delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 VX Ranch, Inc., appeals a judgment entered in the Sixteenth Judicial District Court, Custer County, in favor of Respondent Smith Livestock, Inc., ordering the Clerk of the District Court to pay Smith Livestock a $100,000.00 earnest money deposit interplead by Security Abstract and Title Co., and awarding attorney fees and costs to Security Abstract and Smith Livestock.
¶2 This dispute arises between two corporatiоns that entered into an *174 agreement for the sale and purchase of ranch property. The District Court, after considering the evidence, held that the agreement in question was not subject to a contingency that VX Ranch obtain a loan to finance the transaction and thus Smith Livestock was entitled to the earnest money deposit.
¶3 Alternatively, the District Court found as a matter of fact that VX Ranch did not make reasonable efforts to obtain financing, and thus the result would be the same if there had been a financing contingency in the agreement. While the District Court’s alternate holding is a determination of fact that is supported by substantial evidence in the record, and thus not clearly erroneous, discussion of this issue is not required as we agree with the District Court that the agreement was not subject to a condition precedent that VX Ranch obtain third party financing.
¶4 On December 7, 2001, VX Ranch sent a written offer to Smith Livestock titled “Buy-Sell Agreement.” The document is a standard form contract developed by the Montana Association of Realtors. The blank portions of the form applicable to this transаction were filled in by a licensed real estate agent.
¶5 Under the original Buy-Sell Agreement, VX Ranch was to pay a total of $10.3 million for the properties. Included in this amount was $100,000 in earnest money to be placed in escrow. The remaining $10.2 million was to be an “additional cash payment, payable on or before closing.” The relevant portions of the Buy-Sell Agreement appear as follows:
[Line 33] PURCHASE PRICE AND TERMS:
[Line 34] Total Purchase price is Ten million three hundred thousand U.S. Dollars
[Line 35] ($ 10,300,000) payable as follows:
[Line 36] $ 100,000 earnest money to be applied at closing.
[Line 37] $ 10,200,000 as additional cash payment, payable on or before closing.
[Line 38] $ balance of the purchase price will be financed as follows:
[Line 39]_Conventional_Other Financing_Seller Financing _Assumption_Home equity
[Line 40]_
[Line 41]_
[Line 42]_
[Line 43]_
[Line 44]_
[Line 45]_
*175 [Line 46] Buyer’s offer is contingent upon obtaining the financing specified herein. If financing cannot be obtained within the time
[Line 47] set forth in the TIME FOR COMPLETION section, this offer is terminated and the earnest money will be refundеd to the
[Line 48] Buyer.
(Italicization indicates handwriting).
¶6 After several counteroffers, the two parties came to an agreed price of eleven million dollars. Except for several modifications not relevant to this appeal, 1 all terms and conditions listed in the Buy-Sell Agreement were incorporated in the final counter offer executed by both VX Ranch and Smith Livestock. Together, the documents represent the final sale “Agreement.” 2 Pursuant to the Agreement, VX Ranch deposited the $100,000 earnest money with Security Abstract & Title Company. Under the Agreement, the closing date for the transaction was March 1, 2002.
¶7 On March 15,2002, both parties signed an “Addendum to Buy/Sell Agreements and Counter Offers” (“Addendum”), extending the closing date to April 4, 2002. The Addendum stated, in its entirety:
WHEREAS, SMITH LIVESTOCK INC[.], as “SELLER” and VX Ranch, Inc., as “PURCHASER”, have entеred into a Buy/Sell Agreement involving the sale and purchase of property commonly referred to as Trail Creek Ranch in Custer and Carter Comities, Montana, and Cohagen Ranch in Garfield [County], Montana, and
WHEREAS there has been a delay in obtaining the financing due to no fault of either party, and
WHEREAS both parties agree to extend the closing date on Line 57 of the Agreеment to April 4th. 2002 in order to allow for a reasonable amount of time to complete the financing.
NOW THEREFORE, it is mutually understood and agreed as follows:
1. The foregoing recitals are made a part hereof.
2. The SELLER and the PURCHASER agree that the date of closing shall be April 4th, 2002.
3. All other provisions of the Buy/Sell agreement shall remain in effect as if the new closing date were part of the original writing.
