Oil Well Supply Co. v. MacMurphey

119 Minn. 500 | Minn. | 1912

Holt, J.

The action is for a breach of an alleged agreement to honor a draft. The conrt directed a verdict for plaintiff, and defendant appeals from an order denying him a new trial.

These are the uncontroverted facts: One Hukill, residing and doing business at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, applied to plaintiff to cash or buy a sight draft for $300 drawn by Hukill, payable to his own order, upon defendant, a relative of Hukill residing at Ortonville, Minnesota. Plaintiff promised to do so if defendant, by telegram, would agree to accept the draft. Thereupon, on the same day, to-wit, December 30, 1907, Hukill sent a telegram to defendant at Ortonville, reading: “Will yon wire me that yon will honor draft for $300 ?” The same day, in response to said message, defendant sent a telegram from Ortonville to E. M. Hukill at Pittsburgh, which reads: “I will.” Hukill thereupon presented the draft and the two telegrams to plaintiff, which bought the draft, and in due course of business caused it to be presented to defendant for acceptance and payment. Defendant refused. When plaintiff learned this, it wrote defendant as follows:

“Oil Well Supply Co.,
“Pittsburgh, Pa.
“January 7, 1908.
“Subject, E. M. Hukill draft.
“Mr. Geo. MacMurphey,
“Ortonville, Minn.
“Dear Sir:
“On December 31st, we cashed for Mr. E. M. Hukill a sight draft drawn on yon for $300, which has been returned to us under protest, marked ‘payment refused,’ the fees amounting to $3.08. We advanced said money ’on the strength of the telegram from yon to Mr. *502Hukill, dated December 30th, reading ‘I will,’ which he told us was in reply to a telegram sent to you by him on December 30th, reading, ‘Will you wire me that you will honor draft for $300 V We would like to know at once your reason for not honoring the draft; also whether or not your telegram reading, ‘I will’ was in answer to a telegram sent by Mr. Hukill to you as quoted above. Trusting to hear from you by return mail, and thanking you in advance,
“We remain,
“Tours truly,
“Louis Brown, Treas.”

To this letter defendant appended this reply:

“Louis Brown,
“Dear Sir:
“I will say in reply to the above that my telegram ‘I will,’ was in answer to above telegram from Mr. Hukill on December 30th. I was out of funds myself and tendered a check from Mr. H. and it was not accepted, hence the protest. I presume this is all cleared up ere this.
“Tours truly,
“Geo. MacMurphey.”

It seems to us that the two telegrams constitute a clear and definite contract on the part of defendant to honor a draft for $300. The manifest purpose of Ilukill’s telegram was to get defendant to agree to honor or accept a draft. It was not to ask for a telegram, except as a means of conveying an agreement or refusal to honor the proposed draft. There can be no doubt that plaintiff took the telegrams to be an agreement by defendant to honor the draft. Defendant appears to be an intelligent professional man, and-it is safe to assume that he was not unacquainted with business methods. Hence he must.have inferred from the telegram that Hukill wished to negotiate the draft on the strength of defendant’s agreement to honor it. That defendant so understood the purport of the telegram admits of no douht, when the subsequent correspondence between him and plain*503tiff is considered. In construing written contracts, the meaning of the language employed, taken in its ordinary and popular sense with reference to the matter in hand, controls unless, when so viewed, an ambiguity still remains. If there be uncertainty after thus exam ining the agreement, the situation of the parties and the circumstances surrounding the transaction may be considered, in order to arrive at the true and intended meaning of the ambiguous expressions used. However, we cannot find any ambiguity in the telegrams constituting the agreement here, when applied to the subject matter. In contracts made by telegrams, the fewest possible words are used, and often omitted words in a message are to be supplied from the sense or context of a message to which it is an answer. This is so usual an occurrence in the business world that courts must take notice of the fact. Upon the undisputed facts, plaintiff was entitled to recover, and the court rightly directed, the verdict, unless there was error in excluding certain evidence offered by defendant.

• The defendant offered to prove that long prior to December 30, 1901, he had been in the habit of honoring drafts made upon him by Hukill; that during such time defendant was in possession of valuable stock pledged by Hukill to secure defendant against loss from such acceptances; that prior to said date, after he had surrendered this stock, Hukill requested defendant to honor further drafts, whereupon defendant stated he would not do so unless his, defendant’s, financial' condition at the bank at Ortonville was such that he could conveniently do so, and that Hukill should also again pledge with defendant the securities he before had; that he told Hukill not to draw any drafts on the defendant, until he had first wired to determine whether defendant would honor them; and that no such telegram or request should be sent to defendant, unless Hukill should, at the same time, place the said securities with defendant. And further that, when defendant received the telegram and he answered the same, it was with 'the expectation that the security would be sent him; that such security was not sent, and defendant was in such financial condition in his accounts at the bank that he could not conveniently honor the draft. We fail to see how the proffered proof could affect the plaintiff which bought the draft on the strength *504of the telegrams. Defendant did not offer to show that plaintiff had any knowledge of either the first arrangement under which defendant honored Hukill’s drafts or this last one.

The order must be affirmed.