35 Ind. App. 45 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
The appellant sued the appellee, alleging in the complaint that the Indiana Lead Glass Company, September 14, 1900, entered into an agreement with the appellee, which was set out in the complaint. By its terms the appellee agreed to convey to the Indiana Lead Glass Company, designated in the contract as the party of the second part, by good and sufficient warranty deed, certain described lots in the first addition to' Matthews, Grant county, Indiana, “to be used for factory purposes only as hereinafter stipulated; deed to be executed and delivered to said party of the second part when the factory is built and in operation;” also>, three residence building lots, to be selected by the party of the second part from any of the platted lots unsold in the town of Matthews. The appellee also agreed to furnish natural gas, free of cost, for the manufacture of glass and for operating said factory upon said land, as long as natural gas is -obtained on the lands and leases of the appellee at and in the vicinity of that town, and to deliver said gas through appellee’s gas-mains to the property line of said land. The appellee also agreed
The complaint showed that on and prior to March 1, 1901, the appellee deeded the real estate to the Indiana Lead Glass Company, and then and thereafter caused the side-track to be laid without cost to that company, and that the appellee fully complied with the terms of the contract, except as afterward in the complaint stated; that the Indiana Lead Glass Company and the receiver and Ansted and the appellant successively complied literally on their part with all the requirements of the contract. It was alleged that the appellee was organized and incorporated for the purpose of purchasing the land upon which the town of Matthews was located, and of building a town or • city
The evidence showed that, besides the written contract set forth in the complaint, the parties thereto also executed another contract, dated December 28, 1900, which was admitted in evidence over the objection of the appellant, the grounds of objection stated being that the proposed evidence was not within the issues on trial, and that the latter contract was' without consideration. This supplemental contract of December 28, 1900, signed by the Indiana Lead Glass Company and the appellee, was for the most part in printing, in the form ordinarily used by the appellee and its customers in contracting’ for the supplying of natural gas by the former to the latter, being an order or request from the Indiana Lead Glass Company, addressed to the appellee, directing it to connect its natural gas-mains with the factory subject to conditions on the back of the contract, the contract to be binding when signed by the appellee.
When the factory was completed, the president and the treasurer of the Indiana Lead Glass Company called upon the general agent of the appellee at Matthews, and notified him that the factory was completed and ready for operation, whereupon the general agent delivered a draft of the supplemental contract to said treasurer, who said he wished to submit it to the legal adviser of the Indiana Lead Glass. Company, and thereupon took the draft of the contract to Indianapolis. Afterward he returned it to the president of
In the supplemental contract as executed there were some erasures of printed matter on the face thereof, and a number of printed “conditions” on its back were erased. Among the conditions not erased was the following: “Contracts are not transferable.” The contention here between counsel relates chiefly to this provision in the supplemental contract. There was evidence introduced, to which no ground of objection appears to have been offered, that at the time of the making of the original contract it was orally agreed between the parties thereto that it was a preliminary contract, and that later on, when the factory was ready to be connected with the gas supply, another contract to cover the gas supply should be executed by the parties. There was also evidence to the effect that at the time of the execution of the original contract it was the orally expressed understanding of the parties that it was not assignable.
It is not claimed or pretended that at the time when the appellee was notified of the completion of the factory it refused further to carry out the contract without a modification thereof, and that thereupon the Indiana Lead Glass Company, to prevent litigation and by way of compromise of such matter, consented to an essential change of the con
The difference between the benefit to be derived by such a corporation as the appellee from the future carrying on of the manufactory by the particular corporation to which it engaged to furnish free gas, and the consequence to the ap
In Sprankle v. Trulove (1899), 22 Ind. App. 577, we had occasion to discuss this subject, and did so at some length, citing a number of authorities, in addition to which we may refer to Rappleye v. Racine Seeder Co. (1890), 79 Iowa 220, 44 N. W. 363, 7 L. R. A. 139; Worden v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (1891), 82 Iowa 735, 48 N. W. 71; Harper v. Dalzell, etc., Co. (1892), 27 W. L. Bull. (Ohio) 274; Robinson v. Drummond (1831), 2 Barn. & Ald. 303; Ross v. Fox (1867), 13 Grant Ch. 683.
Whether, in the exercise of its legitimate discretion, a court of equity could find it proper to grant all the relief prayed for by the appellant, or any part thereof, under circumstances such as are stated in the complaint, we need not now determine. The case at bar is submitted to us upon the evidence all of which appears in the record by bill of exceptions, and we are to determine what is right and proper upon the whole case, as provided by section eight of the act of 1903 (Acts 1903, p. 338) concerning proceedings in civil procedure.
We think we may consider the supplemental contract as having' been regarded by the parties thereto as not in conflict with the original contract, and that its introduction in evidence, with proof of the acts of the parties after its execution, tended to show not that they had made inconsistent contracts, but that by their conduct they construed as not assignable the original contract, capable of such construction by them; and, considering such construction by the parties in connection with the terms of the original contract and the character of the interests of the parties which it was thereby intended to subserve, we may properly coincide
Judgment affirmed.