73 Md. 342 | Md. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The questions in this case were presented to the Court below with a considerable variety of form. They all depend, however, upon the proper construction of the agreements contained in a certain lease, which appears at large in the record. On the sixth day of June, eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, the plaintiffs below (now appellants) leased to the defendants a lot of ground in the City of Baltimore “together with the building or warehouse thereon;” said lot and building being known as number 37 South Gay street. The lease was for the term of five years, accounting from the fifteenth day of May, eighteen hundred and eighty. Shortly after the execution of the lease, the lessees obtained an assignment from a tenant in possession and entered upon the premises. On the thirtieth day of May, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, the building suddenly fell down and became a mass of ruins. It was contended at the trial below that by force of the agreements contained in the lease, the defendants were responsible for the damage caused by the disaster; while the contrary was maintained by the defendants. Before we examine the terms of the lease, we will state some of the evidence adduced by the respective parties. The evidence offered on the
The lease is very long, and is drawn with much minuteness and particularity. The agreements contained in it are called covenants; but as the instrument is not under seal, this description is not technically accurate. It was probably adopted under the supposition that it was to be sealed by the contracting parties. This phraseology, however, will not in any way affect the construction of the paper. After stating the lease of the lot with the building or warehouse thereon, many so-called covenants follow. There .is a provision for a suspension of the
This case is very interesting, and it has been remarkably well argued on both sides. We have fully recognized the force of the arguments addressed to us by the learned counsel for the appellants, and the weight of the authorities on which they relied. We think, however, that the decisive character of several of the cases which they cited has been greatly diminished by a change which has been silently and steadily taking place in the mode of construing contracts.' In Kingston vs. Preston, 2 Doug., 689, Lord Mansfield made a vigorous protest against the artificial and mechanical rules of construction which prevailed at that time, and earnestly insisted that the “evident sense and 'meaning of the parties” was the true object of inquiry by the Court, without regard to the order or arrangement of the covenants. Many distinguished jurists since his Lordship’s time have given their efforts to the establishment of this rational principle. A summary of the doctrine as generally adopted may be found in Platt on Covenants, (3 Law Library, 136:) “ The first general principle is that covenants shall be so expounded as to carry into effect the intention of the parties. This intention is not to be collected from the language of a single clause in the deed, but from the entire context; and it is immaterial in what part of a deed any particular covenant may he inserted, for exposition must be upon the whole instrument, ex anteeedentibus et consequentibus, and according to the reasonable sense and construction of the words;
There is no error, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.