Kann v. Wausau Abrasives Co.

153 A. 823, 85 N.H. 41, 1931 N.H. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 3, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 A. 823 (Kann v. Wausau Abrasives Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kann v. Wausau Abrasives Co., 153 A. 823, 85 N.H. 41, 1931 N.H. LEXIS 77 (N.H. 1931).

Opinion

Branch, J.

It will be useful to consider at the outset the only exception to the admission of evidence which has been argued by the plaintiff.

The defendant was permitted to introduce the correspondence between the parties leading up to the formation of the contract. To the admission of these letters, sixty-three in number, the plaintiff objected and was granted a general exception. The only ground of objection stated was “the immateriality of [the] evidence.”

In the course of its findings the trial court made the following statement:

*46 “While the terms of the contract as finally reduced to writing are not to be varied by the prior negotiations of the parties, their extensive, correspondence discussing the contemplated contract is material and competent as bearing on the situation of the parties; their knowledge of the purposes and intentions of each; of the subject matter of the contract, and of what each might reasonably expect of the other in the way of performance.”

At the oral argument it was asserted that the foregoing statement proved that the trial court made an illegal use of this evidence. This position is not well taken. The question of the extent to which the preliminary negotiations of the parties may be received in evidence as an aid to the construction of a written contract, received careful consideration in the case of Weston v. Ball, 80 N. H. 275, 276, 277, and it was there said: “As an aid to construing and applying a contract, it is always permissible to show the facts surrounding the Undertaking, including what was said in the preliminary negotiations. ‘Having themselves locked up the idea in the words, themselves must furnish the key to unlock it.' 4 Wig., Ev., s. 2465. ‘The instrument to be interpreted, whatever may be its nature, should be read in the light of all the circumstances which may be supposed to have been present to the mind of its author when it was framed.’ Noyes v. Marston, 70 N. H. 7, 16 . . . The modern authorities elsewhere are to the effect that the evidence should be admitted. ‘If the previous negotiations make it manifest in what sense the terms of the contract are used, such negotiations may be resorted to as furnishing the best definition to be applied in ascertaining the intention of the parties. The sense in which the parties understood and used the terms of the contract is thus best ascertained.’ Keller v. Webb, 125 Mass. 88, 89.”

Judged by the foregoing standards the ruling of the trial court was plainly correct. He properly states that the preliminary negotiations are “material and competent as bearing on the situation of the parties.” The important elements which go to make up the situation of the parties are the items of knowledge which each possesses. These are “the circumstances which may be supposed to have been present” in their minds when the contract was framed. The trial court then enumerates three points in regard to which the letters may tend to elucidate the knowledge of the parties as follows: (1) “their knowledge of the purposes and intentions of each,” (2) their knowledge “of the subject matter of the contract,” and (3) their knowledge “of what each might reasonably expect of the other in the way of performance.”

The knowledge of the parties upon all of these points was clearly *47 a material element to be considered in construing their agreement within the rules laid down in Weston v. Ball, supra, and the other cases cited therein. The plaintiff’s exception must accordingly be overruled. Osgood Co. v. Claremont, 81 N. H. 29; Lariviere v. Stratton, 81 N. H. 17. It must not be assumed, however, that the trial court’s catalogue of questions upon which the correspondence of the parties may throw light is complete. As will later appear, we think that this correspondence had an important bearing upon issues of fact not specifically mentioned by the court in the passage above quoted.

The trial court found that the plaintiff had committed two material breaches of the contract: (1) by failing to pay the invoice of December 20, 1922 when it became due, and (2) by failing to give shipping orders for the material deliverable in January and February. If either of these findings is sustainable it furnishes a sufficient basis for the decree, and the soundness of the other need not be considered. Therefore, without intimating in any way that the first finding was not warranted by the evidence, we prefer to rest our decision upon the second ground stated by the trial court.

The finding that the defendant’s “failure to give shipping orders was a material breach of the contract ” is tantamount to a ruling that the provisions in regard to monthly deliveries or shipments were material parts of the contract, and the plaintiff contends that the trial court thus fell into error because “this court already has placed its [contrary] construction upon the language of the contract relating to deliveries.” Reference is here made to the following language from the opinion in Kann v. Company, 81 N. H. 535, 539. “The contract itself provided merely for approximate monthly shipments, and so far as the deliveries in 1922 were concerned, their quantity was to be more definitely fixed after the delivery of the first hundred tons. This would clearly indicate that the provisions with respect to shipments were not of the essence of the contract. That being the case, strict compliance with those provisions would not be a prerequisite to the granting of equitable relief.”

The plaintiff contends that the foregoing quotation constitutes an authoritative interpretation of the contract which definitely establishes the fact that “the provisions with respect to shipments were not of the essence of the contract.” The answer to this argument lies in the fact that when the language above quoted was used the case was being considered upon demurrer to the plaintiff’s bill, and for the purpose of overruling the demurrer it was only necessary for *48 the court to point out possible conclusions favorable to the plaintiff which might be reached by the trial court, upon the assumption that the allegations in the bill were true. No attempt to place a final construction upon the language of the contract could properly be made before the evidence had been produced and no such attempt was made in the passage above quoted. The opinion closes with these words: “But the precise remedy eventually awarded, whether specific performance or an injunction against the breach of the defendant’s negative promise, must of necessity depend upon an equitable consideration of all the evidentiary facts and circumstances.” With equal force it might have been said that the final interpretation of the contract must of necessity depend upon a consideration “of all the evidentiary facts and circumstances” bearing thereon. The trial court was not bound to adopt the suggested construction and was fully justified by the evidence in reaching a different conclusion.

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Bluebook (online)
153 A. 823, 85 N.H. 41, 1931 N.H. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kann-v-wausau-abrasives-co-nh-1931.