Appellant company sued W. S. Wood in the justice court to recover a balance of $39.86, claimed to be due on some merchandise shipped by it from Memphis to him at Strong, Arkansas, consisting of fencing, wire, nails and staples. On appeal to the circuit court, judgment was rendered in favor of Wood, from which judgment appellant brings this appeal. The amount sued for was the exact amount of the freight charges from Memphis,- Tenn., the point of shipment, to the point of destination, Strong, Arkansas. Appellant claims the fencing was sold to him at an agreed price, f. o.. b. Memphis, Tenn., and the wire nails and staples at a price f. o. b. Strong; appellee insisting that the entire bill of goods was to be sold f. o. b. Strong, for the agreed price. The written order, signed by appellee, expressing the terms of the contract, was read in evidence and is as -follows:
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The salesman testified that appellee executed the contract and that there was no agreement that the entire car was to he delivered at Strong and that Mr. Wood did not tell him he wouldn’t buy it unless it was sold f. o. b’ Strong. Appellee denied owing the account, stated that he did not agree to pay the freight on any part of the merchandise purchased, and that it was his understanding that it was all to he delivered f. o. b. Strong; just like it reads above his signature, “All above goods, f. o. b. Strong. ’ ’ That when he signed the order he glanced up and noticed above the place for the signature, “All above goods f. o. h. Strong,” and that if he had not understood that the goods were to he delivered he would not have signed the order. He admitted that he signed the order; that he did not notice the line, “Fencing 73 per cent off, f. o. b. Memphis, Tenn.” That he did not always read every line of an order, and having seen the “f. o. b. Strong,” supposed that it stated the terms and that he kept a duplicate of the order, which was introduced in evidence. That the order was made out in his store and handed to him right away, and that he filed it away and did not think any more about it until the question came up about the freight when he looked it up and noticed that it did have some stuff on the left-hand column, marked f. o. b. Memphis; that that was the first time he ever knew the order had been taken that way. One of the clerks in his store testified that he heard part of the conversation when the trade was made and heard Mr. Wood tell the salesman at the time the order was executed that he wouldn’t buy the wire unless it was delivered at Strong. The salesman stated that the words, “All above goods f. o. b. Strong,” mean only the items on the right-hand side of the double column of the order. That the left side specified the terms of payment.
The court refused to instruct the jury to find for the plaintiff and instructed them1 that if they should find from a preponderance of the testimony that the contract provided that a certain part of the hill of goods was to he delivered f. o. b. Strong, and that another part was sold f. o. b. Memphis, that they would find for the plaintiff, and that if they should find under the terms of the contract all the property was to be delivered f. o. b. cars at Strong, they would find for the defendant.
The written order executed by appellant expressed the terms of the contract and its construction was a question for the court, there being no ambiguity arising from it and no fraud claimed.to have been practiced in its procurement. 9 Cyc. 591; Estes v. Booth, 20 Ark. 583; Arkansas Fire Insurance Co. v. Wilson, 67 Ark. 553; Dugan v. Kelly, 75 Ark. 55.
The intent of the parties to a written .contract should be derived from-the whole instrument. Kelly v. Dooling, 23 Ark. 582, Railway v. Williams, 53 Ark. 58; Vaugine v. Taylor, 18 Ark. 65.
Appellant does not contend that the contract as executed has been changed, but only says that he did not in fact examine it sufficiently and closely to discover the provision that the fencing was priced f. o. b. Memphis. He executed the order, and, no fraud having been practiced upon him in its procurement and there being no ambiguity in its terms, he can not excuse himself from his liability thereon hy saying that he did not read/ it all and that if he had understood that it read as it appears to read that he would not have signed it. He is bound, under the law, to know the contents of a paper signed by him, and he can not excuse himself by saying he did not read it or know what it contained. Upton v. Tribilcock, 91 U. S. 45; 9 Cyc. 391; Stewart v. Fleming, 105 Ark. 37.
The terms of the contract are plain and unambiguous and the court erred, in not instructing a verdict for the appellant.
The judgment is reversed and judgment will be entered here for the amount sued for. It is so ordered.