New England Granite Works v. Bailey
Decision Date | 31 October 1896 |
Citation | 37 A. 1043,69 Vt. 257 |
Parties | NEW ENGLAND GRANITE WORKS v. BAILEY. |
Court | Vermont Supreme Court |
Exceptions from Washington county court; Ross, Chief Judge.
Assumpsit in the common counts by the New England Granite Works against Harriet Bailey. Pleas, nonassumpsit and several special defenses. Judgment for defendant. Plaintiff excepts. Affirmed.
F. L. Laird, for plaintiff.
T. J. Deavitt and S. C. Shurtleff, for defendant.
The plaintiff seeks to recover for a balance alleged to be due it for a monument erected on the defendant's lot in Montpelier cemetery. By the terms of the contract, which was in writing, the monument was to be of "white Westerly granite." The monument erected was of a reddish or choco late tinge in color. The defendant refused to accept the monument, on account of its color, claiming that it must be of a whiter shade to fulfill the contract in respect to color. The county court found that there were different varieties of Westerly granite, known among dealers as "white Westerly granite," none of which are pure white. The coloring material is intermixed in some, is of a reddish cast, which will give to the polished surface a chocolate tinge or color, and a slighter tinge or color of the same kind to the hammered surface. These tinges or colors are not all of the same intensity. In another variety of white Westerly granite the coloring matter is of a bluish color of different intensities. This gives to the polished and hammered surface a grayish white color. A monument from this variety has more of the appearance of clear white than one constructed of the reddish variety. The plaintiff contends that there was no evidence to support the finding that there was more than one kind of Westerly granite known to the trade as "white Westerly."
We have carefully examined the transcript of the evidence, and find that this contention cannot be sustained, there being evidence tending to prove the facts found. For instance, Henry Bertoli, a witness improved by the plaintiff to show that the monument in question was made of white Westerly granite, on cross-examination testified: Other evidence also had the same tendency.
The plaintiff also insists that it was error to permit the defendant to show by parol evidence that at the time the contract was made it was understood and agreed by the parties that the monument should be made from the whitest variety of white Westerly granite,— the one which took a grayish, rather than a reddish, cast. It is urged that this phase of the case falls within the general rule that "parol contemporaneous evidence is inadmissible to contradict or vary the terms of a valid written instrument." 1 Greenl. Ev. (12th Ed.) § 275. It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish that the monument was made of white Westerly granite. The granite of which it was made was not white,...
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