112 P. 8 | Or. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is the third time this case has been, in some form, before this court. In the first case the action was based upon the refusal of defendants to deliver the lambs for 1905, but as plaintiff's evidence failed to show that
Upon a retrial of the case the evidence was undisputed and conclusive that the note and mortgage, although dated October 1, 1904,' were not delivered by the makers thereof until November 2d following, and concurrently with the execution and delivery of the contract upon which this action is based, and that the subject-matter thereof was included in the terms of chattel mortgage. Upon this state of the record, although there had been offered by each of the parties, and received in evidence, conflicting, extrinsic parol testimony of the acts and declarations of the respective parties, tending to show their intent as to whether the contract was on the one hand an independent contract to sell, or, on the other, a further security for the payment of the note, defendants
The court instructed the jury, in substance, that where .several instruments are executed and delivered at or about the same time, are between the same parties, and concerning the same subject, all are to be construed as one and the same contract; that if the jury found it was the intention of the parties that the contract should be a part of the chattel mortgage, as additional security for the payment of the note, then the verdict should be for defendants, but if not so intended, but intended as evidence of a sale, then the verdict should be for plaintiff; and that in determining the intent of the parties the jury might take into consideration the extrinsic evidence, showing the previous dealings of the parties, with reference to the band of sheep originally sold by plaintiff to defendants, a previous similar contract existing between the parties in relation thereto, and the acts and declarations of the parties in relation thereto.
Defendants’ contention is based upon this assumption, that where there are two contemporaneously written agreements between the same parties, relating to the same subject-matter, they must be construed together as one contract. Some decided cases have thus announced
“It is not necessary that the instruments should in terms refer to each other, if in point of fact they are parts of a single transaction. But until it appears they are such, either from the writings themselves, or by extrinsic evidence, the case is not brought within the rule. * * It may very well be that the same parties should have several transactions in one day, and of the same general nature; and yet that each one should be distinct from and wholly independent of the other.”
In the later case of Blagen v. Thompson, 23 Or. 239, 246 (31 Pac. 647, 650: 18 L. R. A. 315), Mr. Justice Bean states the rule with more caution as follows:
“When two written contracts are entered into between the same parties, concerning the same subject-matter, whether made simultaneously or on different days, they may, under some circumstances, be regarded as one contract and interpreted together.”
What circumstances would be necessary to make such agreements one transaction was not essential to the discussion of that case, but the citation to Bishop, Contracts, § 165, made in that connection, may be significant. That author there says that separate instruments, executed under the circumstances mentioned, “may be regarded as one contract, when this view of them is just, and accords with the intent of the parties; and, whether so or not, all should be interpreted together. Yet, as a foundation for suing, what thus appears to be one contract may in law constitute more contracts than one;
In Thorp v. Mindeman, 123 Wis. 149 (101 N. W. 417: 68 L. R. A. 146: 107 Am. St. Rep. 1003), which was an action by an indorsee to recover upon an ordinary, negotiable promissory note, the defense was made that there
“Construing together simply means that, if there be any provisions in one instrument limiting, explaining, or otherwise affecting the provisions of another, they will be given effect as between the parties themselves and all persons charged with notice, so that the intent of the parties may be carried out, and that the whole agreement actually made may be effectuated. This does not mean that the provisions of one instrument are imported bodily into another, contrary to the intent of the parties. They may be intended to be separate instruments, and to provide entirely different things, as in the very case before us. The note is given as evidence of the debt, and to fix the terms and time of payment. It is usually complete in itself — a single, absolute obligation. The purpose of the mortgage is simply to pledge certain property as security for the payment of the note.”
Whether instruments of the same general character, but much more indefinite as to the intent than the ones now under consideration, are to be treated as contracts for the payment of a specific sum of money, but in which a privilege is reserved to the payor to pay the same in specific articles at the price agreed, or whether they shall be treated as contracts for the delivery of specific articles at an agreed price, and at a specified time and place, the authorities are by no means uniform. “If a note or written promise,” says Mr. Parsons in his work on Contracts, vol. 2 (9 ed.) p. 215, “be to pay so much money, but in goods specified, and at a certain rate, and the promise is broken, it is not quite settled whether the law will regard this as a promise to pay money or to deliver gooas.” In discussing this question that learned author suggests that, “the true question is, whether it was
For the opposite view, see Heywood v. Heywood, 42 Me. 229 (66 Am. Dec. 277), and the dissenting opinion therein of Mr. Justice R.ICE, where the cases are cited and discussed. But in all these cases the promise upon which the action was based was of this character: “For value received I promise to pay John Pinney seventy-nine dollars and fifty cents * * in salt at 14 shillings per barrel,” as in Pinney v. Gleason, 5 Wend. (N. Y.) 394 (21 Am. Dec. 223). We have no such contract here. The form of the promise creates no doubt as to the intent. It is not a promise to deliver lambs at a fixed price to the amount of the debt, but it is to deliver all the increase of a certain flock of sheep, whether the number is greater or less than sufficient to liquidate the debt. The subsequent clause of the contract, requiring the price to be
For these reasons we are bound to say that the verdict of the jury is the only legal result obtainable by a construction of the several instruments as representing one transaction.
The judgment is therefore affirmed. Affirmed.