160 N.Y.S. 973 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1916
Lead Opinion
In December, 1913, the defendant agreed to furnish to the plaintiff 1,120 pounds of crystal carbolic acid at seven and one-half cents a pound during the year 1914. The contract was made on a printed form of the defendant and contained a clause that “ contingencies beyond your control, fire, strike, accidents to your works or to your "stock or change in the tariff will allow you to cancel this contract or any part of the same. ’ ’ The plaintiff ordered and received in May, 1914, one drum of 280 pounds and in November, 1914, the defendant ordered a second drum of 280 pounds but received only 100 pounds. On January 21, 1915, the defendant refused to make any further deliveries and attempted to cancel the contract under the clause hereinbefore set forth. It was shown at the trial that the defendant was accustomed to receive goods of the character in question from abroad and there can be no doubt that the plaintiff understood that the goods called for by the contract were made and imported from abroad. It further appears that in August, 1914, owing to the existence of a state of war between Germany and England and her allies, an embargo was placed upon the exportation ■ of these goods from Germany and. thereafter the defendant could import no further goods of the character called
If the words “ contingencies beyond your control ” stood alone there could be little, if any, doubt, that they covered the conditions arising from the state of war beginning on August 1, 1914. It is true that probably these parties did not contemplate the probability or possibility of a world war arising which would interfere with the importation of the products of foreign nations but the question in this case is not what contingencies did the parties contemplate might arise but what meaning did they intend to give to the words “ contingencies beyond your control ” and if these words stood alone they would cover all contingencies arising thereafter beyond the defendant’s control which became the proximate cause of the inability of the defendant to comply with its contract.
Undoubtedly it is a well-established canon of construction that general expressions will be restricted by particular descriptions or additions following them. Like other canons of construction, however, this rule is applied to determine the intent of the parties and not to thwart such intent. When applied it does not destroy entirely the force of the general words but it limits the force of the general words so that it covers only the general class in which the particular words fall. This rule, however, has, I think, no application to the contract under consideration. The particular words are 1 ‘ fire, strikes, accidents to our works or to
Concurrence Opinion
The facts and questions at issue have been clearly stated by my learned associates. The only question to be determined is the construction of the contract sued upon.
The primary and universal rule governing the construction of contracts is that the intention of the parties when ascertained shall govern. All other rules of construction are subsidiary and have been evolved by the courts for the purpose of ascertaining and giving force to and not defeating this intention.
I think the use of the phrase ‘1 contingencies beyond your control ” was intended to cover all causes which no care, foresight or acts of the defendant could have controlled or prevented.
The intention of the parties, in my opinion, is disclosed upon the contract itself and was that any contingency which was concededly beyond the control of the appellant, and which made it impossible for it to perform the contract, gave it the right of cancellation.
The judgment should be reversed.
Judgment reversed, with costs.