Court Opinion

ID: 6410674
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:52:27.263928+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:21.763261
License: Public Domain

Thomas, J.
The question raised by these exceptions lies within a narrow compass.
The defendant made a deed of quitclaim to the plaintiff, with a covenant to warrant and defend the quitclaimed premises against the lawful claims and demands of all persons claiming by or under him. There was an incumbrance on the premises, not created by the grantor, to wit, a mortgage of one thousand dollars, and the plaintiff avers that at the time the defendant made this quitclaim and limited covenant by deed, he, at the same time, and for the same consideration, made a paroi agreement to discharge and pay the mortgage.
This action was brought to recover an amount paid by the plaintiff upon the mortgage, which he says the defendant by his paroi agreement had promised to pay. The plaintiff offered evidence of such paroi agreement, and it was excluded. It was, we think, rightly excluded. The parties made a contract in writing at one time, for one consideration, upon one subject matter. Of that contract the written instrument is the exclusive evidence. The paroi evidence, if admitted, would enlarge the covenant contained in the deed ; it would show a covenant, not merely against incumbrances created by the grantor, to which the deed is restricted, but a covenant or agreement to remove incumbrances created by a third person.
It is true, as the plaintiff suggests, that the consideration of a contract, in other respects within the statute of frauds,-may be proved by paroi. You may prove what was the real consideration, and that it was not that recited in the deed. But you cannot show that, as the consideration of a deed from A to B, of Whiteacre, B agreed by paroi to convey Blackacre to A; and rely upon such paroi agreement as the ground of a suit in equity to enforce a specific performance. That is, under the *319power of proving by paroi the consideration of a "written contract, you cannot establish an independent agreement, otherwise within the statute of frauds.
E. B. Stoddard, for the plaintiff,
cited Brackett v. Evans, 1 Cush. 79; Preble v. Baldwin, 6 Cush. 552; Weld v. Nichols, 17 Pick. 538 ; Davenport v. Mason, 15 Mass. 85; Wilkinson v. Scott, 17 Mass. 249 ; Lapham v. Whipple, 8 Met. 59.
G. F. Hoar, for the defendant,
cited 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 281,282; 3 Stark. Ev. (4th Amer. ed.) 1006-1008, & notes; Preston v. Merceau, 2 W. Bl. 1249 ; Powell v. Edmunds, 12 East, 6 ; Brigham v. Rogers, 17 Mass. 571; Beach v. Steele, 12 N. H. 82, Conant v. Dewey, 1 Foster, 355; O'Harra v. Hall, 4 Dall. 340.
Nor can you, under the guise of proving by paroi the consideration of a written contract, add to or take from the other provisions of the written instrument. This would practically dispense with the statute of frauds, and with that sound rule of the common law, which finds in the written contract the exclusive and conclusive evidence of the intent and agreement of the parties, and will not suffer such written contract to be varied or affected by any contemporaneous paroi agreement.
The cases of Brackett v. Evans, 1 Cush. 79, and Preble v. Baldwin, 6 Cush. 549, relied upon by the plaintiff, decided only that an agreement by the grantee to pay the taxes which should be assessed on the land granted, was not within the statute of frauds, as a contract for the sale of land or any interest therein. Nor was that agreement obnoxious to the statute, as a contract to answer for the debt of another; because, if the tax to be assessed could be treated as an existing debt, a promise made by A to B to pay a debt due from B to C is not within the statute; a promise to pay the debt of one of the contracting parties not being a promise within the statute. Eastwood v. Kenyon, 11 Ad. & El. 438. Alger v. Scoville, 1 Gray, 395.
The agreement relied upon by the plaintiff wras an agreement to pay the debt of a third person. It was an agreement contemporaneous with the written contract, extending and enlarging its provisions. In both points of view the evidence was inadmissible.

Exceptions overruled.