115 F. 32 | 9th Cir. | 1902
This is an action to recover damages for an alleged breach of contract for the delivery of 5,000 barrels of cement, more or less. The contract is embodied in a letter from the plaintiff in error which reads as follows:
“Alsen’s Portland Cement Warehouse, Manufacturers of Portland Cement.
William Wolff & Co., California Agent, 329 Market Street, San Francisco.
“San Francisco, California, September 24, -1897.
“Colonel Geo. E. Gray, 1st Vice President Wells, Fargo & Co., City — Dear Sir: Referring to the conversation the writer, Mr. Baker, had with you this afternoon, we take pleasure in submitting to you our quotation on Alsen’s German Portland Cement for use in the new Wells, Fargo Building, now in course of construction. We will name you a price for what you may require, on about 5,000 barrels, more or less, of two dollars and fifty-six cents ($2.56) per barrel, delivered at the building site Second and Mission Sts., in quantities to be designated by you. We will guaranty the Alsen Cement to be of standard quality, and subject to any reasonable tests you may call for.
“Very respectfully, William Wolff & Co.,
“Per Edmund Baker.”
Upon receipt of this letter the offer therein made was orally accepted by the defendant in error.
The case was tried before the court without a jury. The findings
There are certain general elementary principles that have been elaborately discussed by counsel which may be briefly disposed of. The rule is well settled by the repeated decisions of the supreme court of the United States and by the circuit court of appeals that in all cases tried by the court without a jury the facts as found by the trial court are not subject to review by the appellate court. Where there are special findings of fact the only question to be considered in this connection is whether the facts found support the judgment. As was said in Lehnen v. Dickson, 148 U. S. 71, 77, 13 Sup. Ct. 481, 37 L. Ed. 373:
“The burden of the statute Is not thrown off simply because the witnesses do not contradict each other and there is no conflict in the testimony. It may be an easy thing in one case for this court, when the testimony consists simply of deeds, mortgages, or other written instruments, to make a satisfactory finding of the facts, and in another it may be difficult, when the testimony is largely in parol, and the witnesses directly contradict each other. But the rule of the statute is of universal application. It is not relaxed in one ease because of the ease in determining the facts, or rigorously enforced in another because of the difficulty in such determination. The duty of finding the facts is placed upon the trial court. We have no authority to examine the testimony in any case, and from it make a finding of the ultimate facts.”
In Walker v. Miller, 8 C. C. A. 331, 332, 59 Fed. 869, 870, the court said :
“Neither the supreme court nor the court of appeals will undertake to determine in a case like the one at bar whether the special findings are supported by the testimony contained in the bill of exceptions, for to do so would be simply to review the decision of the trial court on questions of fact rather than law. By filing a written stipulation waiving a jury, the parties to the litigation may impose upon the circuit court the duty of making a general or special finding on questions of fact, but they cannot impose upon an appellate court a like duty. The finding of the trial court, whether it be general or special, has the same conclusive effect when the record is removed by writ of error to an appellate tribunal as a similar finding by a jury, and exceptions must be saved and presented in the same manner, either by objections to the introduction or to the exclusion of testimony, or by tendering declarations of law and obtaining a rule thereon. These several propositions are well established by repeated adjudications.”
I11 so far as the assignments of error call for a review of the evidence, they will not, for the reasons stated, be considered. Many of the assignments, however, are based upon the proposition that the court erred in its findings of fact because “there is no evidence to justify the same.” The dividing line in the contention of the respective parties as to the construction of the letter is whether, as claimed by the plaintiff, the contract was for a given amount, to wit, 5,000 barrels of cement, more or less, or whether, as claimed by the defendant in error,, it was a contract for the delivery of such amount of cement as might be required by Wells, Fargo & Co. for use in the completion of its new building then in course of construction, and that the amount mentioned was a mere estimate of the amount that would be required.
