Opinion by
In December, 1874, E. H. Griffith, owner of a stagecoach plying between Marion, Indiana county, and Punxsutawney, Jefferson county, made an agreement for the sale of the outfit to Knarr & Schoch for $400; with other stipulations not material here. The terms were orally agreed upon at Punxsutawney, where Knarr and Schoch lived. A few days later Knarr went to Marion, the residence of Griffith, where the contract was reduced to writing, signed and sealed by Griffith and *381Knarr, and $100 of the price receipted by Griffith; the residue being payable by installments. In this contract, dated December 14, 1874, the parties were described as E. H. Griffith of the first part, and George Knarr and Henry Schoch, doing business under the title of Knarr & Schoch, of the second part; and the horses that formed part of its subject-matter were described as “ the grey team now being driven by William Clark.” On the same day Knarr received the hack and gray horses into his custody and returned with them to Punxsutawney, the team being driven by Clark; and the written contract was sent with them to be signed by Schoch. Schoch refused to sign it, alleging that the horses bargained for were a bay team and not the gray team. A few days afterward, Knarr & Schoch sent the horses back to Griffith, who refused to receive them. They were then left at a hotel and subsequently sold for their keeping. The written contract was returned to Griffith, who thereafter retained it.
In 1879 and again in 1881, Griffith began suit in Indiana countj' against Knarr, but failed to obtain service on him. In 1894 he began suit in Clearfield county, where Knarr then resided, against Knarr & Schoch, and obtained service on Knarr alone. The plaintiff’s statement in this action, filed November 22, 1894, set forth the contract of December 14, 1874, as the-foundation of the action, and claimed the balance of $300 remaining unpaid, with interest. September 7, 1895, on plaintiff’s motion, the record was amended by striking off the name of Schoch and leaving Knarr the sole defendant. At the same time an amended statement was filed, setting forth the contract of December 14, 1874, as the foundation of the action, and averring “that while the contract was drawn between him, the plaintiff, and George Knarr & Henry Schoch, doing business as Knarr & Schoch, that when it came to be executed, a dispute arose between the said George Knarr and the said Henry Schoch, and Schoch refused to execute the contract, but Knarr executed it, and agreed with the plaintiff that he would be bound by it, and would pay the money called for therein, regardless of Schoch’s refusal to execute the contract.” On the trial the plaintiff elected to proceed on the amended statement.
- Though the amended statement avers that “the plaintiff’s claim is founded upon ” the contract of December 14, 1874, it *382sets forth the claim as resting, not on the original obligation of that contract, but on the alleged oral agreement by Knarr, after Schoch had refused to sign it, to “ pay the money called for therein, regardless of Schoch’s refusal to execute the contract.” This alleged agreement was denied by Knarr, and the greater part of the evidence on the part of the plaintiff was offered for the purpose of proving it. •
Besides denying this alleged oral agreement, the defendant contended that the bargain between the parties was for the sale of a bay team, and that a “ grey team ” was substituted in the written contract by fraud, accident or mistake. After hearing-all the evidence on this subject the trial judge very-properly' held it insufficient to affect the written, contract, and withdrew it from the consideration of the jury.
The attempt to vary the written contract failing, the case was, by the allegata and probata,-made to turn-on-.the question whether Knarr, after the refusal of Schoch to sign the contract, individually and independently assumed the obligation of payment according to its terms. This was the allegation of the amended statement, and to the proof of this the plaintiff’s evidence was, in the main, directed. Upon the evidence offered, the jury found for the defendant.
The first, second and third assignments of error relate to the admission of evidence to vary the written contract. It was the duty of the court below to receive any competent evidence offered for this purpose, and to determine its effect in the first instance. The evidence received was pronounced insufficient for the purpose, and the written contract was held to express the agreement of the parties. Of this conclusion the plaintiff assuredly cannot complain, and it leaves nothing for these assignments to operate on.
The very able argument of the appellant’s counsel has failed to- convince us of any merit- in the remaining assignments. They relate to portions of the charge, and answers to points, which in our view are fully justified by the pleadings and evidence. The issue raised by the pleadings was exclusively for the jury, and was fairly submitted to them upon the evidence adduced. Their verdict is beyond OUr. control; if erroneous, the only remedy was an appeal to- the court below for a new trial.
*383Whether the ease might have been so presented by the plaintiff as to entitle him to recover against Knarr on the original obligation of the written -contract, we need not now consider. In the aspect in which it was presented, the question at issue was whether, after Griffith and Knarr had signed the contract, and Schoch had refused to sign it, Knarr, independently of any obligation under it, agreed to pay in accordance with its terms. In this aspect it was fairly tried, and we find no error in the record.
The assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.