308 N.Y. 342 | NY | 1955
The major question in this case concerns the commencement and termination dates of a written lease for the hire of six milk trucks. The S & E Motor Hire Corporation, plaintiff’s assignor (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff), entered into an agreement with defendant O’Neill Milk & Cream Co., Inc., on January 14,1946, to lease to defendant six new Brockway trucks, two of six-ton capacity and four smaller vehicles. They were to be built, painted and lettered according to defendant’s specifications ; the lessor was to pay all the expenses of their servicing and operation; and the lessee was to pay a weekly rental of $63 for each of the larger trucks and $53 for each of the smaller ones.
The agreement, embodied in a printed contract form prepared by plaintiff, provided in paragraph I that
“ The Lessor hereby leases and the Lessee hereby hires from the Lessor six motor vehicle(s) as described below, or vehicle(s) of other manufacture substantially similar, for a period of three (3) years to commence on the date the contracted truck(s) is (are) put into the service of the Lessee.”
Although, as the undisputed evidence showed, the parties intended that all six trucks were to be delivered within ninety days from the date the contract was signed, plaintiff did not furnish any trucks until some four and a half months later, when, on June 1, 1946, only the four smaller trucks were turned over. Defendant was billed for, and paid, the stipulated weekly rental for these four trucks as of and from June 1. Plaintiff supplied two additional trucks in the first week of September, 1946, one small and one large, but these were older and not the two large Brockways called for by the contract. These older trucks were used and paid for by defendant until October 22, when plaintiff finally delivered the large new ones.
The trial court, expressly observing that ‘ ‘ this is not a divisible contract ”, adopted plaintiff’s view that the three-year period specified in the contract was to be figured from October 22,1946. Plaintiff was awarded the sum of $4,286.10, representing the rental for the six trucks from June 1 to October 22, 1949, less the amount plaintiff received from renting the trucks to others during that period.
The Appellate Division modified, concluding that the agreement was ‘ ‘ divisible ’ ’ and that the rental term of the four small trucks commenced on June 1, 1946, and that of the two large trucks on October 22. The lease was, accordingly, held to have terminated as to the small vehicles on June 1, 1949, and defendant’s cancellation on that date was deemed to constitute a breach only as to the large trucks. The measure of plaintiff’s damages was fixed at the amount of the agreed rental of the two large trucks from June 1 to October 22, less deductions (1) for the rentals received by plaintiff from others during that period and (2) for the expenses of servicing and operation that plaintiff would have incurred had defendant not defaulted.
The contract, however, plainly manifests the design of the parties that the rental term is to be one of three years, and not one of indefinite duration depending upon the timeliness of plaintiff’s performance.
Further militating against plaintiff’s interpretation is the equally well-settled maxim that, where there is ambiguity in the terms of a contract prepared by one of the parties, ‘ ‘ it is consistent with both reason and justice that any fair doubt as to the meaning of its own words should be resolved against ” such party. (Mutual Ins. Co. v. Hurni Co., 263 U. S. 167, 174; see Atterbury v. Bank of Washington Heights, 241 N. Y. 231, 238; Gillet v. Bank of America, 160 N. Y. 549, 554-555.) Application of that principle is particularly appropriate in this case, where the contract was embodied in a printed form prepared specifically by plaintiff for its use and where plaintiff itself, by its own delay of delivery, introduced the element of uncertainty into an otherwise clear provision. It would be anomalous if a lessor could, by his own conduct, vary the scope and meaning of a provision of his own formulation to the disadvantage of the lessee.
Little is to be gained by attempting to resolve the issue of interpretation in this case by resort to any fixed rule of divisibility or entirety. (See 3 Corbin on Contracts, §§ 694, 695; see, also, 3 Williston on Contracts [rev. ed., 1936], § 861, pp. 2413-2415.) It is unnecessary for us to determine whether this lease contract would be treated as a divisible one in some other connection or for some other purpose. As hearing on the issue of interpretation here presented, however, it is significant that the contract fixed different rental rates for the four small trucks and for the two large ones, and that the parties themselves treated the contract as immediately effective, as respects the small trucks, upon their delivery over four months prior to the delivery of the large trucks. Plaintiff sent periodic invoices, which defendant paid, for the use of the small trucks, at the stipulated weekly rate, during the entire period that elapsed between the dates of delivery of the two groups of vehicles. This practical construction of the contract reflected the parties’ intent that their respective obligations as to the four small vehicles be treated as separate and distinct from those affecting the large vehicles. (Of. 3 Williston, op. cit., p. 2419.)
We agree, therefore, with the conclusion reached by the Appellate Division that the lease term commenced separately for each
It is urged, however, that, since plaintiff argued at the trial that the lease term commenced for all six trucks on October 22, and defendant, that it began on June 1, the Appellate Division had, and this court has, no alternative but to accept either the one construction or the other.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the case remitted to that court in order that it may review the questions of fact as determined by the trial court, without costs to either party.
Desmond, Froessel and Van Voorhis, JJ., concur with Fuld, J.; Conway, Ch. J., and Dye, J., dissent in an opinion; Burke, J., taking no part.
Judgment affirmed.
. The Appellate Division gave the parties the choice between stipulating the amounts of such deductions or submitting to a limited new trial. The parties thereupon entered into a stipulation fixing those amounts, on the basis of which the Appellate Division directed the entry of final judgment. Although it recited that it was not to be construed to limit either party’s right to appeal to this court, the stipulation is necessarily conclusive as to the amounts agreed upon by the parties in lieu of submitting to a new trial. (See Pines v. Beck, 300 N. Y. 181, 186-187; Hine v. New York Elevated R. R. Co., 149 N. Y. 154, 160-161.)
. It may be that, when complete delivery was not made within the period specified, or a reasonable time thereafter, defendant could have cancelled the lease and that, by accepting the trucks at a later date, it waived its right to timely delivery. However, when it did accept delivery, defendant did not thereby waive the basic provision that the lease term was to be for a period of three years.
. Actually, the interpretation adopted by the Appellate Division was advanced by defendant in the trial court after announcement of that court’s orally delivered decision, by way of exception thereto. The record discloses that, when the point was raised, the trial judge did not reject it as untimely, but rather expressed his view on the merits, in opposition, that the lease in suit was "not a divisible contract.”