Fry v. Hawley

4 Fla. 258
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 4 Fla. 258 (Fry v. Hawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fry v. Hawley, 4 Fla. 258 (Fla. 1851).

Opinion

DOUGLAS, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case has been fully argued by the counsel /or the [275]*275respective parties, and the questions presented for our consideration are, what interest the complainant is entitled to in the said steamboat, and what share of her nett profits he ought to receive.

It is admitted that every contract, deriving its force from the mutual assent of the parties, is to be interpreted according to the intention of the parties, so far as it is legal, and mutually understood. Chitty on Contracts, pages 148, 149, 1st edition, sections 228, 231, and that exposition is to be upon the whole contract, and not upon disjointed parts taken separately. Page 167, section 252.

For the complainant, it is contended that, by virtue of this agreement between Hawley and himself, he is entitled to an equal share in the boat with Hawley, and to an equal participation in the profits or earnings, and that the agreement is susceptible of no other interpretation.

That Hawley’s agreement with Fry was made with special reference to the agreement or contract he had made with Allen, and to understand the meaning of the terms, “ an interest with himself,” it is only necessary to ascertain what was the interest of Hawley in the joint concern of Allen and Plawley, and what proportion the contribution of Fry bears to it.

That the evidence discloses, and that it js also conceded, that Hawley was entitled to a moiety of the boat, by reason of the contribution of one-half the stipulated capital, say $3,000, as between himself and Allen; and Fry’s contribution being $1,500 or one half thereof, makes the extent of his interest under Hawley just one-half — in other words, equal with Hawley’s, and that this is confirmed by the subsequent stipulation, that “ all losses are to be equally borne.”

That Hawley’s interpretation, that it is in the proportion which the $1,500 bears to the whole cost of the boat, is a strained one, and that a Court of Equity will not give a strained construction to create a societas leonina. The last proposition we deem a sound one. But we understood the [276]*276position of the defendant’s counsel to be, that Hawley was entitled to a moiety of the boat, on account of his contribution of #3,000, and of his having given to said Henry Allen authority to use his name,- to procure a credit to any amount beyond the sum of #6,000, that might be necessary to procure a steamboat suited to the accomplishment of the objects they had in view, viz: the carrying of the mail, and the transportation of merchandize, conveyance of passengers, &c.; he (Hawley) thus making himself equally liable with said Allen for any debt which the latter might contract in effecting that object. And this we consider a correct view of that matter, and we are unable to perceive why Hawley’s interpretation of his' contract with Fry is. a strained one. To interpret the contract, the whole must be taken together. “Faithful interpretation implies that words, or assemblages of words, be taken in that sense which we honestly believe that their utterer attached to them.” Lieber’s Hermeneutics, 99. “ Since our object is to discover the sense of the words before us, we must endeavor to arrive at it as much as possible from the words themselves.” Ibid, 113. The whole of the agreement is to be considered — 'the construction is upon the entire deed or agreement, not merely upon disjointed and particular parts of it. The whole context shall be considered in endeavors to collect the intention of the parties, although the immediate object of inquiry be the meaning of an isolated clause.— Chitty on Contracts, 6th American edition, 83. Now, what are the words we are called upon to interpret ? — “ All losses to be equally borne. What is the instrument we are called upon to construe ? — The receipt of Hawley to Fry, viz :

“ Received of Daniel Fry fifteen hundred dollars, to be invested in a steamboat, for the purpose of carrying the mail between Apalachicola and Chattahoochee, for the term of four years, commencing July 1, 1847; Nelson Hawley being jointly interested with Captain Henry Allen in the above pamed contract, binds himself to give to said Fry aji [277]*277interest with himself to the extent of the amount placed in his hands, and in proportion to that amount, he is to share in the profits accruing from said contract. He further binds himself to consult and advise with said Fry in all matters of importance in regard to said joint interest.” What joint interest? — the joint interest of Hawley and Allen. Now, the contract here spoken of, is the contract for carrying the mail, and the joint interest mentioned, is the interest of Hawley and Allen in that contract. No reference is here made to the agreement between Allen and Hawley about the purchase of the steamboat. The object in view, viz; the carrying out of that contract to convey the mail, appears from the fact that the $1,500 advanced'by the complainant, was to be invested in a steamboat by Captain Henry Allen for that purpose; and Nelson Hawley being jointly interested with Captain Henry Allen in that contract, binds himself to give the said Fry an interest with himself to the extent of the amount placed in his hands, and in proportion to that amount, he is to share in the profits accruing from said contract. Why all this circumlocution, if it were intended that Fry should have an equal interest both in the steamboat and in the profits accruing from said contract ? Why did not Hawley say, being jointly interested with Captain Henry Allen in the above mentioned contract, I bind myself to give the said Fry an equal interest with myself in said contract, and an equal share of the profits accruing therefrom ? It would have taken fewer words, and been clear of all doubt — no room would have been left for construction, and in the agreement which he had on that very day executed with Captain Allen, he had a precedent for so drawing it. If the instrument had stopped here, no question, we think, would have been raised about its construction — the whole difficulty then rests upon the words, “ all losses to be equally borne.” But the construction must be reasonable — it must also be as near the painds and apparent intents of the parties as the rules of law [278]*278will admit. 2d Blackstone’s Commentaries, 379; and it is essential to consider the subject-matter of the agreement, in affixing a meaning to the terms used therein. Chitty on Contracts, 6th edition, 74. The subject-matter here was a portion of this steamboat and of the contract mentioned, and the question is, the extent of those interests intended to be conveyed. If these words m ust be understood to mean that Fry must bear the same amount of any loss as Hawley, and that, consequently, he (Fry) shall have the same interest in the steamboat and in the profits of the contract as Hawley, then it results that Fry, for the sum of $1,500, is to have as large a share of both as Hawley, who has paid $6,000.

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4 Fla. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-hawley-fla-1851.