66 So. 837 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
The Cody-Henderson Company (appellee) brought suit in detinue against one J. C. Tate to recover, among other things, 6 bales of cotton and 500 bushels of corn. The writ was executed by levying upon 4 bales of cotton and 160 bushels of corn as the property of J. C. Tate. After the levy was made, W. H. Tate, the appellant, made claim to 2 bales of the cotton and 80 bushels of the corn levied on. The claim suit was tried, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
J. C. Tate, the father of W. H. Tate, the claimant in the court below, being indebted to the Cody-Henderson Company, in order to pay or satisfy his indebtedness, sold to the Cody-Henderson Company certain personal property, including 2 mare mules, 1 two-horse wagon and harness, and 75 bushels of corn, which personal properly, together with 40 acres of land, had previously been conveyed to the Coody-Henderson Company by J. C. Tate and wife and accepted in payent of J. C. Tate’s indebtedness to the Cody-Henderson Company by that company.
The contract or arrangement of sale of the personal property between the parties above referred to was in writing, dated February 3, 1913, and contained the following provisions:
“It is agreed and understood that J. C. Tate is to have the use of the mules, wagon, and corn for the year 1913.
After the above agreement had been made, J. C. Tate, according to the testimony of himself and his son, transferred his interest in the same to his son, W. H. Tate, and W. H. Tate is shown to have made a crop on the Cody-Henderson Company place during the year 1913, under the terms of the agreement made by his father, J. C. Tate, with the Cody-Henderson Company, but there is little, if any, evidence to show that the Cody-Henderson Company knew anything of the transfer by J. C. Tate to his son, W. H. Tate. The evidence is without conflict that the property claimed by W. H. Tate was grown on the Cody-Henderson Company place during the year 1913, and that W. H. Tate lived with his father during that year.
The appellee’s right of recovery in the court below rested, primarily, on the written contract between the parties above set out, being declared a contract of hire under section 4743 of the Code of 1907, providing that, when one party furnishes the land and the team to cultivate it, and the other party furnishes the labor, under an agreement to divide the crop between them in certain proportions, such a relation is established. It would seem from the ruling of the trial court that it adopted this theory in the trial of the case, and held that the legal title to the cotton and corn levied upon and raised on the Cody-Henderson place during the crop year 1913 was in the Cody-Henderson Company, and that the defendant, Tate, had but a mere lien on the property for one-half the amount in valúe thereof as the measure or proportion of the crop to which he was entitled as his
The question of moment is this: Does the contract fix the status of the parties under the provisions of section 4743 of the Code and establish a relation of hire? For, aside from the statute, the contract would not establish such a relation, .and legal title to maintain the action would not therefore be in the Cody-Henderson Company, the appellee, as against the claimant, W. H. Tate, the appellant, as they would in such event be either tenants in common, or the relation of landlord and tenant would exist between them. — Hendricks v. Clemmons, 147 Ala. 591, 51 South. 306.
In determining the real character of a written contract, courts look to its purpose (Steele v. State, 159 Ala. 9, 48 South. 673) and undertake to ascertain and give effect to the intention of the parties by resorting to construction, when necessary, without doing positive violence to the sense of the words used in the instrument (Marx v. Kilby L. & M. Works, 162 Ala. 295, 50 South. 136, 136 Am. St. Rep. 24), and in case of doubt in the meaning of the words used, or their application to the particular circumstances, resort may also be had to extrinsic parol evidence to show the real meaning (Cassells Mill, et al. v. Strater Bros. Grain Co., 166 Ala. 274,
The contract shows on its face that the parties to it had in contemplation, as the object in view in making the contract, an agreement between them to provide or contract for making a crop on the place in question for the year 1913; that, in fact, was the subject-matter of the contract. To accomplish this intention and purpose of the parties there is no provision as to what should be done by either in the way of furnishing the other things not specified in the contract that we know, as a matter of common knowledge, are absolutely necessary and essential to a completion and fulfillment of the contract for the production of a crop. The contract, to this extent, is shown on its face to be incomplete and ambiguous. Under the well-known principles of law above stated and authorities cited, parol evidence was therefore admissible to show the situation and surrounding circumstances of the parties and their subsequent conduct with respect to which party did, in fact, furnish these necessary and essential things. Various rulings of the trial court in refusing to permit proof of this na
It cannot be said that, because the contract provides that one of the parties is to furnish “the mules, wagon, and corn,” and is to receive one-half of the crops made in 1913 “for the use of the land and stock above mentioned,” the contract, by the terms provided on its face, is brought within that part of the terms of the statute providing that, “when one party furnishes the land and team to cultivate it,” etc. (Code, § 4743), the contract of hire between the parties is held to' exist. The provision in the contract for the use of the “stock” above mentioned could have reference to nothing else than the aforementioned mules, or possibly, under a broad construction, also a wagon, that one of the parties was to furnish under the terms of the contract, while the statute provides that for the relation of hire to exist the party who furnishes the land must furnish the “team” to cultivate the land.
In arriving at a proper meaning to be accorded to' the word “team,” as used in this statute, the proper rule of construction would be to look to the intention and motive upon which the Legislature proceeded with respect to the end in view or the purpose designed, rather than to the letter of the law, or the precise word used. “The intention of the lawmaker constitutes the law. A thing may be within the letter of the statute, and not within its meaning, and within its meaning, though not within its letter.” — Atkins v. Disintegrating Co. 18 Wall. 272, 21 L. Ed. 841, approvingly quoted in Cocciola, et al. v. Wood-Dickinson Co., 136 Ala. 532, 537, 33 South. 856. The word “team,” as generally used in our language, has a broader and more extensive meaning than that given in our dictionaries. — Finnin v. Malloy, 33 N. Y.
The contract entered into by the parties here having been made in reference to a subject-matter covered by a statute, it is supposed to have been made in contemplation of the statute. The contract containing the provision that one party should furnish the mules, wagon, and corn was not sufficient on its face, for the reasons we have discussed, to bring it within the terms of the statute (Code, § 4743) making it a contract of hire
Reversed and remanded.