Court Opinion

ID: 3858012
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:44:33.008885+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:35:15.002677
License: Public Domain

Argued April 18, 1927.
The plaintiff's action is based on four promissory notes for $45 each, dated January 12, 1924, signed by the defendant and delivered by him to the plaintiff to secure the payment for certain musical instruments known as Claxtonola and twelve double faced records to be used therewith. They were given pursuant to the provisions of a contract, Exhibit A attached to the statement of claim, under which the plaintiff agreed to appoint the defendant an agent in the City of Pittsburgh for the sale of such instruments and records. The execution and delivery of the contract and notes is admitted. The merchandise was received by the defendant and he was appointed an agent of the company as provided for in the contract. On May 29, 1924, the defendant sent a notice to the plaintiff that he wished to discontinue the agency for the sale of the instruments; his reason therefor being that he was quitting his business. The defense presented at the trial was that at the time the contract was signed and as an inducement thereto, an agent, acting for the plaintiff in the transaction, stated to the defendant that the contract was merely for the appointment of the defendant as agent for the plaintiff in the sale of instruments and that the notes were to be given as security for those sent on the first order to be given by the defendant. The latter claimed not to be able to read well in the English language and stated that he did not read the paper nor ask to have it read to him; that he relied on the statement of the agent. The wife of the defendant and a clerk in his shop were not called to read the papers for him. He was in the bakery business and had lived in the City of Pittsburgh or that vicinity for more than twenty years. He attended *Page 257 
school for some years in Germany and was educated in the German language. It may be inferred from the evidence in the case that he is a man of average intelligence and he appears to have had some business experience. Apparently he did not misunderstand the terms of the contract as to his authority as an agent and he acted as such for about three months. The only attempt to corroborate his testimony appears in the evidence of a witness named Krell. This witness in response to somewhat leading questions stated that he was working for the defendant in Pittsburgh in January, 1923. In answer to the inquiry whether he saw this agent O'Neil who had procured the contract in question, he replied I saw an agent; I didn't know his name. The defendant and the agent were talking in the store. They were talking about victrolas. The witness said that he hadn't much time, but he heard the agent coaxing Mr. Kroker to sign some notes which Kroker didn't want to sign, during which conversation the man said that he, the defendant, should sign these notes as security for the victrolas; that the man said they could be sent back any time and that the defendant could discontinue the agency and return the property. In answer to the question was there any agreement or papers there, the witness replied, I didn't see any. In answer to the further question "And you left before any papers were signed"? He answered "Yes, I did." To the further question did you see these papers, he replied, no, I didn't. It is apparent we think that this evidence is not such corroboration as is required when it is proposed to modify or contradict a written contract. If we assume that the testimony of the defendant is sufficiently clear to disclose a defense, it cannot be said that it is supported by such corroboration as to make the evidence clear, precise and indubitable as is necessary to avoid the effect of the obligation: Phillips v. *Page 258 
Meily, 106 Pa. 536; Fuller v. Law, 207 Pa. 101; Hicks v. Harbison, 212 Pa. 437; Faux v. Fitler, 232 Pa. 33. The rule is well established that such an instrument cannot be avoided by the uncorroborated evidence of the obligor, and the corroboration must go to the execution of the paper. The testimony of the witness Krell neither identifies the time nor the person who had the conversation with the defendant and he frankly states that no papers were seen and that he was not present at the signing of any agreement. Even if he identified the time when the plaintiff's agent and the defendant were in conversation about the sale of victrolas or the appointment of an agent, there is not the slightest suggestion with respect to the terms on which the parties actually contracted at some later time. Written evidence of indebtedness or of other contract obligations would be little more than scraps of paper if their prima facie integrity is to be overcome by evidence whose weight only exists in inferences or implications. In our judgment, the evidence of the defendant is not corroborated by relevant evidence or circumstances and the allegation of a contemporaneous parole agreement modifying the written contracts is not supported by an adequate weight of evidence. The plaintiff was entitled therefore to an affirmation of the point set forth in the first assignment of error in effect requesting binding instructions for the plaintiff. It follows that the rule for judgment non obstante veredicto should have been made absolute.
The judgment is reversed and it is now entered in favor of the plaintiff. *Page 259