John Deere Plow Co. v. City Hardware Co.

57 So. 821 | Ala. | 1912

MAYFIELD, J.

This is an action of detinue by appellant against appellee, to recover certain chattels mentioned in the complaint. The right of the respective *514parties to maintain or defend the action depends solely upon the construction to he given a certain contract of sale, by which appellant sold to appellee the chattels in question. The contract in question is a conditional one of sale, by which the vendor, appellant here, retained the title to the chattels sold upon certain conditions specified in the contract of sale. The real difference between the contentions of the parties is as to whether or not the vendor had the right to retake the possession of the property sold and delivered, at the time the action was brought, or whether the time at which it could retake possession, on account of the breach of the conditions of the contract, was postponed to a later date than that at which the suit was brought.

It is not denied by the vendee, appellee here, that the sale was a conditional one, and that under certain provisions of the contract the vendor could retake possession of the property sold; but it contends that the time at which the contract provided the vendee might retake possession was fixed at October 1, 1910, while the action was brought in April, 1910. If this be true, of course, the plaintiff had no right to recover, at the time it brought the action, and therefore must fail.

On the other hand, it is contended, by the vendor that by paragraph 1 of the contract of salé (which the reporter will set out), the plaintiff was entitled to possession, upon demand, either oral or written, of all the goods which might be shipped under the provisions of the contract, or during the current season.

The trial court construed the contract in accordance with the contention of the vendee, to the effect that the plaintiff had no right, under the written and printed contract, to the possession of the property at the time the action was brought, but further ruled that the parol evidence was in dispute as to whether or not there was *515a subsequent agreement between tbe parties by which the plaintiff was entitled to possession at the time the suit was brought, and, accordingly, submitted this question to the jury, which found in favor of the defendant, appellee here.

As to the rulings of the court upon the question of the subsequent parol agreement, and as to the finding of the jury of the facts as to such agreement, no error is assigned, and no objection is here made by appellant.

The trial court, in its oral charge to the jury, instructed them to the effect that under the terms of the written and printed contract the plaintiff was not entitled to the possession of the property at the time the suit was brought, and for this reason refused a Avritten requested charge to the plaintiff, asserting the reverse of the proposition. It is conceded that the same question of law is raised by both rulings, and that the correctness or incorrectness of the one necessarily determines the propriety Or impropriety of the other.

We agree Avith the trial court as to the construction placed upon the Avritten and printed contract. To give clause 7 construction and effect intended by appellant would make it Avholly inconsistent Avith the other provisions and conditions of the contract. On the other hand, with the construction placed upon it by the trial court,- this provision of the contract can be reconciled with the other provisions thereof.

The contract in question is quite lengthy, and is conceded to have been partly Avritten and partly printed; and section 7 thereof is one of a great number of provisions printed on the back of the contract, but referred to and made a part of it by provisions in the body of the instrument, Avhich were in writing.

It is a sound and Avell-settled rule of construction of contracts that, in arriving at a proper interpretation, *516tlie court should examine the whole instrument with a view of ascertaining and carrying into effect the purpose and object the parties had in view, and thus give some effect to each clause, and reconcile apparent discrepancies if practicable. Courts will never presume that parties intended to insert in their contracts provisions wholly incompatible and irreconcilable one with another. It is likewise a well-settled rule of construction that as to instruments which are partly printed and partly written, that which is written shall have the greater weight, because of the presumption that greater attention has been bestowed upon the written parts of the contract.

As was said by this court in Bolman v. Lohman, 79 Ala. 67, per Stone, C. J.: “The printed form is intended for general use without reference to particular objects and aims. That which is written is siipposed to. be dictated by the particular intention and purpose of the parties contracting.”

Applying these rules of construction to the contract in question, we have no hesitancy in agreeing with the trial court as to the construction proper to be placed upon this contract. We find one of the written provisions of the contract to be as follows: “It is expressly agreed and understood that the terms made herein shall hold good until October 1, 1910, and are not to be considered a precedent for the future.” This being written into a printed form of contract used by the vendor in making such sales is suggestive, at least, of the idea that the contract in question was somewhat different from the usual contracts made by it in such cases. It was provided by the last clause of section 7, of the printed conditions, after stipulating that the vendor should have the right to the immediate and exclusive possession upon demand, as follows: “But nothing in this *517clause Avill release the undersigned (the vendee) from making payment as herein agreed.” It was agreed in the contract that the vendee Avould make payments thereon until October 1, 1910, and it would be inconsistent to hold that the vendor could retake the property, and yet.hold the vendee to the payment of the purchase price.

No error appearing in the record, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

Affirmed.

All the Justices concur.
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