124 Ky. 146 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
On the 9th day of April, 1901, the appellant, Mitchell, and the defendant, Southern Railway Company, entered into a contract by which Mitchell was to do certain work in the construction of a tunnel on the line of the appellee’s railway in Indiana, according to the specifications made a part of the contract. The specifications contained the following provision:
“The contractor takes all risks in regard to accidents and casualities of all kinds which may occur during the progress of the work and to he held responsible for all damages to work as well as to the machinery, rolling stock, persons and property, which could have been avoided by the exercise of proper care and viligance on his part. ’ ’
Among the provisions of the contract was the following:
“The contractor hereby agrees to give bond, same*148 secured by some reliable surety company, accepted by the Railway Company, in the sum of fifteen thous- and dollars ($15,000) for the faithful performance of the within contract, and for the purpose of indemnifying the Railway Company for the work contemplated under this contract, and for all cost accruing to said Railway Company in defending any and all liens, of whatsoever nature, enforced for labor and material under this contract.
“Said contractor further agrees to indemnify and save harmless said Railway Company from all casualties or accidents resulting to employes engaged in the work contemplated under this contract, or to any third person who may be in any manner injured or damaged by the said contractor, his servants or agents, in the performance of this contract.”
The appellant entered upon and completed the work under the contract, which has been accepted, and the contract price has been paid, except $355.95, which appellee withheld from the appellant on account of the following facts, namely: During the progress of the w'ork on the tunnel, Mills Buxton received an injury, Which was due entirely to the negligence of the appellee in the manner of its operation of a railway train through the tunnel whilst Buxton was working as an employe of plaintiff in- the execution of the work required by the contract. Neither the plaintiff nor any of his employes in the least degree contributed to the injury. The train which inflicted it was. not used by the appellant or for him, but was ope which was operated entirely by the appellee, and wholly within its control. Buxton instituted a suit against the appellee to recover damages for the injury he had received. The suit was compromised for $355.95, and it is conceded that the compromise .and
The question here for our consideration is, did the appellee have the right to withhold the amount which it paid Buxton out of the contract price of the work? The answer to this question depends upon the terms of the contract into which the parties entered. It is the contention of the appellee' that the appellant indemnified it against losses occasioned by casualties and accidents resulting in the injury of the appellant’s employes engaged in the performance of the work contemplated under the contract, notwithstanding that the injury might be inflicted solely by its own negligence. For the appellant it is insisted that it was not the intention- that he' should indemnify appellee against its own negligence, but that he was indemnifying against losses which might result to it by reason of his or his employes ’ conduct in the prosecution of the work. In construing a contract, it should be the purpose of a court to ascertain, if possible, the intention of the parties to it. To do so, it is sometimes not only important for the court to- consider the language employed in the contract, but the circumstances surrounding the parties, and the object in view which induced the making of it. It is not proper, in construing a contract, for a court to seize upon some expression in it, and allow that to control, in disregard of other provisions of it. The whole of the contract should be read. When we consider the work to be done by the appellant was to yield him but a few thousand' dollars in gross, and that his profits, if large, considering the work to bé done, would necessarily be small in amount, it is improbable that he would undertake to indemnify the appellee against losses occasioned by its own acts of negligence. Especially is it so when one act of negligence by the
To read the contract in question without observing the punctuation, we at once conclude that it was not the intention of the parties that the appellee was to be indemnified against its own acts of negligence. If we read it with a comma after the words “to any third person, ’ ’ then it would read as follows: ‘ ‘ Said
The judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.