— Respondent moved to dismiss the appeal in this case because the transcript was not filed or served within the time allowed by Rule 26, and no extension of time had been secured under Rule 28 of this court, effective February 25, 1920. The appeal was perfected February' 21, 1921, when the rules of February 25, 1920, were in effect, which gave the appellant sixty days after the settlement of the reporter’s transcript within which to file the record on appeal. The reporter’s transcript was settled and allowed February 13, 1922, and the transcript was filed in the supreme court March 10, 1922. The motion to dismiss is therefore denied. (Obermeyer v. Kendall, 36 Ida. 144, 209 Pac. 888.)
Appellant sold to respondent an automobile, part of the payment therefor being covered by a conditional sale contract or title retaining note, as follows:
“$600.00. Jerome, Idaho, March 8, 1918.
“On cr before the 1st day of Oct. 1919, for value received, I, John F. Schmershall, the undersigned, promise to *250pay to S. Foster, or order, the sum of Six Hundred no/100 Dollars, at the office of S. Foster, in Jerome, Idaho, together with interest thereon from date at the rate of 10 per cent per annum until maturity, together with interest at the rate of one per cent per month after maturity, both before and after judgment, until fully paid, together with a reasonable attorney’s fee and all costs that may be incurred in action or proceeding instituted for the collection of this note or the enforcement of this contract.
“This contract note is given for the following described personal propei’ty, hereinafter called ‘said property,’ to-wit: One Chandler Touring Car, No. 37541, this day sold conditionally by S. Foster to the undersigned upon the following conditions:
“The express condition of this transaction is that the title or ownership of ‘said property’ does not pass from the said S. Foster until this note and interest shall have been paid in full, and the said S. Foster has full power to declare this note due and take possession of ‘said property’ when he deems himself insecure, even before the maturity of this note; and it is further agreed by the maker hereof, that they will not sell or dispose of ‘said property’ except on the written order of said S. Foster. In case said S. Foster shall take possession of the ‘said property’ he may at his pleasure sell the same at public or private sale without notice, and apply the proceeds on this note, or he may without sale endorse the value of ‘said property’ on the note, and I or either of us, agree to pay on this note the balance due thereon after such endorsement, as damages and rental for ‘said property,’ as to this debt we waive the right to exempt, or claim as exempt, any property, real or personal, we now own or may hereafter acquire, by virtue of any homestead, or exemption law, now in force or that may hereafter be enacted.
“The undersigned also agrees to pay the taxes assessed on ‘said property’ from the date of this agreement and in case of fire or any other cause in which ‘said property’ is *251injured, the undersigned agrees to hold themselves responsible for the fulfillment of the contract.
“The purchaser declares there are no promises, representations or agreements either written or oral pertaining to this conditional sale which is not herein stated.”
After the sale of the automobile and some use thereof by respondent, he sued appellant upon alleged contemporaneous oral promises and statements made with regard to the fitness and condition of the automobile, and to the effect that appellant would make good any defects appearing in the automobile. Respondent denied the oral representations. Trial was had, resulting in a verdict in favor of respondent for $186.35, the amount spent by him in making certain repairs necessitated by defects which respondent claimed existed in the car at the time of the sale. Appellant objected to the evidence of such oral promises and statements on the ground that it tended to vary the terms of a written contract, and that it was in conflict with the terms of the title retaining note above mentioned.
The law is well settled that where the parties reduce their full agreement, covering all of the terms and conditions of the contract to be entered into, to writing, contemporaneous or prior oral statements are not admissible if they tend to vary the written terms thereof. On the other hand, where the writing does not purport, and was not intended by the parties, to be a complete recital of the terms and conditions of the transaction, oral contemporaneous agreements covering points not mentioned in such written contract and apparently not intended to be covered therein may be shown, as they do not vary, the contents of the instrument. (23 R. C. L. 1392; 35 Cyc. 629; 22 C. J. 1257; Sorenson v. Webb, ante, p. 13, 214 Pac. 749.)
The clause in the note to be construed in the instant action is:
“The purchaser declares there are no promises, representations or agreements either written or oral pertaining to this conditional sale which is not herein stated.”
*252The extraneous promises excluded, it will be noticed, are those pertaining to the conditional sale only, and not to the property which is the subject of the sale. The only reference to the property sold contained within the note is “One Chandler Touring Car No. 37541, this day sold conditionally by S. Foster to the undersigned upon the following conditions.” The conditions thereafter contained in the instrument pertain not to a description of the property, or any statement with regard to its condition, or guarantees or promises made in regard thereto 'by the seller. The only conditions mentioned are with regard .to the payment of the note, and certain things which the buyer agrees to perform by way of paying taxes on the automobile and keeping .it insured.
It is apparent from a reading of this instrument that the parties did not intend in this note to cover all of the terms and conditions of the contract, but that this note merely covered the terms and conditions of payment. (Gale Sulky Harrow Mfg. Co. v. Stark, 45 Kan. 606, 23 Am. St. 739, 26 Pac. 8; Armsby v. Hydraulic Auto Exch. Inc., 188 N. Y. Supp. 483.) The subject matter of appellant’s promise to make good any defect in the automobile was not covered in the note, nor is there anything in the written instrument to indicate that it was intended to be covered therein. There was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether or not these representations were made, and as to the condition of the car. There was evidence to sustain the respondent’s contention, and the jury having passed upon that point, their verdict will not be disturbed.
This point is the basis of all of the assignments of error urged by appellant. The judgment of the trial court should therefore be affirmed.
Budge, C. J., and McCarthy and Wm. E. Lee, JJ., concur. PER CURIAM.— The above and foregoing opinion has been examined and is hereby adopted in whole as the opinion of the court. Costs are awarded to respondent.