Lowem v. Hickman
Decision Date | 12 November 1906 |
Citation | 97 S.W. 681,80 Ark. 505 |
Parties | LOWEM v. HICKMAN |
Court | Arkansas Supreme Court |
Appeal from Saline Circuit Court; Alexander M. Duffie, Judge affirmed.
J. O Hickman sued W. H. Lower and Dewell Gann, alleging that, on October 14, 1902, they executed to him a promissory note for $ 850, payable December 1, 1902, on which $ 210,65 had been paid, and that the remainder was due and unpaid; that the note was given for purchase of a certain sawmill and attachments. Prayer was that the property be seized and sold and the proceeds applied on the note.
The answer of the defendants alleged false representations and "that at the time said machinery was purchased and said note was made, and as a part of the same transaction, the plaintiff warranted said machinery to cut 20,000 feet of lumber per day, and but for said warranty of plaintiff the defendants would not have bought said machinery and executed said note; that said machinery would not cut 20,000 feet of lumber per day, and could not be made to cut one-half of said amount."
The note sued on was as follows:
(Here follow stipulations as to when installments were payable and a description of the sawmill and attachments; whereupon the instrument continues as follows.)
Witness:
"D. M. Cloud."
It was shown by Dewell Gann, one of the defendants, that, in the negotiation for the purchase of the machinery, Hickman told him that the sawmill would cut 20,000 feet a day, and that this induced Gann to sign the note as surety for Lower. Hickman, at the same time, made a written statement to Gann in which is included the statement that the mill is of 20,000 feet capacity. This written statement was as follows:
Gann testified that it was upon this written statement and the oral statement of Hickman that the mill would cut 20,000 feet per day that Lower & Gann signed the note.
Thereupon, while introducing this statement in evidence, Gann was asked by This was objected to by the plaintiff for the reason "that the writing sued upon was a writing, and no mention of warranty being made therein." The court sustained the objection, holding that the note constituted the contract of sale between the parties, and, being in writing, a warranty could not be shown otherwise. The defendants excepted to this, and it is made a ground for new trial.
The issue as to false representations was properly submitted to the jury, but the court refused to submit to the jury the question whether there was a warranty in the sale of the mill. The verdict was for plaintiff, and defendants have appealed.
Affirmed.
D. M. Cloud, J. W. Westbrook and Mchaffy & Armistead, for appellants.
1. It was error to exclude testimony to show that appellee warranted the capacity of the sawmill. The use of the word "warranty" is not necessary to make a warranty. 64 F. 70; 11 Ark. 339. The memorandum contains the warranty; but even if it did not, but was only a mere memorandum of the articles sold, it would be competent to introduce parol testimony. 30 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 Ed.), 169, 170. An express warranty is not required to be in writing. 103 Ala. 152; 30 Mo. 406. The contract, being partly in writing and partly in parol, is to be regarded as a parol contract, and proof of a warranty is admissible. 98 Am. Dec. 435; 8 Lea, 468.
2. The court's instruction with reference to the warranty and the plaintiff's good faith in making the same is erroneous. Whether the warrantor knew or did not know that he was deceiving is immaterial. It is only necessary that the warranty be made, that purchaser rely upon it, and that it fail. 122 U.S. 575. The test whether representations made by a vendor constitute a warranty is, whether he so intended them, and whether the vendee purchased on the faith of them. 30 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 Ed.), 151, 152.
Wood & Henderson, for appellee.
OPINION
An examination of the rejected evidence, the memorandum alleged to have been signed by Hickman and the final contract signed by Lower and Gann, will show that two questions have arisen:
1. Was it competent to prove an oral warranty of the capacity of the sawmill?
2. Was it competent to prove that the words "sawmill cap. 20,000" on the memorandum meant a warranty that the sawmill had a capacity to cut 20,000 feet of lumber per day?
1. A warranty is so clearly a part of a sale that where the sale is evidenced by a written instrument it is incompetent to engraft upon it a warranty proved by parol. The character of the written instrument is not important, so long as it purports to be a complete transaction of itself, and not a mere incomplete memorandum or receipt for money or part of a transaction where there are other parts of it other than warranties. It may be a complete contract signed by both parties. and comprehensive and exhaustive in detail, and contain many mutual agreements, terms and stipulations, or it may be a simple bill of sale, or sale note evidencing the sale. The principle is the same in any of these transactions and oral evidence of a warranty is almost universally excluded when a complete written instrument evidences the sale. It is not important that the instrument be signed by both parties, for acceptance of the other may be equally binding, and the principle here invoked is as often applied to unilateral as to bilateral instruments. For the statement of the principles involved and the many applications thereof see: 4 Wigmore on Evidence, § 2434; and review in notes; 1 Elliott on Ev. § 580; Seitz v. Brewers' Refrigerating Co., 141 U.S. 510, 35 L.Ed. 837, 12 S.Ct. 46; Hanger v....
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