agent, about selling for sixty-four dollars, was merged in that printed contract. (Engelhorn v. Reitlinger, 122 N. Y. 76, 81.) His alteration of the price therein specified was utterly void, and was agreed to be so over the defendant’s own signature

It is to be noticed, also, that the defendant does not claim to have been ignorant of the terms of the agreement so signed by him. He says: At that time I did not particularly notice it. I did not read it all. I don’t think I noticed the red print on the back of it.” He also testified: I don’t think I read all that red print on the back of the agreement, called Notice Special, at the time I got it. I think it was on there when I got it.” This is the full extent of [301]*301his claim that he was ignorant of the terms of the contract he signed; and, in the absence of any presumption, even, it would hardly justify a finding that he was not cognizant of the full and precise language of such contract.

Assuming, then, as we must,. that the contract under which defendant purchased the range was the printed one, signed by himself and the payee of the note, he was obligated to execute and deliver to the payee just such a note as is found upon the face of the one he did execute. And any agreement indorsed upon the back thereof, to the. effect that such note was to be binding for the sum of sixty-four dollars only, was a variation of the actual contract, and was utterly nugatory as between himself and the payee. 1 concede that an agreement, limiting the maker’s liability upon a note, might be indorsed upon the back of it, and would be read as apart of the note, if such agreement was put there to make it conform to the real contract between the maker and the payee. But if the real contract was expressed upon the face of the note, any indorsement upon the back tending to alter or modify it, put there by the maker or any person not authorized to make such change, could not be used as a lawful modification of the note, and hence could not be read into the note as a part thereof.

Suppose the defendant, in this case, had executed and delivered this note without any indorsement thereon, but the agent had executed and delivered to him a written agreement to the effect that only sixty-four dollars should be collected thereon, and had signed thereto the payee’s name, it seems clear that such an agreement would not, as against the payee, bar a recovery for the whole amount of the note. The agent’s want of authority to make such an agreement would be too plainly established by the bill of sale under which defendant purchased. And, if the agent should repossess himself of that agreement and destroy it, it could not be said that he had thereby, in any material part, affected the actual contract between the maker and the payee.

For the same reason I conclude that a destruction of the indorsement, placed by the' agent upon the back of this note, does not change the contract between the maker and the payee, either as expressed by the note itself, or as actually made between them.

The note, as expressed upon the face of it, and the printed bill of [302]*302sale, constituted the contract between the maker and the payee, and the indorsement upon the back of the note was but an attempt to modify the terms of that contract by a separate and unauthorized agreement between the maker and an unauthorized agent.

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Bluebook (online)
15 A.D. 297, 44 N.Y.S. 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldorf-v-simpson-nyappdiv-1897.