*176 DATED March 15, 2002.
(Italicization indicates handwriting).
¶8 Despite the extension of the closing date, the рurchase of the ranch properties was not completed. Smith Livestock and VX Ranch each demanded the earnest money, and Security Abstract and Title Company filed this action in interpleader.
¶9 VX Ranch has contended at all times during this litigation that the Agreement included a condition precedent that it obtain a loan from a third party lender to finance some unspecified part of the purchase price prior to the Agreement becoming effective. However, the District Court held that the Agreement did not contain a financing contingency. VX Ranch now appeals, claiming that the District Court erred in this conclusion.
¶10 As a preliminary matter, VX Ranch argues that the issue of whether the Agreement contained a financing contingency was not pled, and the District Court, therefore, should not have considered whether there was a financing contingency.
3
To support this notion, VX Ranch cites
H-D Irrigating v. Kimble Properties,
¶11 A court may determine that a party has waived its right to assert a legal theory or factual issue where that theory or issue is not spеcified in the pleadings or pretrial order.
Plath v. Schonrock,
[W]hile thе pre-trial order may be the beginning, it is never the end of a matter of this sort. It normally controls the subsequent course of the action, but not if it is modified at the trial to prevent manifest injustice. The judicial function does not terminate upon discovery that an issue is unspecified, but extends to a determination as to whether the ends of justice implore that the issue nonetheless be introduced into the litigation. This frequently involves a delicate balance of competing considerations, variable from case to case, in order that the decision may be soundly made. And absent perceptible irregularity in a process so largely discretionary, we are loath to disturb the result.
Plath,
¶ 50 (quoting
Nentwig,
¶12 We conclude the District Court acted within the scope of the pleadings when it considered whether a financing contingency was included in the Agreement. Smith Livestock did not waive its right to assert the theory that there was no finаncing contingency. In its answer to Security Abstract and Title Company’s complaint, Smith Livestock stated that the District Court should “declare that Smith Livestock is entitled to the earnest money together with accrued interest.” This statement alone put VX Ranch on notice that entitlement to the escrow money was in dispute and thus, by implication, the terms and conditions in the controlling Agreement would inevitably be at issue in this case. In the District Court’s pretrial order, which was signed and filed the same day that the District Court denied VX Ranch’s motion for summary judgment, Smith Livestock again contended that “it should be entitled to keep the earnest money pursuant to the terms of the Buy-Sell Agreement.” Thus, at a minimum, it can be implied from the pleadings and pretrial order that the interpretаtion of the Agreement and whether it contained an express financing contingency was preserved for the District Court’s consideration. See Plath, ¶¶ 50-51; see also H-D Irrigating, ¶ 23 *178 (pleadings and pretrial order, although not expressly referencing constructive fraud, gave parties sufficient notice of the issue, and the district court, therefore, did not err in considering the issue).
¶13 Further, a review of the District Court transcript shows that evidence of the parties’ intent in creating the Agreement, specifically whether it was contingent upon VX Ranch obtaining third party financing, was presented throughout the trial. VX Ranch made no contemporaneous objection to the evidence concerning whether the Agreement was contingent upon its obtaining this financing.
¶14 During the course of the litigаtion, VX Ranch filed a motion for summary judgment claiming that the Agreement was subject to a contingency that it obtain financing from a third party, and thus it was entitled to the return of its earnest money deposit as a matter of law. Smith Ranch, in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, argued that a material issue of fact was present as to whether VX Ranch used reasonable effоrts to obtain financing. The District Court agreed with Smith Ranch, and denied VX Ranch’s motion for summary judgment. The dissent would seem to say that because Smith Livestock did not argue that there was no financing contingency in the Agreement in its opposition to VX Ranch’s motion for summary judgment, it was somehow precluded from making this an issue at trial. However, the denial of a motion for summary judgment does not sеttle or even tentatively decide anything about the merits of the claim. Such a denial is a pretrial order that decides only that the case should go to trial.
