—Appellant was plaintiff and sued upon the following instrument: “Evansville Ind., Mch. 13 ’91., Evansville Brwg. Co. Dear Sirs. We will submit to you designs for your stationery including design for cut of building also calendar sketch for Gambrinus hanger as per pencil rough shown you, all to be lithographed in first class style, and proofs submitted. Will furnish you 5 M. each, letter-heads 8% x 11, business cards, envelopes, statements at $12 pr. M., and hangers on chromo plate paper tinned top & bottom with trade mark and proper wording at 22c. each. No extra charge to be made for sketches and same to be to your satisfaction before proceeding with work.
“Stationery to be in gilt red & black. Hangers to be delivered by June 10, 1891.- Yours truly, Beck & Pauli Lith. Co. pr Saville Johnston. Accepted. .Evansville Brewing Co, II. Wimberg, Pres.”
The pleadings in the case are voluminous, but no question is presented affecting them, and no useful purpose will be subserved by a further reference to them. It is conceded that the judgment rests upon the first paragraph of complaint. The case was tried before a jury, and, under an instruction by which the court construed the contract, the jury returned a verdict for appellant for $514.65. Appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and such ruling is challenged by the assignment of errors. The decision of the questions involved depends upon the construction of the contract sued on. ‘ The court, on its own motion, gave instruction number one, and this was the only instruction given. Appellant tendered three instructions, which the court refused to give. The appellant introduced in evidence the contract sued on, and called as a witness the president of the appellee brewing company, Mr. Wimberg.
The court, in its instruction, construed the contract, and by such construction told the jury that appellee was liable to appellant for the letter-heads, business cards, statements, and envelopes, 5,000 each, and for the first 500 hangers received by it, in the aggregate sum of $350.50, together with sis per cent, interest from August 13, 1891, making a total of $514.65, for which amount the jury were instructed to return a verdict for appellant, and held, and so told the jury, in effect, that appellee was not liable for the remaining 4,500 hangers. This instruction can not be upheld for at least two reasons: (1) The contract from its terms and the subsequent acts of the parties will not bear the construction placed upon it, and (2) it wholly disregards the fact that appellant received the hangers, stored them away, and made no offer to return them. If it be conceded that the contract is ambiguous, indefinite, and uncertain (and this is stoutly denied by appellant), yet in construing it, the surrounding circumstances and the subsequent conduct of the parties may be resorted to.
In Mobile, etc., R. Co. v. Jurey, 111 U. S. 584, 4 Sup. Ct. 566, 28 L. ed. 527, it was held that, in instructing a jury as to the construction of a writing offered in evidence as a contract, the court should consider surrounding circumstances as well as the language and subject-matter.
In Bement v. Claybrook, 5 Ind. App. 193, this court, by Black, J., said: “Where the language of a written contract is indefinite, ambiguous, or of doubtful construction, the practical interpretation given it by the parties in acting pursuant to it, is entitled to great, if not controlling, influence in arriving at the true intention.” See, also, Chicago v. Sheldon, 9 Wall. 50, 19 L. ed. 594; Reissner v. Oxley, 80 Ind. 580; Lyles v. Lescher, 108 Ind. 382; Gaylord v. City of Lafayette, 115 Ind. 423; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Reynolds, 118 Ind. 170.
The work which the contract required the appellant to do was a special work, and the product of its labor and skill was specially adapted to the business in which the appellee was engaged. We know as a matter of common knowledge that lithographing is an art which requires a high degree of skill. Appellant and appellee both knew that the particular work specified in the contract, and the product of that work, could only be done for and used by appellee. The work would possess no value to any one else. Lithographing, which is done by engraving on stone, is an expensive work. The “Gambrinus hangers” mentioned in the contract were to be on “chromo plate paper tinned top and bottom with
Now as to the construction of the contract from the conduct of the parties. There is no doubt as to the construction the appellant put upon it, for it proceeded under the contract to lithograph, tin, etc., 5,000 hangers, according to “pencil rough shown you” and when completed, shipped them to appellee. There is no controversy but' what' the work was done in accordance with the contract, for appellee received and used 500 of them, and received and stored 4,500. After appellee received these hangers, it remained passive and did not do or say anything, so far as the record shows, to even indicate that it placed a different construction on the contract. By its acceptance of the hangers, and its silence, and its failure or offer to return them, the ap
The contract includes stationery with cut of buildings, also colored sketch for “Gambrinus hangers as per pencil rough shown you.” By the express terms of the contract,
There are five articles specified in the contract, the last of which is “hangers.” In the second paragraph of the contract they are all mentioned and described in the same sen
Counsel for appellee invoke the canon of construction that* if the language used in a contract is ambiguous, it must be considered and construed most strongly against the party using it; and that hence the rule should be applied here, for it appears from the contract itself that appellant was the moving party. There is no doubt but what this rule prevails in all cases where it is applicable, but if we concede that appellant was the moving party, the rule would not be applicable, unless we go further and concede that the contract is ambiguous and uncertain. The rule was early announced in this State, and has never been questioned, that a contract is only to be construed most strongly against the grantor or moving party, when it will equally admit of two or more interpretations. Falley v. Giles, 29 Ind. 114. This rule is one of dernier ressorl, and is to be invoked only when all other rules of exposition fail. 2 Blacks. Com. 380. Adams v. Warner, 23 Vt. 395. As before said, we do not regard the contract before us as being ambiguous, and hence
Judgment reversed, and the court is directed to grant appellant a new trial.
Robinson, J., absent.