43 Pa. Super. 168 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
Although the record before us is somewhat voluminous and the assignments of error numerous, the controlling question in the case lies within a narrow compass.
In the year 1904 the two plaintiffs and the defendant constituted a partnership doing business in Huntington county under the firm name and style of Trexler Bros. & Co. The business in which they were engaged was farming and dealing in five stock, both horses and cattle. The firm, or the members composing it, owned a large tract of land of nearly 5,000 acres and much personal property consisting of valuable horses, herds of cattle, farming implements, etc. It appears to be a conceded fact that the two Trexler brothers owned the one-half of the land and a proportionate share of the personal property and business, the defendant Reynolds owning the remaining half.
During the same year there was in existence a limited partnership, the legal name of which was Trexler Stave & Lumber Company, Ltd. It is conceded that the defendant Reynolds was no member of this firm, had no interest in its business and no ownership in its property. Whilst the articles of association organizing this limited company were rejected by the learned trial court, and we are therefore not advised by the evidence how many persons were interested, it appears to be conceded that the two plaintiffs and their father at least were members, and further that the father, although a member of the limited company, was not a member of Trexler Bros. & Co. and had no interest in their lands, personal property or business.
This limited partnership was the owner of a sawmill, stavemill and other necessary buildings located on the large tract of land belonging to the general partnership
With matters in this situation the two plaintiffs and the defendant entered into a written article of agreement dated January 29, 1905, and the true construction of that agreement, and particularly of a single clause in it, to be referred to, has become the principal matter of contention between the parties.
If it be, as the able counsel for the appellee insists, that it' was the duty of the learned trial court to construe this written agreement, the attitude which the court should assume in undertaking to perform such a duty has been often declared by our text-writers and courts of last resort. In Williamson et al. v. McClure, 37 Pa. 402, Woodward, Justice, said, “In order to get at the true meaning of the particular clause in controversy, we must advert to the situation and relation of the parties, the subject-matter of their agreement, and all the other provisions of the instrument. It is a true rule of construction, said Lord Ellenborough in Barton v. Fitzgerald, 15 East, 530, that the sense and meaning of the parties in any particular part of an instrument, may be collected ex antecedentibus et consequentibus, that every part of it may be brought into action, in order to collect from the whole one uniform and consistent sense, if that may be done.” In Wright v. Monongahela Natural Gas Co., 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 219, our Brother Orlady said, “It is the dictate of common sense, and therefore a rule of law, that every written instrument is to be interpreted according to the subject-matter, and yet the nature and qualities of the subject-matter are seldom fully stated, often only alluded to in the
Keeping this cardinal principle in mind, let us turn our attention to the agreement itself and see if, viewing it in the light of the circumstances that surrounded the parties at the time of its execution, there is any room for a substantial doubt as to the subject-matter with which they there undertook to deal. In the first place we observe the agreement is made “between John L. Trexler, J. F. Trexler and H. P. Reynolds, trading and doing business as Trexler Bros. & Co.” This fact of itself would seem to point with considerable force to the idea that the thing about which they were to deal would be all or part of the business or property of the firm because no one but members of the firm was to join in the agreement and they were dealing in their capacity as partners. The agreement so declares. But all speculation as to the purpose and object of the agreement is put at rest by its very next clause, which states in plain and unambiguous terms the reason why the agreement was to be made. “Whereas certain differences have arisen between the members of the said copartnership, they hereby agree to dissolve the same upon the following terms.” The purpose of the agreement then was the dissolution of the pre-existing partnership, and this would naturally involve some disposition of the partnership property and business. The agreement then
At the time this agreement was thus made, however, the Trexler Stave & Lumber Company had piled at its mill a large number of staves. It also owned some horses, wagons and other like property which it used in its business, bringing lumber to the mill and hauling staves to the railroad station. When the plaintiffs sought to collect the balance due on the bond for $3,000, given to them as above recited, the defendant alleged that the consideration of that note had failed in part because the Trexlers had not turned over to him all of the personal property belonging to the Trexler Stave & Lumber Company, contending that the clause of the agreement already quoted covered not only the personal property of Trexler Bros. & Co., but all other property at the time on the land, although it was not denied that such property belonged to the Stave & Lumber Company, Ltd. The learned trial court opened the judgment and permitted the defendant to make defense, and on the trial construed the agreement in accordance with the contention of the defendant and submitted to the jury the single question of ascertaining
After an attentive examination of the language of the agreement and all the circumstances admittedly existing at the time it was made, we have reached the conclusion that the interpretation of the agreement adopted by the learned trial judge was an erroneous one. In no aspect of the case, as we view it, can the agreement furnish any foundation for the defendant’s claim that any part of the consideration of his bond was the acquisition by him of the title to a large amount of personal property belonging to a limited partnership which was no party to the agreement.
As we have already seen, the agreement declares that the parties to it, whose interests alone could be affected by it, were the three partners composing the firm of Trexler Bros. & Co. It further declares that its purpose was to straighten out the difficulties which had arisen among the members of that firm with relation to their own property and business, not to that of any other person. It is true that the plaintiffs agree to sell “all their right, title and interest in and to all the personal property upon the said lands, and all their right, title and interest in and to all other personal property owned by the said firm,” etc, The learned court below construes the first portion of this clause as if the latter portion of it did not exist. No proper significance can be given to the expression “all other personal property owned by said firm” unless we hold that the qualifying expression “owned by said firm” applies to all of the property which was to be the subject of sale. This we think is not only the true grammatical construction of the sentence as a whole, but is the only construction, that will make the entire agreement harmonious and calculated to effectuate the avowed object of those who made it. Later on the agreement provides that the stavemill and all the buildings in connection
The agreement still further provides that the manufacture of staves was to go on at the then present location of the mill until May 1 following the execution of the agreement on a royalty of twenty-five cents per 1,000 staves, but that after that its operations were to cease and the mill was to be removed at such time as it would be convenient to the owners to move it. Thus, while the right of the limited company to continue to use its mills and manufacture staves on the land until May 1 was expressly reserved, the defendant claims that its horses, wagons and harness, axes, saws and tools — the appliances without which its business could not be conducted — had been taken from it and transferred to him by the operation of the clause of the agreement we have quoted.
Our construction is still further strengthened when it is remembered that the two individuals who were dealing with Reynolds had no power to sell the property of the
It therefore seems to us that’ the only defense which the defendant set up to the payment of the balance due on his bond, after allowing certain admitted credits, entirely failed, and the learned court below should have directed a verdict for this balance in favor of the plaintiffs.
This view of the case renders it unnecessary that we should deal with the assignments of error in detail. Many of them complain of the rejection of evidence tending to show, by the acts and declarations of the parties at the time, the interpretation which they themselves put upon the agreement, and if the true construction of the written instrument had been a matter of doubt, such evidence would certainly have been admissible. “When we are asked to say what the parties meant or intended by their contract, it is entirely safe to point to their own construction of it, as evidenced by their course of dealing under it:” People’s Nat. Gas Company v. Wire Company, 155 Pa. 22. Many other cases could be cited to show the correctness of this principle, but it is unnecessary we should go farther.
The judgment is reversed but as the record exhibits no basis on which we can enter judgment for the plaintiffs,. a venire facias de novo must be awarded.