Switzerland Cheese Assn., Inc. v. E. Horne’s Market, Inc.,
¶15 Contrary to the dissent’s statement at ¶ 32, the issue whether the Agreement contained a condition precedent that VX Ranch obtain third party financing, was an integral part of the trial. This Court has previously held that when еvidence and issues extrinsic to the pleadings are admitted at trial without objection, the failure to object is an implicit consent to the litigation of those issues.
Glacier Nat. Bank v. Challinor,
¶16 VX Ranch next argues that the District Court erred in finding thаt the Agreement did not include a contingency that VX Ranch obtain third party financing. The construction and interpretation of a written contract is a question of law. Where a contract has been
*179
reduced to writing, the intention of the parties is to be ascertained, if possible, from the writing alone. Section 28-3-303, MCA;
Wurl v. Poison School Dist. No. 23,
¶17 The initial determination of whether an ambiguity exists in a contract is a question of law for the court. An ambiguity exists where the language of a contract, as a whole, is reasonably subject to two different interpretations. When a contract is ambiguous, the intent of the parties in creating the contract becomes a question of fact for the court to decide in a case that is tried without a jury. Wurl, ¶ 17.
¶18 To support its argument that the Agreement is subject to the contingency that it obtain third party financing, VX Ranch repeatedly quotes the following language:
Buyer’s offer is contingent upon obtaining the financing specified herein. If financing cannot be obtained within the time set forth in the TIME FOR COMPLETION section, this offer is terminated and the earnest money will be returned to the Buyer.
¶19 VX Ranch claims that this language is clear and unambiguous in conditioning the Agreement upon financing. However, as noted by the District Court, this language conditions the Agreement upon the “financing specified herein.” (Emphasis added). As evidenced by the excerpt from the Agreement noted in ¶ 5 above, the Agreement does not specify any finanсing. Those parts of the Agreement that were applicable to financing (e.g., lines 38-45) were simply left blank. At no point does the Agreement indicate that payment of the balance of the purchase price (after applying the earnest money) required that VX Ranch obtain third party financing. To the contrary, line 37 specified that the balance would be mаde as an “additional cash payment, payable on or before closing.”
¶20 The dissent, at ¶ 33, posits that the form language stating that the “offer is contingent on obtaining the financing specified herein,” clearly and unambiguously establishes that financing was required, and assumes that “financing” refers to some type of third party financing, even though none was specified. However, the form contract does provide boxes to specify the type of financing required, and also spaces to specify the particular financing, all of which are left blank. ¶21 The dissent goes on to state that the language which predicates the termination of the Agreement, and the refund of the earnest money, on obtaining financing within the time set forth in the Agreement’s TIME FOR COMPLETION section, makes it clear that obtaining financing was a condition precedent to completing the sale. *180 However, to the contrary, the TIME FOR COMPLETION section of the Agreement bolsters the conclusion that no third party financing was contemplated in the original Agreement. Such section states:
TIME FOR COMPLETION: If third party financing of the type specified herein is required by the terms of this Agreement {includes assumptions, contracts for deed, and lender financing), the closing shall occur on the date specified or as soon thеreafter as financing is completed, but no later than 30 days after the stated closing date.
(Emphasis added). The TIME FOR COMPLETION clause of the Agreement begins with the word “If,” and the condition is that there be a type of financing specified. Of course, no type of third party (lender) financing is specified. Thus, by its plain terms, the TIME FOR COMPLETION section is not applicable, and by reference neither is thаt section that makes VX Ranch’s offer contingent on its obtaining financing.
¶22 The Agreement further states at lines 67-70:
FINANCING CONDITIONS AND OBLIGATIONS: BUYER’S REPRESENTATION OF FUNDS: Buyer represents that they have sufficient funds for the down payment and closing costs to close the sale in accordance with this Agreement and are not relying upon any contingent source of such funds unless otherwise expressly set forth herein.
(Emphasis added). This is the third section of the form agreement thаt provides that unless some type of third party financing is set out in the Agreement, it is not contingent on the VX Ranch obtaining such. In the Agreement, VX Ranch, the buyer, represented that it had sufficient funds to close the sale and was not relying on any contingent sources. Because no financing is specified in the Agreement, and VX Ranch represented that it had sufficient funds to close the sаle, we must conclude that this portion of the Agreement is unambiguous in that it requires the buyer to have “sufficient funds for... closing costs” without any “contingent sources” of financing.
