Clark v. Duncan, 214 Ark. 83, 214 S.W.2d 493 (1948)

Nov. 8, 1948 · Arkansas Supreme Court · 4-8632
214 Ark. 83, 214 S.W.2d 493

Clark v. Duncan.

4-8632

214 S. W. 2d 493

Opinion delivered November 8, 1948.

Ed. Trice, for appellant.

Thomas L. Gashion, for appellee.

Ed. F. McFaddiN, Justice.

This appeal presents problems arising from the alleged parol rescission of a written contract.

In December, 1945, Clark leased certain lands to Duncan for the calendar years of 1946, 1947 and 1948. The contract was in writing, and a rent note was executed for each year. Duncan cultivated the lands in 1946 and paid the rent for that year; but did neither in 1947. Thereupon Clark filed this action on the 1947 *84rent note. Duncan’s defense was that he and Clark had by parol mutual consent rescinded the written rent contract, and that such rescission was effective at the end of 1946. The case was tried to a jury, and Clark and Duncan were the only witnesses. There was a verdict and judgment for Duncan, the correctness of which is challenged by this appeal. Our decision turns on instruction No. I1 given by the Court, which reads in part:

“As a defense to this suit the defendant asserts that there was a mutual agreement by and between the plaintiff, B. C. Clark, and the defendant, J. H. Duncan, revoking and annulling said contract. You are, therefore, instructed that the burden of proof is upon the defendant to establish the fact that said mutual agreement was entered into and said contract revoked. If you find from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that said contract was revoked by the mutual agreement between the parties hereto, then said revocation is binding upon both parties, and you will find for the defendant.” (Italics our own).

It will be observed that the court told the jury that the proof of the parol rescission of the written contract need be established by only a ‘‘preponderance of the evidence.” Clark offered a general objection to this instruction. We therefore have two questions: (1) quantum of proof, and (2) sufficiency of the general objection. We proceed to discuss these.

I. Quantum of Proof. The question presented is this: May parol rescission of a written contract be established by a mere “preponderance of the evidence,” or must such evidence be “clear and convincing?” In 12 Am. Juris. 1012 this appears: “ . . . evidence of rescission of a written contract by a subsequent parol agreement must be clear, positive, and above suspicion.”

In 13 C. J. 780 and in 17 C. J. S. 1261 this appears: “ . . . proof of an oral rescission of a written contract *85must be clear and convincing.” Cases from many jurisdictions sustain tbe foregoing textual statements.2

Our own case of Terral v. Poe, 190 Ark. 346, 79 S. W. 2d 69, bears directly on tbe question. ,In that case, Poole bad a written contract witb Terral, but sought to show a subsequent parol contract rescinding tbe written agreement. Concerning tbe quanhim of evidence, Mr. Justice McIIaNey said: “Moreover, a contract in writing is not to be so lightly set aside. It takes something more than a mere preponderance of tbe evidence to overturn tbe written agreement.”

Tbe case of Peck v. Stafford Flour Mills Co., 289 Fed. 43, is enlightening. There, tbe Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, after stating that — absent any question of tbe statute of frauds — a prior written contract might be can-celled by subsequent oral agreement, said: “But tbe evidence in all such cases must be clear and convincing as to tbe oral agreement.”

Without further discussion of tbe cited cases, we bold that, when it is sought to establish a parol rescission of a written contract, then the evidence of.such rescission must be “clear and convincing.” >So the instruction here questioned is erroneous, in that it stated “preponderance of the evidence,” when it should have stated “clear and convincing evidence.”

II. Sufficiency of a General Objection. To the instruction here involved, Clark offered only a general objection; and the question therefore is: even if the proof had to be clear and convincing, does a mere general objection reach such defect in the instruction, or must there be a specific objection? Appellee cites us to such cases as Washa v. Harris, 167 Ark. 186, 266 S. W. 944; Tennyson v. Keef, 172 Ark. 877, 291 S. W. 426; and *86 Emerson & Co. v. Stevens Grocery Co., 105 Ark. 575, 151 S. W. 1003. In each of these cases there may be found statements to the effect that, when an instruction is confusing or misleading, there must be a specific objection, so that the court may have an opportunity to correct the instruction. But the instruction here at issue was more than “confusing or misleading”; the instruction was affirmatively and inherently erroneous. Furthermore, it was a “binding”3 instruction, in that it told the jury: “If you find from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that said contract was revoked by the mutual agreement between the parties hereto, then said revocation is binding upon both parties, and you will find for the defendant.”

Being a binding instruction and being erroneous, it was therefore inherently erroneous, because it directed' the jury to make a finding based on less than the required evidence on the issue of rescission.,. When an instruction is inherently erroneous and binding, it cannot be,cured by a concurrent correct instruction; hence a general objection is sufficient. Mo. Valley Bridge Co. v. Malone, 153 Ark. 454, 240 S. W. 719; First National Bank v. Peugh, 160 Ark. 517, 255 S. W. 4; Mo. Pac R. Co. v. Johnson, 167 Ark. 464, 268 S. W. 31; Arkebauer v. Falcon Zinc Co., 178 Ark. 943, 12 S. W. 2d 916; Harper v. Futrell, 204 Ark. 822, 164 S. W. 2d 995, 143 A. L. R. 235.

Since instruction No. 1 was a binding instruction and was inherently erroneous, it follows that the judgment is reversed and the cause-is remanded.