(after stating the facts.)—The first question presented for consideration is, whether the rulings of the judge in admitting parol evidence to explain the receipts, were correct. We think, the authorities in this state and the decisions of this court leave no room for further question on this point. Without recurring to all the cases in the books on this subject, it will only be needful to call attention to a few of the more leading.
In Tobey v. Barber (5 Johns. 68), a receipt had been given and indorsed on the counterpart of a lease, for $163, “ and in full for the second and third quarters’ rent.” The plaintiff offered to prove, that the defendant had procured one Coffin to give a note, payable to *ke or *or<ier, for $115.68, at the Bank of Columbia, in four months, and dated the same day as the receipt, and that it formed a part of the receipt; that Coffin failed, before the note became due, and took the benefit of the insolvent act, and that the note had not been paid. This evidence was objected to and admitted. The -judge charged the jury, that a receipt was not conclusive evidence, but might be explained by parol. The court held, that a receipt is an exception to the general rule, that a writing cannot be explained or contradicted by parol, citing Ensign v. Webster (1 Johns. Cas. 145), and that the parol evidence was admissible. The court say: “ The parol evidence was then admissible in this case, to show that the receipt of the 24th of September 1803, though purporting to be in full for two quarters’ rent, was founded partly on a note given by one Coffin to the plaintiff, by the procurement of the defendant, and that Coffin became insolvent before the note fell due, by which means the note was not paid. The taking of the note was no extinguishment of the debt due for the rent. It is a rule well settled, and repeatedly recognised in this court, that taking the note of a, third person for a preexisting debt, is no payment, unless it be expressly *359agreed to take the note as payment, and to run the risk of its being paid.” The court, in its opinion, refers to the case of Murray v. Gouverneur & Kemble, decided in the court of errors, in 1800, where it was held, that receipts were explainable, and that a bill was not a discharge of a precedent debt, unless by express agreement; and that a receipt of a bill as cash, was not sufficient evidence that the bill was taken as an absolute payment.
This case is cited with approval in Egleston v. Knickerbocker (6 Barb. 458), and in that case it was decided, that the paper writing sought to be explained by parol evidence, was the agreement between the parties and no.t a receipt, and the head note is, “ Parol evidence is inadmissible to contradict or explain a written agreement.” This case was relied upon as the basis of the decision of Coon v. Knap (8 N. Y. 402). There it was held, that parol evidence was not admissible, to explain a release, and that the paper offered in that *case was not a simple receipt, which it was conceded could be explained or varied by parol evidence. The paper writing in that case was in effect a release of the defendant from all liability occasioned by that transaction.
In Filkins v. Whyland (24 N. Y. 338), this court had occasion to consider the question, whether a writing in this form, “ F. bought of W. one horse, $150. Received payment, W.”—given upon the purchase of and payment for the horse, was a contract, and it was held, that the same was a mere receipt, and not a contract or bill of sale, so as to exclude parol evidence of a warranty of soundness of the horse by the vendor. Judge Weight, in his opinion in that case, says: “The paper in this case is to be construed as a simple receipt, delivered and accepted as evidence of payment, and not the contract by which the title to the horse was transferred. The paper cannot be read as a present agreement of sale; it *360contains no stipulations to buy, nor declares any present undertaking by either party. The vendor acknowledges payment, but he does not profess by the writing to sell. The vendee does not execute, but accepts it. It recites the fact of a past sale; it admits that a sale has been had, but does not effect one. A merchant’s bill of items of goods sold, made up and receipted in the same form, has never been regarded as the written contract of sale.”
These observations are pertinent to the case at bar, and conclusively show, that the four paper writings relied upon by the defendant, to sustain the defence set up in his answer, were neither releases, contracts of sale, nor agreements, but simply receipts, which, upon most abundant authority, could be explained by parol evh dence, and the court properly overruled the objection to the admission of such evidence. The exception to the charge of the judge, that such receipts might be explained by parol testimony, is equally untenable. The general term of the supreme court was incorrect in holding that there was 'error in these particulars, and reversing the judgment and ordering a new trial.
This result makes it unnecessary to examine the excel;)^01-1 *aken to the *judge’s charge, in reference to the alleged fraud of the defendant, in transferring the notes of Mann, Kendrick & Co., knowing that the same were nots good, and would not be paid. The order granting a new trial should be reversed, and the judgment on the verdict should be affirmed, with costs.
Order reversed, and judgment of the special term affirmed.
Grover and Parker, JJ., dissented.