4 Fla. 258 | Fla. | 1851
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case has been fully argued by the counsel /or the
It is admitted that every contract, deriving its force from the mutual assent of the parties, is to be interpreted according to the intention of the parties, so far as it is legal, and mutually understood. Chitty on Contracts, pages 148, 149, 1st edition, sections 228, 231, and that exposition is to be upon the whole contract, and not upon disjointed parts taken separately. Page 167, section 252.
For the complainant, it is contended that, by virtue of this agreement between Hawley and himself, he is entitled to an equal share in the boat with Hawley, and to an equal participation in the profits or earnings, and that the agreement is susceptible of no other interpretation.
That Hawley’s agreement with Fry was made with special reference to the agreement or contract he had made with Allen, and to understand the meaning of the terms, “ an interest with himself,” it is only necessary to ascertain what was the interest of Hawley in the joint concern of Allen and Plawley, and what proportion the contribution of Fry bears to it.
That the evidence discloses, and that it js also conceded, that Hawley was entitled to a moiety of the boat, by reason of the contribution of one-half the stipulated capital, say $3,000, as between himself and Allen; and Fry’s contribution being $1,500 or one half thereof, makes the extent of his interest under Hawley just one-half — in other words, equal with Hawley’s, and that this is confirmed by the subsequent stipulation, that “ all losses are to be equally borne.”
That Hawley’s interpretation, that it is in the proportion which the $1,500 bears to the whole cost of the boat, is a strained one, and that a Court of Equity will not give a strained construction to create a societas leonina. The last proposition we deem a sound one. But we understood the
“ Received of Daniel Fry fifteen hundred dollars, to be invested in a steamboat, for the purpose of carrying the mail between Apalachicola and Chattahoochee, for the term of four years, commencing July 1, 1847; Nelson Hawley being jointly interested with Captain Henry Allen in the above pamed contract, binds himself to give to said Fry aji
But let us take a view of those circumstances and see whether they are calculated to sustain or change this view of the subject. One fact deemed of some moment is, that the complainant is an engineer, and it was a matter of considerable importance to him to obtain constant employment as such, at good wages. This seems to have been one object which it appears he accomplished by it; for, although no reference is made in the receipt given by Hawley to Fry, for this $1,500, to the agreement between Hawley and Allen respecting the purchase of the steamboat, yet it clearly appears by reference to the bill of complaint in this case that the complainant was fully aware of it, for he commences with the charge that “ Nelson Hawley informed him that, in connection with Henry Allen, he had obtained a contract to carry the United States mail from the port of Apalachicola to a point on the Apalachicola river, known as Chattahoochee ; that said contract was to continue four years, at a yearly stipend of $2,600 ; that said Hawley also informed him (Fry) that he was desirous of purchasing a boat to carry said mail and perform said contract, and that it would require about $6,000 to purchase a suitable boat for the purpose aforesaid ; that he was to furnish $3,000 and said Allen to furnish the remaining $3,000, and each was to own one moiety in the said contract and the saicE
It is contended on behalf of the complainant that the agreement on the face of it and by equitable interpretation is both •certain and fair ; that nothing is asked for by him which is either inequitable or unjust; that so far as the principle of mutuality is involved, the agreement on the part of the complainant is executed ; that he paid the amount of his contribution at the time of entering into the contract. If this be so, if the contract on the complainant’s part was executed ■by the payment of the sum of $1,500 at the time he entered into the contract, and we think it was, then surely there is no mutuality.
An agreement must depend on the circumstances at the ■time, and cannot be made better or worse by subsequent facts. Morris v. Burroughs, 1 Atkyns, 404. Subsequent acts ■cannot be given in evidence to explain any ambiguity in a written contract. Chitty on Contracts, 106. 1 Atkyns, 404, 605. The debt contracted by Allen in building the boat was •in no wise a liability of Fry. Plawley and Allen alone were 'bound for that debt. Fry was not liable for it. So far as we are able to discover, from any thing which the record ■discloses, he was not liable over to Hawley. Fry, by the payment of his $1,500 into Hawley’s hands, obtained a permanent situation as engineer, at $135 per month, and an interest in the steamboat and the profits, &c., in proportion
Upon the whole, therefore, we see no reason to disturb the decree of the Court below, and it is consequently in all things affirmed.
Per totam Curiam.