Arlington Hotel Co. v. Rector

186 S.W. 622, 124 Ark. 90, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 17, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 622 (Arlington Hotel Co. v. Rector) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arlington Hotel Co. v. Rector, 186 S.W. 622, 124 Ark. 90, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 15 (Ark. 1916).

Opinions

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts). (1) In Wood v. Kelsey, 90 Ark. 272-277, we said: “Courts may acquaint themselves with the persons and circumstances that are the subject of the statements in the written agreement, and are entitled to place themselves in the same situation as the parties who made the contract so as to view the circumstances as they viewed them, and so as to judge of the meaning of the words and of the correct application of the language to the things described.” See also, Fort Smith Light & Trac. Co. v. Kelley, 94 Ark. 461-471; Ford Hardwood Lumber Co. v. Clement, 97 Ark. 522-532; Keopple v. National Wagon Stock Co., 104 Ark. 466; Alf Bennett Lumber Co. v. Walnut Lake Cypress Co., 105 Ark. 421.

It is an old and familiar rule that “every legal contract is to be interpreted in accordance with the intention of the parties making-it.” Paepcke-Leicht Lbr. Co. v. Talley, 106 Ark. 400-411.

In arriving .at the intention of the parties to a contract it must be considered as a whole, all of its parts being considered in order to determine the meaning of any particular part. No word should be treated as surplus-age if any meaning can be given to it that is reasonable and consistent with the other words of the contract. Railway v. Williams, 53 Ark. 58-66; Earl v. Harris, 99 Ark. 112; Phoenix Cement Sidewalk Co. v. Russellville Water & Light Co., 101 Ark. 22-27; Yellow Jacket Mining Co. v. Tegarden, 104 Ark. 573; Pittsburg Steel Company v. Wood, 109 Ark. 537.

I. Keeping in mind these elementary rules, did the parties to the contract evidenced by the consent judgment intend that the old company should pay the $600 per annum beginning with the first of January, 1907, only until the expiration of its charter, or during the term of the lease under which it held, or was it their intention that the old company should be liable for these payments as long as it or anyone deriving auv interest in any way under it occupied the Arlington Hotel site even after its charter expired?

It was but little more than five years from January 1, 1907, the date when the first payment was to be made under the contract, until the charter of the old company wóuld expire. The lease under which the old company held, expired a few months before the expiration of its charter. So the life of the old company and the leasehold estate under which the old company occupied the hotel site were not for coterminous periods. If it had been the intention of the parties to fix either one of these periods as the limit bevond which the liability of the old comnany should not extend, it seems reasonable that they .would have named specifically one or the other of these periods, for these were definite and certain and but a few years in the future.

If the parties had really intended that the company should pay the sum of $600 per annum only for a definite period of a little more than five years, the most natural way to have expressed such intention would have been to fix the liability at an aggregate sum embracing that period, to be paid in annual payments; or, to designate the sum of $600 to be paid annually, beginning the first of January, 1907, and continuing until the charter or lease of the old company expired, naming the date. If the parties had contemplated that the liability of the old company should continue until its charter expired, then they could not have intended that its liability should cease with the termination of the lease under which it held; for, as we have seen, the time when the lease expired was a few months before the time of the expiration of Cie charter life of the old company. It is manifest that the lease from the United States to S. H. Stitt & Co. was mentioned simply for the purpose of designating the hotel site as the property constituting the subject-matter of the contract between them, and not for the purpose of fixing a definite time when the liability of the old comnnny should end. If the purpose in mentioning the lease from the Government to S. H. Stitt & Co. had been to fix the time of the expiration of that lease as the time also when the liability of the old company to pay the annual sum named should cease, then the natural language would have been as follows: “As long as the Arlington Hotel Company, or its successors or assigns, shall continue to occupy the Arlington Hotel site under a lease by the United States to S. H. Stitt & Co. for a term of twenty years beginning March 3, 1892, and ending March 3, 1912.” And doubtless the language “embracing the grounds included in said lease, or any part .of said grounds, used for the purpose of operating the hotel, nr for any other purposes, as the lessee or lessees of the United States or otherwise,” would not have been added, because it was meaningless surplusage, and because the words “or for any other purposes” and “or otherwise” were entirely inconsistent with, the theory that the liability of the old company to pay $600 per annum ended when either the charter or the lease expired.

The consent judgment was doubtless drafted by the attorneys for the respective parties, and the court rendered the judgment in the language used to express their intention. The old company, its assigns or successors, could not have occupied the hotel site under its charter and the Stitt & Co. lease for ¡any other purpose than operating a hotel. Under the charter and lease then existing the old company was holding only as a lessee of the United States government, and only for the purpose of operating a hotel. But the language, “or for any other purpose as the lessee or lessees of the United .States or otherwise,” shows that the parties contemplated that the old company or its successors or assigns might occupy the hotel site under lease from the Government for some other purpose than ¡operating a hotel, and that the old company, its successors or assigns, might occupy the. site as lessee under some other lessor than the Government.

The parties who framed the consent judgment knew of course when the old company’s charter and the Stitt lease would expire; yet they used language which is absolutely incompatible with an intention to limit the annual payments to the time of the expiration of the charter or lease, and language which shows affirmatively that such was not the intention.

(2) We conclude therefore that the intention of the parties to this contract was that the old company should be liable for the sum of $600 per annum on the first day of each year, as stipulated, as long as the old company, or those who succeeded to its rights as assigns, or successors, continued to occupy the Arlington Hotel site, or any part of the grounds embraced in said site, for any purpose whatever, whether it was occupied under a lease from the United States or in any other manner, even though such occupancy continued beyond the life of the old company and the term of the Stitt lease. This construction is the correct one if effect is to be given to the language of the contract when considered as a whole, and if any meaning is to be attached to many of the words which the parties used to express their intention.- Any other construction would result in ignoring much of the language of the contract, and in treating some of the words in which the latter portion is couched as meaningless. This we can not do. Any other construction would also do' violence to the familiar rule, that where the contract is ambiguous in its term the parties will be held 'bound to the construction which they themselves have placed upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 622, 124 Ark. 90, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arlington-hotel-co-v-rector-ark-1916.