26 Ind. App. 322 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1901
Appellee sued appellants for the wrongful conversion of one D. Ohio tile mill, combined with clay crusher, some tile dies, and other described property incident to and connected with such mill. The complaint avers that appellee was the owner of the property described; that appellants “wrongfully took and thereafter used, appropriated, and converted to their own use all of said property, and have ever since kept the same, and that said property was of the value of $400.” Answer in denial, trial by jury, and a verdict for appellee.
Appellants moved for a new trial, which motion was overruled, and such ruling is assigned as error. Appellants based their motion for a new trial upon fifty reasons, the
The remaining forty-seven reasons assigned for a new trial are for alleged errors in giving, giving as modified, and in refusing to give certain instructions, and in admitting and refusing to admit certain evidence, and in refusing to strike out certain evidence. We do not think that many of the questions thus presented are of sufficient importance to require us to take them up and discuss and decide them separately. There is one question, however, which appellants’ learned counsel have argued earnestly and at great length, which demands consideration, and the decision of which will clear up and largely eliminate other questions discussed. This, question is a compound one, and may he stated as follows: (1) That the written contract between the parties included the “D. Ohio Mill”; and (2) that said mill was a fixture, and hence the title passed to them in the conveyance of the real estate. It is readily seen from this that appellants’ theory is that it was error to admit any evidence explanatory of what particular property was covered
So here we have a contract providing for the sale of a specific article, viz., a tile mill. As we have seen, it can only include one mill, for that is the specific description of the article. In carrying out the terms of the contract it may be equally applied to one of two articles of the same name, and as there were two “mills”, we have a contract before us burdened with a latent ambiguity. So as to the particular mill that was embraced in the contract, and we are clear it only .embraces one, there is a seeming latent ambiguity as to which particular mill was intended.
Mr. Greenleaf says: “As it is a leading rule, in regard to written instruments, that they are to be interpreted according to their subject-matter, it is obvious that parol or verbal testimony must be resorted to in order to ascertain the nature and qualities of the subject, to which the instrument refers.” 1 Greenl. on Ev. (15th ed.) §286. In the same section it is also said: “So, where a house, or a mill, or a factory is conveyed eo nomine, and the question is as to what was part or parcel thereof, and so passed by the deed, parol evidence to this point is admitted.” At section 288, the same author says: “It is only in this mode that parol evidence is admissible (as is sometimes, but not very accurately, said) to explain written instruments; namely, by showing the situation of the party in all his relations to persons and things around him, or, as elsewhere expressed, by proof of the surrounding circumstances. Thus, if the language of the instrument is applicable to- several * * * species of goods, * * *; in all these and the like cases, parol evidence is admissible of any extrinsic circumstances, tending to show * * * what * * * or what things, were intended by the party, or to ascertain his meaning in any respect.”
In Reynolds’ Stephen on Ev., art. 91, sub. 8, p. 129, it
It is a well settled rule of law that parol evidence may be given of the surroundings and circumstances and the situation of the parties under which a writing was executed in order to apply the writing to the subject-matter embraced in the writing. Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Shearer, 10 Ind. 244, 247; Bell v. Golding, 27 Ind. 173; Mace v. Jackson, 38 Ind. 162; Martindale v. Parsons, 98 Ind. 174; Clark v. Crawfordsville, etc., Co., 125 Ind. 277.
In Bates v. Dehaven, 10 Ind. 319, it is held that parol evidence of the circumstances surrounding a contract in writing, as well as the mutual acts of the parties in its fulfilment, is admissible to explain the meaning of the parties in the use of language otherwise obscure. Upon these general principles, upon which parol evidence is admissible to explain a latent ambiguity in a written contract, or to explain the language where it is obscure, the authorities are in ac.cord. Another rule which seems to be firmly settled is that where parties give their contract a construction, the court will adopt that construction and hold the parties to it. Frazier v. Myers, 132 Ind, 71, and authorities there cited; Beck, etc., Co. v. Evansville, etc., Co., 25 Ind. App. 662; Toledo, etc., Co. v. Burgan, 9 Ind. App. 604.
From the facts we have already stated, there is no question as to the construction the parties gave to the contract between them. It is very clear that both appellants and appellee treated the contract not as embracing the “D. Ohio Mill”. At least, there is ample evidence from which the jury could find that they did so construe it.
The settlement of the question of the right to introduce
Judgment affirmed.