40 Ky. 7 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1840
dellveied the Opinion of the Court.
Cowan and Mason were near neighbors, and the former was a farmer, and raised and fattened hogs for market. In the fall of 1836, they entered into the following agreement: “This writing is to show that James F. Mason “has bought of Wm. C. Cowan all the hogs that he may “have for market, next fall; to be delivered about the “25th or 10th of October. The lot of hogs are to aver“age two hundred and fifty pounds, and be in number, “about one hundred, more or less, at the price of five “dollars per hundred pounds, gross, payable in ninety “days after delivery, the paper well indorsed. Ibis fur- £ £ ther understood that no hog is to weigh less than two “ hundred, gross.
“ Signed this 9th of November, 1836.
“ Wm. C. Cowan.
“James F. Mason.”
Suit was brought upon this writing by the Administrator of Cowan, in covenant, charging a breach in the failure and refusal of Mason to receive and pay for, or secure payment for the hogs.
It appears from the testimony, that on the 17th or 18th of October, the parties met by agreement, at the house of
Waiving numerous preliminary points, made in the progress of the trial, the question occurs upon the merits, Was Mason bound to receive the hogs tendered? We think he was not.
The contract, in our judgment, clearly points to, and was intended by the parties to embrace the hogs fattened and prepared for market by Cowan, and not to those that might be bought by him, that had been fattened and prepared for market, by others. They were neighbors. Cowan was a hog raiser, and it does not appear that he was in the habit of buying fattened hogs to sell on speculation. The number, “ about one hundred, more or less,” is indefinite, and was made so, no doubt, with a view to limit the contract to the stock of hogs fattened by Cowan. The number might be more or less than one hundred, that might be brought within the average. But it was expect
If Cowan could purchase hogs fattened by others, had the price risen to six dollars, he could have sold out, and then he would have no hogs for market at the time agreed on, and could have escaped from all responsibility on the contract. If he had a right to buy, and force Mason to take those purchased, in case hogs had fallen, he would have been bound to buy in case they had risen in value. We think no such obligation rested on him or was intended to rest on him. If he was not bound to buy, neither was Mason bound to take those he might buy. Mason being acquainted with Cowan’s stock of hogs, and his manner of fattening and preparing them for market, might have been willing to give for them the price agreed on, and yet have been unwilling to allow that price for hogs promiscuously purchased, that had been fattened and prepared for market by others.
This interpretation of the contract is fortified by the facts that the parties themselves so understood it, as appears from their meeting and commencing the weighing of Cowan’s stock of hogs on the 17th or 18th of October.
Nor do we think that Mason could be made responsible for the ten or eleven hogs of Cowan, which reached the average, for two reasons:
First, they fell so far below the supposed number agreed on, as not to come within the spirit of the contract.
And secondly, the weighing - on the 17th or 18th was discontinued by Cowan, and those ten or eleven not then offered or tendered to Mason, nor offered or tendered af
Upon the whole, we think that the Court improperly instructed the jury, and that the verdict is against evidence, and a new trial should have been granted.
It is therefore, the opinion of the Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed and cause remanded, that a new trial may be granted without costs, and the plaintiff is entitled to costs in this Court.