Crass v. Scruggs & Co.

115 Ala. 258
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 115 Ala. 258 (Crass v. Scruggs & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crass v. Scruggs & Co., 115 Ala. 258 (Ala. 1896).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

The action, in which the appellees were plaintiffs and the appellant defendant, was for work and labor done and performed by the plaintiffs at the request of the defendant, on the track of the Decatur, Chesapeake & New Orleans railroad. The complaint contained two counts, which correspond to the common counts in assumpsit for work and labor [264]*264done and performed. The errors assigned are numerous, relating to the rulings of the court below on the extended and multiplied pleadings introduced in the course of the trial, the admission and rejection of evidence, ■and the giving or refusal of instructions to the jury. But the respective rights and liabilities of the parties are dependent on a few questions not of difficult solution. The first of which, and the more important, as the case is presented and has been argued, we propose to consider, is the construction and operation of the contract of July 23d, 1890, under which the greater part of the work was done.

Separating the contract into its component parts, the first clause is the undertaking of the plaintiffs to do the grading on designated sections of the track of the railroad, completing the work by the first day of September, 1890. The succeeding clause, is the engagement of the defendant, absolute and unconditional in its terms, to pay the plaintiffs specified prices for the work. The next clause, that from which the controversy arises, relates to the payment of these prices, and is in these words: “Payments based on engineer’s estimates, and to be made on the 15th of each month, or as soon thereafter, as said R. R. Company pays or causes to be paid the said J. T. Crass.” The last clause is a declaration that the time specified for the completion of the work, is of the essence of the contract.

The point upon which hinges the correctness of many of the rulings of the court below, is, whether payment to the plaintiffs of the promised compensation was conditional, dependent on payment by the railroad company to the defendant; or whether it was payable on the 15th of each month during the progress and on the completion of the work, or within a reasonable time thereafter for the company to make or cause payment to be made the defendant.

There is no doubt of the general rule, that a contract must be read and interpreted as a whole; all its provisions and stipulations must be regarded; and it is the duty of the court to consider the relations of the parties, their connection with the subject matter, and the circumstances under which it was made, And the construction must make the whole consistent, giving all the parts due weight.—Pollard v. Maddox, 28 Ala. 321; Comer v. Bank-[265]*265head, 70 Ala. 136 ; Mason v. Ala. Iron Co., 73 Ala. 270. Tlie contract was drawn not without care, and imports that some contractual relation existed between the defendant and the railroad company, by which the company was to pay him • for the work, or to furnish him with the means of making payment. 'Whether there was such relation, and if it did not exist, whether the consequence was that the provision in reference to the postponement of payment to the plaintiffs, was not inoperative, was the matter of much contention in the court below. This is a phase of the case we do not deem it necessary to consider, for applying the general rules of construction we have stated, we do not doubt that the provision of the contract merely prescribes a time of payment, and not a condition upon which payment was dependent.

Can it be reasonably supposed it was contemplated, that the plaintiffs would devote their time, labor and means to the work, they were bound to complete within a particular period, without an absolute engagement from the defendant to pay them? There was no relation between the parties except that of employer and employes ; and it is to this relation, defining the services the plaintiffs were to render, and the compensation for the services the defendant was to make, the first and second clauses of the contract are devoted. The clauses are in terms as absolute and unconditional, as the subject matter permits ; and not more absolute and unconditional in respect to the one party than the other. The plaintiffs were bound to the performance of the work, without the expression of any condition dispensing with performance ; and without the expression of any condition, the defendant engaged to pay them a certain compensation. The contract is not divisible ; it is entire for the grading of the two sections ; and if it had been silent as to the time of payment for the work, payment could not have been demanded until the work was completed. This was known to the parties, and as the contract was drawn with care, the time of payment was not left to implication, but was the matter of express stipulation. And it must be observed, the stipulation speaks of payment, and of the time of payment, not of non-payment, nor in avoidance of the duty of paying. Any other construction would render the contract inharmonious in its several [266]*266parts ; would place this stipulation in antagonism to the absolute engagement of the defendant to make payment of the compensation. The plaintiffs had no contract with the railroad company; were unknown to it; and to them the company owed no duty. The defendant had contractual relation with it, and from it expected to derive funds to meet his engagement to the plaintiffs; and it was time to realize these funds for which he was contracting, and not freedom from liability if they were not realized.

Similar contracts have been the subject of frequent construction, and the construction deemed best to give effect to the intention of the parties, has been that which avoids the conversion of an absolute into a conditional engagement, or which puts it into the power of a defendant at his mere option to pay, or not to pay. The recent case of Page v. Cook, 28 L. R. A. 759, is illustrative. The suit was on a note for the payment on demand of five hundred'dollars, “payable when payer and payee mutually agree.” As the parties had not agreed, it was insisted an action on the note could not be supported. The court said: “We think that it hardly could have been the intention of the parties to put it into the power of the defendant thus to avoid payment, and that it is more reasonable to construe it as meaning that it is payable when and after the payer ought reasonably to have agreed. * * * * * The promise to pay is absolute. It is only the time of payment which is left to future agreement. Evidently, it is expected, from the tenor of the note, that the parties will agree, and that a time will be fixed, and that the note will be paid. But no time is fixed within which the agreement is to be made. The law will, therefore, imply a reasonable time.” In McCarty v. Howell, 24 Ill. 341, a note payable four months after date, containing the clause, “or as soon as I shall be able to collect a certain note against Abram Davis,” was held to be due absolutely at four-months, or sooner if the Davis note was collected. The court said, unless this was the construction, no meaning could be given to the promise of payment at “four- months after date.” In Harlow v. Boswell, 15 Ill. 56, a notepayable “twelve months after date, * * * or as soon as I can sell the above amount of Allen’s Vegetable Tonic,” was deemed payable absolutely at twelve months. In [267]*267Walters v. Mcbee,

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Bluebook (online)
115 Ala. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crass-v-scruggs-co-ala-1896.