162 N.W. 393 | S.D. | 1917
This was an action brought to recover the contract price for constructing a well. There was a verdict and Judgment in favor of plaintiff, from which defendant appeals. Among other errors assigned there are those which relate to the rejection of certain testimony offered by appellant. In order to determine the questions in relation to the exclusion of this tes-timon)r, it will ’be necessary to consider some elements of the contract in question in . connection with other testimony. While the contract does not specifically name the well to be constructed under the provisions thereof as an artesian well, and while the plaintiff did not agree by this contract to construct or procure a flowing well, still it is clear from all the surrounding circumstances that the parties had in view the drilling of a well into .the artesian water basin or strata underlying defendant’s premises. The conduct of both parties before and after the making of the contract, and during the construction of said well thereunder, evidence that ir was the penetration of what is commonly known as the artesian water strata that was in contemplation. The testimony offered 'by plaintiff for the purpose of showing that he had completed the well according to contract is that he had gone through the arte-sian basin, and that by reason thereof it was improbable that any different well could have been procured by going deeper into the earth as defendant seems to have desired. This character of evidence was offered by plaintiff for the purpose of showing that defendant in reason should 'have been satisfied with the fulfillment of the contract.
“To determine the intention of the parties, if the meaning is not clear, it is necessary that regard shall be had to' the nature of the instrument itself, the condition of the parties executing it, and the objects which they had in view, for which purposes parol evidence is admissible. Where the parties to a contract have given it a particular construction, such construction will generally be adopted by the court in giving effect to its provisions. And the subsequent acts of the parties showing ,the construction they have put upon the agreement themselves, are to' be looked to by the court, and in. some cases may be controlling.” 9 Cyc. 587, 588.
The construction put upon this contract and the acts of the plaintiff while constructing said well indicate that the plaintiff had in view the sinking of said well into or through the artesian water strata. It is conceded' that the well in question was drilled to' a depth of about 1,000 feet. Plaintiff testified that flowing wells had ■been obtained in that artesian basin 1,600 to i,8oo feet deep.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed, and the cause remanded.