Seaman v. O'Hara

Decision Date29 January 1874
Citation29 Mich. 66
PartiesWilliam S. Seaman v. William O'Hara
CourtMichigan Supreme Court

Heard January 16, 1874

Error to Calhoun Circuit.

Assumpsit. Plaintiff brings error. Reversed.

Judgment reversed, with costs, and a new trial awarded.

T. G Pray, for plaintiff in error, was stopped by the court.

Brown & Patterson, for defendant in error.

Cooley J. Graves, Ch. J., and Campbell, J., concurred. Christiancy J., did not sit in this case.

OPINION

Cooley, J.

This suit was brought to recover a certain sum paid by plaintiff on a mortgage given by defendant and covering premises which defendant had afterwards sold to plaintiff. The deed which defendant gave the plaintiff contained a covenant which plaintiff claimed made defendant liable to pay any sum owing upon the mortgage beyond a certain sum which was specified, while defendant, on the other hand, insisted that he conveyed subject to the payment by plaintiff of the whole mortgage. The plaintiff did in fact pay the whole, but then brought suit in assumpsit on the common counts to recover from defendant the sum which he claimed the latter should have paid.

On the trial plaintiff sought to prove an understanding between himself and defendant at the time the deed was given that any sum owing on the mortgage beyond the sum named in the deed should be paid by defendant. The evidence for this purpose was rejected. He then offered to prove that in a business transaction between the parties several months afterwards, the defendant agreed to make such payment, but this offer was also rejected.

The ground of the rejection appears to have been that the proposed evidence tended to vary and contradict the written evidence of the contract between the parties. But this objection is only applicable to evidence of oral understandings contemporaneous with the writings. Parties who have made contracts may vary them afterwards as much as they please, and if the nature of their agreements is not such that the law requires them to be in writing, the fact that a previous arrangement relating to the same subject, and which would be varied by the new contract, was in writing, cannot make it imperative that the new contract should be reduced to writing also. The written and the oral contract thus made at different times may both be valid so far as they are not inconsistent, and when they are inconsistent, the one latest in time will control.

It was...

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17 cases
  • Insurance Co. of North America v. Williams
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • November 15, 1917
    ...prevent its change by subsequent parol agreement. Any written contract not within the statute of frauds may be changed by parol. Seamen v. O'Hara, 29 Mich. 66. And this has applied to the enlargement, and continuance of policies. Kennebec v. Augusta Ins. Co., 6 Gray [Mass.] 209; Trustees, F......
  • Westchester Fire Ins. Co. v. Earle
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  • Richards v. Fuller
    • United States
    • Michigan Supreme Court
    • June 20, 1877
    ... ... 687); or of additional matters agreed on, ... if consistent with the written contract (Loud v ... Campbell 26 Mich. 239 and note; Seaman v ... O'Hara 29 Mich. 66; Gillett v. Bowman 43 ... Mich. 477, 5 N.W. 661; Mason v. Phelps 48 Mich. 126, ... 11 N.W. 413; Skeels v. Starrett 57 ... ...
  • Quinlivan v. Dennstedt Land Co.
    • United States
    • North Dakota Supreme Court
    • April 2, 1918
    ... ... substitute for the old or in addition to and beyond it. 1 ... Greenl. Ev. § 303; Bannan v. Aultman & Co ... (Wis.) 49 N.W. 967; Seaman v. O'Hara, 29 ... Mich. 66, 67; Ch. Cont. ed of 1848; 2 Phill. Ev. 363; 4 ... Phill. Ev. 301 note; Bryan v. Hunt, 70 Am. Dec. 262; ... Bryan ... ...
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