Court Opinion

ID: 5557126
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 00:43:16.259934+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:35:21.949399
License: Public Domain

Warner, Chief Justice.
This case came before the court below on a certiorari from a justice’s court. The plaintiffs sued the defendant on a promissory note for $30 00, payable to the plaintiffs four months after date, for value received. The defendant offered in evidence, over the objections of the plaintiffs, that the note was given for a sewing machine, and that the plaintiffs’ agent agreed, at the time the note was given, that if the machine did not give satisfaction to his wife, that he (the agent) would take it back at any time within six months, the agent saying that his time would soon be out; that he wanted the note so as to enable him to get his commissions for selling the machine. The justic.e held that the parol evidence was admissible, and the court below sustained the ruling of the justice and dismissed the certiorari; whereupon the plaintiffs excepted.
Was the parol evidence admissible for the purpose of proving a condition to the contract not expressed on the face of the note? The written contract was a promise to pay the plaintiffs $30 00 for value received, without any conditions whatever. The defendant proposed to prove, and was allowed to prove, that his absolute, unconditional promise, in writing, to *449pay the plaintiffs $30 00, was made on condition that if a certain sewing machine, for which he alleges the note was given, did not give satisfaction to his wife, that the plaintiffs would take it back. The general rule is, that parol cotemporaneous evidence is inadmissible to contradict or vary the terms of a valid written instrument: Code, see. 3800. Parol evidence is inadmissible to add to, take from, or vary a written contract: Code, sec. 2757. There is no ambiguity on the face of the note, either latent or patent, nor does it appear that any part, of the contract was omitted from the note by fraud, accident or mistake. If the contract was conditional, as the defendant now seeks to prove by parol, then it should have been inserted in the note. There is no pretense that the defendant did not know the contents of the paper which he signed, or that only a part of the contract was reduced to writing, by fraud, accident or mistake. The contract which he signed was'an unconditional promise to pay the plaintiffs $30 00, and that written promise of the defendant is the highest and best evidence of the contract: Lester vs. Fowler, 43 Georgia Reports, 190; Sullivan vs. Cotton States Life Insurance Company. 43 Ibid., 423.
The rule which excludes parol evidence from adding to, or taking from, or varying, written contracts, in view of our evidence act which allows parties to testify in their own favor, should not be relaxed. This ease does not come within that class of cases where receipts or notes have been given in settlement of a former indebtedness, which are subject to explanation.
Let the judgment of the court below be reversed.