69 So. 525 | Ala. | 1915
E. G. Ensign, J. I. Ensign, and W. S. Hollister instituted this action against the Twin Tree Lumber Company, an Alabama corporation. Originally the common counts, other than that to be mentioned, were employed to state the cause of action. The general issue was appropriately pleaded; and by agreement the case was submitted to the court, without jury, on an agreed statement of the facts; the provision being that the record should show a request for the affirmative charge by each party, that it should be made to appear as if refused to the party against whom the court concluded, and that a verdict, as of the jury, should enter, consistent with the court’s conclusion on the agreed facts.
On February 5, 1907, the Ensigns and Hollister (E. G. Ensign, called the “seller,” acting for himself and the other two plaintiffs) entered into a contract, to which the corporation (defendant) was made a party, with Kroll, Sparrow & Sands for the sale of one-half
In section 5 of the instrument these provisions occur: “The seller also covenants that any claim against said company pending on the 1st day of February, 1907, other than the debt due to the Alabama Mineral Land Company, and cost of said skidder above stated, whether now known or shall hereafter be made known, of any nature, shall be paid by him, and that said company and the buyers at all times shall be saved and kept harmless therefrom and from any expenses and costs connected therewith. By the word ‘claims’ is included claims for damages on account of personal injury, trespass upon lands, actions growing out of defective titles, or alleged to be defective, and every claim of every other nature that has arisen, or may arise, other than those specifically above excepted for ground acquired prior to February 1, 1907.”
It is not possible under tbe terms of this instrument to determine tbe stated question by recourse to tbe varied meanings of tbe word “account” alone; for that term is immediately qualified by tbe further expression, “for sales prior to February 1, 1907.” “Account,” when employed, as here, in connection with tbe term “sale,” can have no other signification than that of tbe obligation of a buyer to a seller — a state of indebtedness by a buyer to a seller. Tbe phrase “accounts for sales,” as employed in tbe ninth paragraph, meant obligations by buyers to tbe selling corporation for things sold and unpaid for. It is not, as we see it, at all equivocal
The judgment is reversed; and, consistent with the statute (Code, §§ 2890, 5361), the judgment will be here rendered for the defendant.
Beversed and rendered.