Hunt v. Gardner

112 So. 7, 147 Miss. 374, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 281
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1927
DocketNo. 25770.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 112 So. 7 (Hunt v. Gardner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Gardner, 112 So. 7, 147 Miss. 374, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 281 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

*379 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of "Winston county, growing out of the following state of facts: Appellee was the agent of appellants, employed by them to promote the use of the Willite process of road and street paving in the state of Mississippi, the contract of employment being in words and figures as follows:

“Memphis, Tenn., Jan. 19, 1925.
“Mr. Walter H. Gardner, F,eland, Miss. — Dear Sir: Pursuant to our conversation with you to-day you are hereby appointed our representative to promote the use of the Willite process of road and street paving in the state of Mississippi, to which you are to give your whole time and attention. The appointment thus made will continue for a period of two (2) years from this date.
“For your services we agree to pay you ten cents (10$) per square yard of finished road or street. Such payment is to apply to each square yard of finished road or street laid in the state of Mississippi during the life of this contract, whether any particular contract shall have been secured by you or not.
“It is understood between us, however, that the amount thus agreed to be paid to you arises from the royalty of thirty cents per square yard to be paid to us from the various contractors, and the payment to you shall be due only when and as such royalty is received by us.
“If at the end of this time of two years there has not been sufficient work secured, or in sight, to justify a continuance of the contract, it shall end. ■ This condition shall he determined by you and us mutually. If for any reason we do not agree, then you shall appoint an arbitrator, and we shall appoint an arbitrator, and these two shall appoint a third arbitrator, and these three shall deter *380 mine whether the contract shall continue for another two-year period under the same conditions as this contract. [Signed] Hunt & O’Connor, by C; A. Hunt.
“Accepted Jan. 20,1925, Walter H. Gardner, by Frank O’Connor.”

A contract for the Willite process of paving- to be used in a paving project in the town of Louisville, Miss., was secured; the contractor being Dick H. Hogan. Appellants and appellee were all active in advertising the Willite process to Hogan and the town of Louisville, and all the parties made trips to Louisville in the interest of the contract. By agreement between the appellants and Hogan the bid for this paving- was submitted on a basis of fifteen cents per square yard of pavement to be paid to appellants by Hogan as royalty on the Willite process. Hogan laid thirty-one thousand eight hundred thirty and five-tenths square yards of Willite paving in the town of Louisville under the contract, and on this appellee claimed that appellants owed him ten cents per square yard, or a total of three thousand one hundred eighty-three dollars and five cents. Appellants refused to pay this or any other sum, insisting that they were due him nothing- since the contract with Hogan called for only fifteen cents per square yard as royalty, and that the contract of employment between appellants and appellee contemplated that he should 'be paid nothing- on contracts where appellants received less than thirty cents per square yard as royalty.

On December 9,1925, appellee instituted this suit by an attachment in the circuit court, the affidavit alleging practically all the grounds for attachment enumerated in the statute, and further alleging the fact of appellants’ indebtedness to him, and requesting that the Hogan Construction Company and the town of Louisville be garnished as provided by law. The writs of garnishment were issued and served, and Dick H. Hogan, trading as Hogan Construction Company, answered that there was due to appellants the sum o.f four thousand seven hun *381 dred seventy-four dollars and fifty-seven cents for royalties under the contract with the town of Louisville, hut that he had theretofore ordered the town of Louisville to pay them that amount; that appellants had released him from further liability for said sum, and suggested that the town of Louisville was indebted to appellants in the sum of four thousand seven hundred seventy-four dollars and fifty-seven cents or had delivered this sum to the clerk of the circuit court. The town of Louisville answered that its warrant for the sum of four thousand seven hundred seventy-four dollars and fifty-seven cents in favor of appellants had been delivered to the sheriff, of Winston county. ■

On the trial in the court below the court peremptorily instructed the jury to find for the appellee on .the attachment issue, and construed the contract to entitle the appellee to recover ten cents per square yard for each yard of Willite paving laid by the Hogan Construction Company in the town of Louisville, unless he consented and agreed to the reduction of the royalty to be paid by Hogan from thirty cents per square yard to fifteen cents per square yard of finished paving, and upon conflicting evidence upon this point the cause was submitted to the jury under instructions properly submitting this issue. Upon this conflicting evidence the jury found for the appellee and returned a verdict in his favor for the sum of three thousand one hundred eighty-three dollars and fifty-five cents, and, from the judgment entered thereon, this appeal wras prosecuted.

On the debt issue the several assignments of error involve a construction of the provisions of the contract fixing the compensation to be paid to the appellee for his services in promoting the Willite paving process. The contract obligated the appellee to give, his entire time and attention for a period of two years to the work of promoting the use of this kind of road and street paving in the state of Mississippi, and as compensation for such services the appellants agreed to pay him the sum of *382 ten cents for each and every square jmrd of such paving laid in the state of Mississippi during the life of the contract, without regard to whether or not any particular contract was secured by him. It was further agreed, however, that the amount thus agreed to be paid to appellee should be paid out of the royalty of thirty cents per square yard to be paid to appellants -by the contractors who laid the paving, and that the payments to appellee should be due only when and as such royalty was received by the appellants, and the appellants contend that under these provisions the appellee was to receive compensation only on contracts wherein a royalty of thirty cents per square yard was provided for and collected by appellants, and that on all contracts in which a royalty of less than thirty cents was provided for and collected the appellee was entitled to no commission or compensation. •

Bearing in mind that “it is the duty of the court, in construing a contract, to place itself in the situation of the parties at the • time the contract was made, and to ascertain their intention from the contract in the light of that situation, looking also to the subject-matter of the contract,” we do not think the construction of this contract contended for by appellants is maintainable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Forbes v. Columbia Pulp & Paper Co., Inc.
340 So. 2d 734 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1976)
Grissom v. Livingston
57 So. 2d 144 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 So. 7, 147 Miss. 374, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-gardner-miss-1927.