Avery Co. of Texas v. Staples Mercantile Co.
Avery Co. of Texas v. Staples Mercantile Co.
Opinion of the Court
Appellee sued appellant for $2,050 paid as the purchase price by appel-ee from appellant of one model type A Avery farm truck. The sale of the truck was about August 4, 1918, and the notes given in part payment therefor were paid about their maturity, October 1, 1913. Alfred Koebig was' originally made a defendant along with the Avery Company of Texas, since he was the local agent who effected the sale of the truck, but he was subsequently dismissed from the suit. More of this later in the opinion.
The petition charges that, when the purchase was completed, appellee was requested by appellant’s agent to sign an order blank addressed to Avery Company of Texas at Dallas, Tex., requesting the shipment of the truck, which order blank contained the following warranty:
“We guarantee Avery motor trucks against defective material and workmanship for a period of one year from date of shipment, and will replace free of charge f. o. b. factory any parts broken by reason of such defects, provided such parts are returned to Dallas for our inspection (transportation charges to Dallas prepaid), tagged with the name of the sender, the number of the truck from which the part or parts were taken, and the reasons for returning.
“This guarantee does not apply to tires, chains, or special equipment which are not manufactured by Avery Company, but are covered by the regular manufacturer’s guarantee.
“This guarantee does not apply to claims arising from accident, misuse, or neglect in connection with machinery thereby purchased.
“The purchaser understands and agrees that no other guarantee of Avery motor trucks is made or authorized to be madé by the company or its agents other above set forth.”
The petition further alleges that the order blank constituting the contract for the purchase did not contain the entire contract, and did not intend or propose to express or do more than secure appellee’s obligation to purchase and pay for the truck, and alleges that the truck was either defectively constructed, or constructed of defective material, and “was worthless and of no value,” as a truck machine. The efforts put forth to make the truck do the work for which it was purchased are set forth, and notice is alleged to have been given appellant of such defects and of its failure to do the work for which it was purchased, and that finally the machine went to pieces, could not be operated at all, and was wholly worthless, and was secondhand when purchased. Ap-pellee charges' that it was deceived by appellant at the time <5£ the purchase in that same was sold for a new machine, but was secondhand, and that its value at the time was only nominal, but, if it had been as represented, it would have been worth the contract price, for which this suit is brought as damages.
Appellant answered with numerous exceptions and denials, and denied specially that it ever sold the machine to appellee, but that Alfred Koebig had bought a machine on the same date from appellant, and that no representations were made except as contained in the written contract. It then sets up and relies on that written warranty, and pleads estoppel on the ground of laches, knowledge on the purchaser’s part, and under the terms of the written contract of sale.
The case was tried before a jury, resulting in a verdict in appellee’s favor for the amount sued for, upon which a judgment was entered.
It is elementary that, as a general rule, parol testimony is not admissible to vary the terms of a written contract; but there is no such sanctity about a writing that parties may not be permitted to go back of it and show that there was such fraud practiced in the procurement of the same as to vitiate the writing. By reason of various representations which appellee maintained were false, such, for instance, as that the truck was a new one, when, in truth, it was an old secondhand, worthless pile of junk, they were induced to sign the order containing the statements herein referred to, stating that this writing contained the whole agreement with reference to warranties, etc. The law never countenanced a rule which would deny a man the right to take advantage of fraud which had been practiced upon him. A contract was never drawn in language strong enough that fraud in its procurement may not penetrate and destroy. The very basic idea of a contract is that the minds have met in an agreement upon the matters, the subject-matter of the contract. It presupposes that the parties understand the elements entering into the agreement, and, if one party has deceived the other and withheld facts the other should know, or has misled him as to the facts upon which the agreement is based, there is no such contract that the law will not permit the light of investigation to be turned on it with a view of ascertaining whether it is enforceable. The late Justice Neill, speaking for this court in U. S. Gypsum Co. v. Shields, 106 S. W. 726, said:
“If a party were denied the right to show facts which prevent a writing from constituting a contract, such a writing would be free from all defenses and outside of all rules which determine the validity of contracts. * * * The evidence objected to was not introduced for the purpose of varying the terms of the writing sued upon, which it did not tend to do, but to the end of showing that defendant was induced to sign the paper by the fraudulent representations of the plaintiff.”
And this opinion was affirmed by the Supreme Court in 101 Tex. 473, 108 S. W. 1165.
See, also, Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Co. v. Bomar, 169 S. W. 1062, where a subscription blank to corporation stock recited that no conditions, representations, or agreements other than those printed therein should be binding on the corporation, and Justice Hendricks, speaking for the court, said, in substance, that parol evidence that the contract had been obtained from the plaintiff on false representations as to the amount of the corporation’s capital stock which had been actually paid was admissible to show that the contract, by reason of the fraud, never, in fact, came into existence, and was not objectionable as varying the terms of the written subscription.
“Why, this machine has only been used for demonstrating to prospective buyers. The same *46 guaranty covers it. You can run it around town a few times, and it wiU look like it has been used a little.”
But he stated that it was as good as new, and Schultz thought he was buying a new truck that had only been used for demonstration purposes moderately, for which use the price was cut $50. The price they had made was $2,100, but it was sold for $2,050. So the selling price could make no difference.
“Mr. Peters stated to me that, if at any time we had any trouble with the truck, they would send a machinist, no matter where it was, to repair it and get it in good running order.
It seems to have been admitted to show the appellee’s good faith in requesting that a skilled mechanic be sent to repair the car.
All assignments not specifically mentioned are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.
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