There are 19 assignments of error, which, boiled down, only present for our consideration three questions: (1) Did the court err
The law is well settled that where the contract as written is clear, plain, and unambiguous it is error to admit parol evidence to vary, modify, or change it. The general rule is that the written contract merged all previous negotiations and conversations between the parties, and it is presumed in law to express the final understanding between the parties. On the other hand, it is equally well settled that if there is any uncertainty or ambiguity as to the meaning of the words used in the written contract, where it is based upon or refers to a conversation, parol evidence may be admitted, not to vary the terms of the contract, but to explain the sense in which the language in the writing was used. Such attendant and surrounding circumstances are competent evidence for the purpose of placing the court in the same situation and giving it the same advantage for construing the instrument as were possessed by the parties who executed it. The object or tendency of such evidence is not to contradict or vary the terms of the writing, but is for the purpose of enlightening the court so as to enable it to more fully understand the language employed therein. There can be no question on the point that the facts as found by the court sustain the judgment. The specific questions asked of the witness Gray and the answers given, to which objection is urged, are as follows:
“Q. State what your conversation was with Mr. Baker? A. The question Mr. Baker desired was that I would define accurately some number of barrels of cement that we would want. I told him I wanted his proposition for the cement for that building, and I could not give him a positive quantity; that the architect said that under certain conditions he would require about 5,000 barrels. That is what I told Mr. Baker; that if certain other conditions existed it would take a great deal more. On that statement to Mr. Baker he left my office, and went back to the office on Market street, as he said, and came back to me again with a written proposition, which is embodied in this letter, which I recognize, and that letter was received. * * * Q. Before offering that, Colonel Gray, I will ask you what, if anything, you told Mr. Baker, preliminarily, you contemplated doing with reference to a building, and why you were getting these bids? A. I told Mr. Baker my object was to get cement for lie building, — the total amount of cement we required.”
We are of opinion that the court did not err in admitting this testimony. It is argued that it is impossible to tell upon what particular ground the court rendered its decision, whether upon the oral testimony, the letter, or both. That is wholly immaterial. If the decision is correct, it should not be disturbed. The testimony of the witness Gray supports the findings of fact and conclusion of law reached by the court, and if it added any light as to the intention of the parties the court did not err in admitting it. If the contract, of itself, was susceptible of the construction given to it by the court, the aid thus given should not be ignored. The case should not be reversed unless it affirmatively appears that the contract is not susceptible of any such construction. The rules governing contracts.
“Where a contract Is made to sell or furnish certain goods identified by reference to independent circumstances, such as an entire lot deposited in a certain warehouse, or all that may be manufactured by the vendor in a certain establishment, or that may be shipped by his agent or correspondent in certain vessels, and the quantity is named with the qualification of ‘about,’ or ‘more or less,’ or words of like import, the contract applies to the specific lot; and the naming of the quantity is not regarded as in the nature of a warranty, but only as an estimate of the probable amount, in reference to which good faith is all that is required of the party making it. * * * But when no such independent circumstances are referred to, and the engagement is to furnish goods of a certain quality or character to a certain amount, the quantity specified is material, and governs the contract. The addition of the qualifying words ‘about,’ ‘more or less,’ and the Uke, in such cases, Is only for the purpose of providing against accidental variations arising from slight and unimportant excesses or deficiencies in number, measure, or weight. If, however, the qualifying words are supplemented by other stipulations or conditions which give them a broader scope or a more extensive significaney, then the contract is to be governed by such added stipulations or conditions. As, if it be agreed to furnish so many bushels of wheat, more or less, according to what the party receiving it shall require for the use of his mill, then the contract is not governed by the quantity named, nor by that quantity with slight and unimportant variations, but by what the receiving party shall require for the use of his mill. And the variation from the quantity named will depend upon his discretion and requirements, so long as he acts in good faith.”
We are of opinion that this cause comes within the third rule above stated. The contract was not to deliver any particular quantity of cement, but to deliver such an amount as might be required by Wells, Fargo & Co. for use in its new building then in course of construction. The quantity designated, “about 5,000 barrels, more or less,” should be considered mere'v as an estimate of what the parties supposed might be required for use in the building. The plaintiff in error said, “We will name you a price for what you may require.” The defendant in error, after using 5,000 barrels of the cement, notified the plaintiff in error of the additional amount required for use in its building, and the plaintiff in error refused to deliver any further quantity. Wells, Fargo & Co. was compelled to go into the open market and purchase the amount at an advanced price, and has been damaged in the extra sum it was compelled to pay. The views we have expressed are not in opposition to, but are in strict conformity with, the principles announced by the court in Budge v. Refining Co., 43 C. C. A. 665, 104 Fed. 498. That case came within a different rule from the present case, and the distinction between the rules was there explicitly recognized. There “the contract was not one in which the quantity of material to be delivered rested wholly in the will of him who was to receive it, nor was it one of those in which the contracting parties had in mind the construction of a particular work, and the supply of the necessary material therefor,” but was one where the work itself furnished “to both parties the ultimate measure of the quantity which the contract contemplated.”
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs.