118 Wash. 356 | Wash. | 1922
— This action grows out of a written contract entered into on the 22nd day of April, 1919, between the respondent Peshastin Mill Company, as the seller, and the appellant Cashmere Apple Company, as the purchaser. It provided that the:
“Buyer agrees to buy and seller agrees to sell . . . box shooks containing no defects . . . and manufactured in a uniform maimer, according to the following specifications and amounts:
“75,000 apple boxes now manufactured and in stock at Leavenworth, Washington, being part of the boxes inspected by the buyer, consisting of . . . [certain sizes described].
“125,000 apple boxes to be manufactured . . . [in certain sizes and dimensions].
“The total pear boxes required by the buyer, manufactured . . . [according to certain sizes mentioned] .
*358 “The total cherry lug boxes required by the buyer, manufactured according to standard specifications of the seller . . . [and to be of certain specifications].
“The total cot crates required by the buyer, to be manufactured according to certain standard specifications of the seller . . .
‘ ‘ The total peach boxes required by the buyer, to be manufactured . . . [according to certain sizes].
“The 75,000 apple boxes now manufactured and in stock at Leavenworth, "Washington, will be shipped at once. The 125,000 apple boxes to be manufactured will be delivered as rapidly as possible . . .
“It is agreed between the buyer and the seller that this contract is subject to fires, strikes, lockouts, delays in transportation, car shortage, and other contingencies beyond the control of the parties hereto.”
The contract fixed the prices and provided for delivery of the boxes between April and November, 1919.
Of the 75,000 apple boxes described as “now manufactured and in stock at Leavenworth,” only 55,425 were ever delivered; and of the 125,000 apple boxes “to be manufactured” only 25,600 were ever delivered. A part of these deliveries were paid for by the apple company, but it refused to pay for the remainder because it claimed to be greatly damaged by reason of the failure of the Peshastin Mill Company to deliver the remainder of the apple boxes.
A few words at this time concerning the parties to the action are necessary for an understanding of the facts. The Peshastin Mill Company assigned its claim for the balance claimed to be due it for boxes shipped to the Leavenworth State Bank, which was the original plaintiff, and the Cashmere Apple Company, a corporation, was the original defendant. The respondents Mills and Loudenback, copartners, intervened because, after the making of the apple contract, they had become the owners of all of the rights of the Cashmere Apple
The case was tried to the court without a jury and judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff bank for the amount sued for, less $1,761.75 damages awarded by the court to the defendants on their cross-complaint, and on account of the failure to deliver the balance of the 75,000 lot of boxes, and the court’s judgment refused to give the cross-complainants any damages on account of the 125,000 lot of apple boxes. The defendants have appealed from that part of the judgment denying them any damages on account of the 125,-000 lot of boxes, and the plaintiff has cross-appealed from that portion of the judgment which awarded the cross-complainants $1,761.75 damages on account of the 75,000 lot of boxes.
In order to simplify the facts, it may be said that the appeal of the defendants involves only that portion of the contract with reference to the 125,000 lot of box sbooks, and the cross-appeal involves only that portion of the contract with reference to the 75,000 apple boxes in stock at Leavenworth. None of the other boxes mentioned in the contract are involved here.
In discussing tbe original appeal, we will refer to tbe apple company and Mills and Loudenback as appellants, and all tbe other parties as respondents; and in discussing tbe cross-appeal we will refer to the bank,
The respondents have at all times admitted that they failed and refused to deliver all of the 125,000 lot of apple boxes, and, as excuse therefor, alleged and undertook to prove that, under the terms of the contract, all of those boxes were to be manufactured by the Peshastin Mill Company at its lumber and box factory located at Blewett, Washington, and that, after it had delivered a portion of such boxes, and on, to wit, the 13th day of August, 1919, its entire mill was destroyed by fire, thus making it impossible for it to comply with its contract; and that, under that provision of the contract which provided that it was subject to fire, strikes, etc., it was relieved of further duty to furnish such boxes. On the other hand, the appellants contend that the contract was merely one of bargain and sale and not one of manufacture and sale, and that the destruction of the mill by fire did not relieve the respondents from complying with the contract. Which contention shall be upheld depends upon what construction shall be given the contract.
The respondents alleged and proved to the satisfaction of the trial court, and to our satisfaction, that, when the contract was made, the Peshastin Mill Company owned and operated but one mill for the manufacture of apple box shooks, and that such mill was the one which was subsequently destroyed by fire, and that the appellants had knowledge of these facts when they entered into the contract. The appellants contend it was error for the court to receive and consider such character of testimony, for the reason that it tended to add to or vary the terms of the written contract, which in itself was complete and definite. We have no doubt,
The proper rule is laid down in 6 R. C. L. 849, as follows:
“Courts, in the construction of contracts, look to the language employed, the subject-matter and the surrounding circumstances. They are never shut out from the same light which the parties enjoyed when the contract was executed, and accordingly they are entitled to place themselves in the same situation as the parties who made the contract, so as to view the circumstances as they viewed them, and so as to judge of the meaning of the words and of the correct application of the language to the things described.”
