The opinion of the court was delivered by
L. F. Schofield entered into a written contract with the board of school district No. 113, of Labette county, to drill a well in the school yard, the purpose being to provide a
The grounds on which the defendant’s liability is contested, assuming the plaintiff’s evidence to be true, are (1) that a school district has legal authority to pay for constructing a well only on the theory that it is a necessary appendage to the schoolhouse, and that a well which produces no water fit to drink is useless and cannot be regarded as covered by that term; and (2) that the language of the contract made the plaintiff a guarantor that a supply of drinking watér would be produced.
“For and in consideration of One Dollar and Twenty-five Cents ($1.25) per foot, first party [Schofield] agrees to drill one water well on school yard east of school east of sehoolhonse. First party agrees to furnish dry pipe suitable for casing out all surface water. Dry pipe to be B^-inch, I. D. First party guarantees first-class work and a stra well. In case of objectionable water other than surface water, second parties [the district board] agree to furnish all necessary casing for completion of well. Payment for said well to be cash on completion of said well.”
The evidence tended to show that at a depth of twenty-four feet surface water was found, which was not suitable for drinking, and was cased out in accordance with the contract and the wish of the members of the board. At about eighty feet salt water was struck, and the board, after a delay to give opportunity for analysis, caused the plaintiff to proceed with the drilling, which was finally stopped by order of the director at 2931/2 feet, no usable water having been reached.
No explanation is offered of the combination of letters “stra” appearing in the contract. It may have been intended for “star,” for the plaintiff testified that he used a Star drill machine. At all events, no force is attached to it by either party. The defendant argues that an undertaking on the part of the
“Defendant founds his argument upon his construction of the word ‘well’; that plaintiffs agreed to drill a ‘well’; that a ‘well’ is a hole in the ground, containing water other than surface water; that when plainr tiffs agreed to drill a ‘well’ they contracted to furnish an article meeting that definition, and that, if they did not produce a hole in the ground, containing water other than surface water, they did not drill a ‘well’ and cannot recover. . . . The defendant himself selected the site for the proposed well. Nothing was said about plaintiffs’ undertaking to reach water. All that can be gleaned from the conversations of the parties is that plaintiffs were to dig a well. From this contract, and the circumstances, to construe an undertaking on the part of the plaintiffs to reach water or receive no pay seems to us to do great violence to language, and to the ordinary transactions of sane men. . . . When plaintiffs went to dig a well, when they took a site selected by defendants, when no guaranty of reaching water was made, when no price was fixed for performing the services or reaching water, can a court for a moment regard it is within the contemplation of the parties, as shown from their words or their acts, that they used the word ‘well’ as meaning a hole in the ground,*347 containing water other than surface water? We think not. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary defines a ‘well’ as ‘a hole dug in the ground in order to obtain water.’ This is, to our mind, the only practical view. The object of a well is to obtain water. The well may be unsuccessful. The object of a mining shaft is to develop a mine that will pay — an object not always attained. Under the circumstances of the case, we cannot construe the word ‘well’ as defendant insists.” (Littrell v. Wilcox, 11 Mont. 77, 83.)
The provisions of the contract relative to casing out water unfit for use serve to show that only water suitable for drinking was sought, but in our judgment do not further affect the question under consideration. They indicate that the finding of undesirable water at different depths was anticipated, and the purpose of their insertion was obviously to determine upon whom should fall the cost of the additional material thereby made necessary.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.