108 Wis. 221 | Wis. | 1900
The respective parties present antagonistic views as to the force and effect of the contract set forth in the complaint. The plaintiff contends that thereby defendant agreed to deliver to it all of the lumber, lath, and shingles which could be manufactured from all of the timber upon the lands mentioned, within three years from the date of the agreement; approximately one third each year, so that it was an entire contract to deliver to it, in approximately equal thirds in each of these three years, the entire product of all the pine timber, — • so definite in its scope and time of performance that breach thereof gave an immediate right of action for damages, to be measured by the difference between the contract price and market value of any portion of such lumber which remained undelivered. Defendant, on the other hand, contends that this is merely a contract binding the plaintiff to receive and pay for any lumber which the defendant might elect to manufacture from the standing timber in question, but binding the defendant to deliver
The most important rules for the construction of contracts are: The primal and áll-important object in the consideration of any written contract is to ascertain the intention which the parties actually had and sought to express. In the effort to reach such result, all parts of the contract must be taken into consideration with reference to each other, and, if possible, such an interpretation of each part be adopted as will be consistent with and give effect to every other part. The intention of the parties must be ascertained from the language of the contract itself, but it is proper and often necessary that the court should be informed as to the subject matter contracted about, the relation of the parties thereto, and the circumstances surrounding the transaction,— in other words, should be placed in the same position that the parties occupied when the contract was put in words, so as to be able to view the terms thereof in the same light in which the parties did. Robson v. Miss. River L. Co. 43 Fed. Rep. 369; U. S. v. Peck, 102 U. S. 64; Lyman v. Babcock, 40 Wis. 503; State ex rel. Heiden v. Ryan, 99 Wis. 123. In Lyman v. Babcock, supra, it was said: “ Whatever, therefore, indicates the nature of the subject, is a just medium of interpretation of the language and meaning of the parties in relation to it, and is also a just foundation for giving the instrument an interpretation, -when considered relatively, different from that which it would receive if considered in the abstract.” In the Heiden Case, as to the construction of statutes, it was said: “Uncertainty of sense, requiring judicial construction, does not always spring from uncertainty of expression. Words may be plain, yet their literal meaning lead to such consequences that courts' must necessarily violate the fetter in order to reach the real spirit of the law and give effect to the legislative will.”
Defendant’s position, that the words, “ all the merchantable lumber that shall hereafter be cut and manufactured from the timber to be cut and removed from the lands in question,” means only such as shall happen to be manufactured in his election, be it little or much, is absolutely inconsistent with the above-mentioned provision that “ the lumber hereby sold and purchased by the party of the second part shall be cut and manufactured at the Manson mill within three years from this date, in about equal amounts of about ■one third to be manufactured each sawing season for the years 1898, 1899, and 1900.” Those words, if used deliberately in this contract, as we are convinced they were, could not have been used unless the minds of the parties had already settled upon the proposition that an approximately ■definite aggregate of property had been sold by the previous words; otherwise, the phrase is wholly incapable of enforcement, for the plaintiff could not establish, at the end of the sawing season in any of the three years named, whether it had been complied with or not. ISTo breach could be predicated if it got but 1,000 feet of lumber in either of those years. Again, the provision that “ in case of the destruction of said Manson mill the said lumber, or the amount then remaining unmanufactured, shall be manufactured at some other suitable mill,” is wholly meaningless, unless the parties understood that some definite and speci-Aed lumber had been sold and was to be manufactured.
If we are correct thus far, namely, that the words of grant, in the contract were intended by both parties to describe some definite and ascertainable quantity of lumber, sold by
A contract having many elements of similarity with the one now before us was considered by Judge Shiras in Robson v. Miss. River L. Co. 43 Fed. Rep. 364, and again, after judgment, in 61 Fed. Rep. 893. There a contract by a log-driving and booming company with the owner of considerable tracts of lands tributary to their river provided that they should drive logs for him, not exceeding, a specified amount each year, at a given price. The facts of the situation were recited under a “ whereas ” in the contract. There
In the view we have taken of the necessary construction of the words used in this contract in the light of the surrounding circumstances, it becomes immaterial to consider the question — much discussed by defendant — whether the contract, upon his interpretation thereof, would be of any validity; whether it would contain any element of obligation on defendant’s part sufficient to constitute mutuality. Suffice it to say that in the two very recent cases of Hoffman v. Maffioli, 104 Wis. 630, and Teipel v. Meyer, 106 Wis. 41, neither of which is cited by counsel, the subject of mutuality necessary to the . validity of contracts, and the authorities bearing thereon, are so fully discussed that respondent’s citation of numerous decisions from other states was hardly necessary.
Conceding that the contract as interpreted by respondent would be valid, we find that interpretation violative of the most important stipulations of the writing itself, inconsistent with the situation and needs of the parties, and opposed to their obvious purpose and intention. On the contrary, the language of that writing, in the light of the conditions under which it was used, declares a meeting of minds upon an agreement for the purchase and sale of all the lumber capable of being manufactured from the entire body of timber described. Such being the contract, the complaint clearly alleges a completed violation thereof by defendant,,
By the Oowrt.— The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer.