46 Mo. 121 | Mo. | 1870
delivered the opinion of tbe court.
The plaintiff complains chiefly of the' instruction to the jury m relation to the construction of the contract between it and the city, and claims, first, that the language of the contract is plain and unequivocal, and not subject to the construction sought to be put upon it by the defendant; second, that it was the duty of the court to construe it, and that that duty could not be thrown upon the jury; and, third, that it was improper, in order to ascertain the meaning of the contract, to consider the subsequent acts ‘of the parties in relation to it in order to ascertain the construction which they themselves had put upon it.
Ordinarily, when there is any uncertainty in the terms of a contract, it is the duty of the court to declare its meaning. When it is so plain that only one meaning can be attached to it, it admits of no construction, and that meaning must be enforced. To give it any other would be making, rather than interpreting, a contract. • Assuming that there is sufficient doubt as to the meaning of this agreement to admit of construction, I will first consider the question whether the court was bound to construe it from its language alone, or whether the action of the parties might be inquired into in order to ascertain the construction which they put upon it for themselves; in a word, whether, in the use of words of doubtful meaning or application, the meaning and application given them by the parties who used them shall prevail over an interpretation that might be given by the court. It seems to me that the statement of the question should carry with it the proper answer. It has nothing to do with the old question of the admissibility of evidence to contradict or vary a written agreement. The law upon that matter has been too long and well settled tobe subject to any doubt whatever, and the position taken by the Circuit Court in its instruction to the jury does not involve its consideration. Nor is it the same question that so often arises when evidence is offered to explain a latent ambiguity, though it has a strong analogy to it.
Our daily experience impresses us with the imperfection of common language and shows the errors into which we constantly
It is true that evidence of such understanding should not be entertained when the language is clear'and will admit of but one interpretation, because in that case, unless there is fraud or mistake, the language used is the best possible evidence of the intention. Nor should any regard be paid to loose declarations or equivocal or isolated acts, but the continuous conduct of the parties for a series of years concerning the subject-matter of the contract, and in fulfillment of its conditions — every act pointing in the same direction — may make their understanding as clear as by the greatest precision of language.
In Patterson v. Camden, 25 Mo. 13, certain partners published a notice of dissolution, with notice that a new firm, composed of part of the members of the old, would collect the dues and pay the debts. ’ The new firm drew a bill in the name of the old firm
The court quote, as authority, Whitehead v. Bank of Pittsburg, 2 Watts & Serg. 172, which is a very similar case; and a certain construction was there given by the court to the article of dissolution, because the parties themselves bad by their acts given it that meaning, tbe judge remarking: “I know of no better mode of ascertaining this moaning than is shown, if all parties acted on a particular meaning.”
In Chapman v. Bluck, 5 Scott, C. P., 515, it became material to determine whether certain correspondence between landlord and tenant was a lease or only an agreement to lease ; and the court not only considered the correspondence making the alleged demise, but also subsequent acts and declarations of the tenant acknowledging the relation of tenancy by promising to pay rent. Tindal, J:, before considering these acts, says: “But we are also at liberty to look at the acts of the parties, than which there can not be a better means of ascertaining their intention.” And Parker, J., after laying down the general rule as given by Lord Elleuborough, “that the intention of the parties, as declared by the words of the instrument, must govern the construction,” adds that “subsequent acts and declarations of the parties may be looked to in aid of the construction.”
Most of tbe instances where resort is bad to acts, etc., in aid of construction, are found in cases where tbe meaning and application of words in old grants, in tbe location of highways, etc., are controlled by the signification attached to them for a series of
I do not understand that there is any dispute in relation to this right of explanation as to ancient grants; but the plaintiff contends that it is confined to them, and, in case of all other contracts, that the court alone can construe them, and, in making such construction, is confined to their language. To sustain this view, many cases are cited, but special attention is called to Parsons v. Miller, 15 Wend. 561. Justice Savage there says that “ deeds are to be expounded by their terms where there is no ambiguity;” and says further, that “the cases cited by Mr. Justice Spencer, in Livingston v. Ten Broeck, show that the evidence (usage of parties) is proper only in case of ancient deeds.3’ But if the justice means by ancient deeds those that are over thirty years old, he is certainly mistaken, for the very deed that in Livingston v. Ten Broeck was construed by the acts of the parties, was executed less than twenty years before the trial. The age of the deed has nothing to do with the principle involved in the question, only sufficient time must have elapsed to enable the continued acts of the parties to have given it an unmistakable construction.
Though I have found no case where the court has refused to explain an ambiguity by the unequivocal conduct of the parties, yet there seems to have been a timidity— a disposition to qualify the cases that would permit a resort to such explanations — a reluctance to depart from the old rule, that patent ambiguities can only be explained by the instrument itself. Phillips (Ev. 804) says that covenants are not to be construed by the acts of the parties, and a note to Fowle v. Bigelow, 10 Mass. 379, says the same. But I find the cases referred to (Baynham v. Guy’s Hospital, 3 Ves. 295, and others) arose upon covenants
So far as time and opportunity for clearly ascertaining the construction given by the parties are concerned, it is seldom that a case has arisen where they have been more fully afforded than in the case at bar. For more than twenty years the plaintiff and defendant were constantly acting under their contract, and the conduct of both parties pointed alone to one understanding. The city from time to time made orders for additional lamps, with the guarantee of the six per cent, named in the contract. The Gas Company proceeded to their erection, and regularly presented their bills for gas furnished, and during the whole period no distinction whatever was made between the price for the 263, now claimed to have been alone fixed by the contract, and the price for the additional lamps. They are not even separately stated in the bills, and in two of the earlier ones they are all spoken of as “per contract,” which refers as well to price as to authority to furnish. There is only one question, then, open to consideration, and that is whether there is such ambiguity in the agreement itself as to admit of construction. The intention of the parties must be first sought in the instrument in all its parts,
The contract opens with an order for 263 lamps, and further on provides for the payment of $25 a year per lamp for those “ herein ordered.” So far all seems plain, and if the price can only refer to the 263 lamps — if, from other provisions and the object of the agreement, no doubt can be thrown upon the intention of the parties in this regard — then the contract is not open for construction. But let us see.
Plaintiff’s charter gives it a monopoly — the “exclusive privilege of erecting gaslights,” etc., “in the city of St. Louis and its suburbs.” This was its declared object; the terms upon which such lights were to he supplied were left to the contract, and the city could only be bound by its contract. Now what more natural than, in making arrangements for lighting the whole city, that some understanding should be had in relation to the price, not only in the small district to be lighted at once, but elsewhere, as the lamps should be extended ? The first contract insured the life of the company, and, unless it were bound by some terms, placed the city at its mercy. Would the city authorities be likely to place it in that position ?
On further inspecting the- contract, I.find, in addition to the 263 lamps expressly ordered, an agreement to furnish such additional lamps as may be ordered, of which six months’ notice is to be given, with a guarantee of six per cent, profit upon the cost. I find also that, in a certain contingency, a reduction is to be provided for “ in the price agreed upon in the gas furnished to the city,” etc., “in virtue of this agreement.” This reference to the price agreed upon for the gas of the city means the whole city, and the provision for the guarantee of six per cent, for any extension of lamps would imply that some price for the whole was fixed in the agreement — the one directly and the other by natural inference. The one shows direc.tly that the price was fixed in the agreement, and in regard to the other, it may be fairly said, if the company was still at liberty to charge a quantum meruit,
But when I look at the writing to find the price, I find it to be fixed only for the lamps “ herein ordered,” and I am then forced to the conclusion either that the price of the 263 was alone provided for, or that the phrase was carelessly used, and did not express the true meaning of the parties, but that they intended instead, “ herein contracted for,” or “herein provided for.” Plausibility is given to the latter construction, not only from provisions and considerations already referred to, but from the want of precision in other parts of the instrument, as in the second paragraph the words “ hereby contracted for” evidently refer to all the lamps ordered and to be ordered, while in the third paragraph the term “herein contracted for” has reference alone to those ordered.
Are not these considerations (and others might be given) enough to create a doubt whether a price was intended to he provided for all the lamps, or only the 263 ? One party now contends for one view, the other party for the opposite. If, for more than twenty years before this contest, the parties agreed as to what that intention was, I think they should be bound by that agreement as the best attainable evidence of their original intention.
Counsel submit an elaborate argument to show that the contract could not have extended beyond the city limits as then existing; that, so far as it operated upon the extensions, it was ultra vires and void. Had the contract by its terms provided for lighting the streets beyond such limits, it would have been so far inoperative as an exercise of territorial jurisdiction beyond its range. But it contained no such provision. The additional orders for lamps were all to be within the city, and the city is a unit, though with changing boundaries. There- might be a question as to the extension of the exclusive rights of the plaintiff, for grants of monopolies axe to be strictly construed; but there is no doubt that a city ordinance or a city contract, designed for the city at large, operates throughout its boundaries whatever their change.
I do not know that I fully understand the charge of the Circuit Court in referring to the ambiguity of the terms ‘ ‘ city of St. Louis” and “herein ordered,” as arising from extrinsic facts. If by extrinsic facts were meant such facts as may be shown to explain a latent ambiguity, the term can hardly apply. ‘ ‘ The city of St. Louis ” has a meaning of which the court will take notice, and its boundaries are fixed by law, and the term “herein provided” must refer to the provisions of the contract; and its ambiguity does not arise from any extrinsic fact, but from other parts of the contract, and from its history and object. But from the whole instruction it clearly appears that the court meant to submit the inquiry to the jury whether the contract had received a construction from the acts of the parties, whether they, by
The other judges concurring, the judgment will be affirmed.