¶23 Also, as noted by the District Court, the printed form agreement contains a section entitled “Loan Application” which provides that if the buyer, VX Ranch in this instance, fails to make a written application for financing and pay a lender any required fees by a time to be inserted in the form, the buyer would be in breach of the Agreement. The blank for insertion of the time by which this must be done is marked “N/A.” This is a further indication that VX Ranch was not going to apply for a loan and thus there was to be no lender financing.
*181 ¶24 VX Ranch argues, however, that the Addendum portion of the Agreement, set forth at ¶ 7 abovе, supports its argument that the Agreement was from the beginning conditioned upon its obtaining financing. As it was executed by both parties, the Addendum was made a part of the Agreement and the entire Agreement, including the Addendum, must be analyzed to determine if it required third party financing as VX Ranch contends. Section 28-2-1602, MCA.
¶25 The relevant portion of the Addendum states:
[Tjhere has been a delay in obtaining the financing due to no fault of either party, and
... both parties agree to extend the closing date on Line 57 of the Agreement to April 4th. 2002 in order to allow for a reasonable amount of time to complete the financing.
(Italicization indicates handwriting). Thus, the closing of the transaction was extended to allow for more time to complete “the financing.” According to Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 719 (2nd ed., Random House 1987), the term “financing” means:
1. the act of obtaining or furnishing money or capital for a purchase or enterprise. 2. the funds so obtained.
VX Ranch was obviously required to pay for the property in question-that is, to obtain the necessary financing. Nowhere in the Agreement, including the Addendum, is it specified that completing the financing means that VX Ranch must obtain a loan from some third party. Simply еxtending the closing date to allow for more time for VX Ranch to come up with the necessary funds does not add such a contingency. It would have been a simple matter for VX Ranch to insert in its offer to buy the property, or in the Addendum, a statement that the sale was contingent on its being able to secure a loan for all or a portion of the purchase priсe. It did not do so, and thus such a condition precedent was not a part of the Agreement.
¶26 When VX Ranch requested an extension to obtain financing, it was in Smith Livestock’s best interest to agree. Smith Livestock had changed its position in reliance on the Agreement. It had sold fifty semi-trailer loads of its cattle, as well as much of its machinery. These actions answer the dissent’s question posed at ¶ 33, of why Smith Livestock agreed to a 30-day extension of the closing date to preserve the sale, even though the Agreement was not subject to a condition precedent that VX Ranch obtain third party financing.
¶27 David Smith, the President of Smith Livestock, testified that VX Ranch’s request to extend the closing date was the first knowledge he *182 had that VX Ranch was seeking a loan. When asked why he agreed to extend the closing date, Smith testified:
Basically I felt at that time that they were still sincere and that, you know, they just needed just a little more time to wrap this thing up. That’s the story they gave me.
This is consistent with the language of the Addendum, which does not expressly condition closing upon VX Ranch’s ability to obtain financing. Although Smith Livestock’s officers were made awаre of VX Ranch’s intention to seek a loan when VX Ranch asked to extend the closing date, the Addendum does not say that Smith Livestock agreed to condition the completion of the sale on VX Ranch securing third party financing.
¶28 We therefore conclude that the District Court did not err in holding as a matter of law that the Agreement was not contingent upon the ability of VX Ranch to obtain a loan to make the final payment.
¶29 Affirmed.
Notes
For example, the handwritten portions of lines 34, 35, and 37, were modified to reflect the final sale price. However, lines 36 and 38-45 were not modified.
The Buy-Sell Agreement, counter offers, and addendum will hereinafter be referred to together as the “Agreement.”
VX Ranch argues the District Court had “jurisdiction” to decide only whethеr it made a reasonable attempt to obtain financing for the purchase.
The language in H-D Irrigating and subsequent cases, to the extent they say that a court loses “jurisdiction” over an issue that is not specified in the pleadings or pretrial order, is incorrect. To clarify this mischaraeterization we look to the more recent case law discussed hererin.
This is a discretionary power of the district court, separate from that granted under Rule 15(a), M.R.Civ.P., to allow a party to formally amend its pleadings.