If the respondents had undertaken to prove that there was an oral agreement between the parties that the boxes in question were to he manufactured by the Peshastin Mill Company, at its Blewett mill, then the argument of the appellants would be applicable, and might, under some circumstances, be sustained on the ground that such testimony tended to change the written contract; hut the testimony involved here was not of that character. It was nothing more nor less than putting the court in possession of such surrounding facts and circumstances as were possessed by the parties at the time they made the contract, and such class of testimony is always admissible as an aid to a construction of the contract.
The real question, then, is, does the contract mean that the 125,000 lot of apple boxes were to he manufactured by the Peshastin Mill Company at its Blewett mill? The contract itself says that these boxes are to be “manufactured in a uniform manner,” according to certain specifications, and that the 75,000 lot of boxes are “now manufactured,” and that the 125,000 lot of boxes are “to he manufactured” according to certain
The appellants cite a large number of cases, but seem most particularly to rely on Thomson & Stacy Co. v. Evans, Colemam, & Evans, 100 Wash. 277, 170 Pac. 578; Newell v. New Holstein Canning Co., 119 Wis. 635, 97 N. W. 487; and Anderson v. May, 50 Minn. 280, 52 N. W. 530, 17 L. R. A. 555. We find nothing in these cases, or others cited by the appellants, contrary to the view we have expressed.
In the Thomson case, supra, the appellants were residents of Vancouver, B. C., and entered into an agreement with the respondents to sell them certain standard Calcutta grain sacks, to be delivered at Seattle or Tacoma. One clause of the contract was that “all agree
In the Newell case, supra, the facts were that Newell was a merchant, and entered into a contract with the canning company whereby he was to purchase, and the company was to sell and deliver to him, a certain quantity of ripe tomatoes, to he canned at the cannery of the appellant. The tomatoes were not delivered. Suit for damages resulted. The defense was that, about the time the tomatoes grown by the appellant were to he gathered, an unusual frost destroyed them. The court held that there was nothing in the contract to indicate that the tomatoes purchased were to he grown by any particular person, or on any particular land, and that it was the duty of the appellant to obtain the tomatoes anywhere it could for the purpose of complying with the contract. The court very properly held that such a defense would add an entirely new term or condition to the contract. It seems to us plain that that case is not at all in point. We do not think it necessary to detail the facts of any of the other cases cited. They all involve facts materially different from those in this case.
It is now necessary to consider the cross-appeal.
It will be remembered that it concerns only that item of the contract with reference to the 75,000 boxes “now manufactured and in stock at Leavenworth. ’ ’ The testimony seems to show that there were not 75,000 boxes in the pile located at Leavenworth, and that on that account the cross-appellant did not deliver the complete number provided for by the contract, to wit, 75,000. They contend that, before the contract was entered into all the parties to it examined this pile of box shooks and each supposed that there were at least sufficient there to supply the demand of the contract. Cross-appellant cites many cases to the effect that, where both parties to a contract assume the existence of a certain thing, and contract with reference to that assumption, if the thing assumed to exist does not in fact exist, then the contract is void. The testimony here, however, as found by the trial court, and we think the finding was correct, does not make the doctrine contended for by the cross-appellant applicable to this case. "While it is true that both parties to the contract saw and examined the pile supposed to contain 75,000 boxes, yet the examination made by cross-respondents was not, and could not have been such as that they could determine that there would not be a shortage. On the other hand, the pile of boxes belonged to the Peshastin Mill Company, and it was its business to know whether there
But cross-appellant further contends that, after the parties learned of the shortage, there was an oral agreement between them that the difference should he made up by the mill company manufacturing them at its plant at Blewett, and it is contended that such oral contract was hut a modification of the written contract in that regard, and that the fire clause in the written contract is applicable and would relieve the Peshastin Mill Company. We cannot accept this view. In the first place, we do not think the evidence shows that any new contract or arrangement was made; and if it should he conceded that it was made, it would he entirely independent of the written contract, and the mill company would be hound to comply with the oral contract, and the destruction of the mill would not relieve it. A very thorough consideration of this case convinces us that the judgment of the trial court was right, and we affirm it.
Parker., C. J., Fullerton, Mitchell, and Tolman, JJ., concur.