McCormack v. Jermyn

40 A.2d 477, 351 Pa. 161
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 5, 1944
DocketAppeal, 215
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 40 A.2d 477 (McCormack v. Jermyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCormack v. Jermyn, 40 A.2d 477, 351 Pa. 161 (Pa. 1944).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Horace Stern,

A jury was instructed that it was its function to find the terms of a disputed oral contract and, from all the circumstances, what the real understanding was of the parties. The jury having found for plaintiff, the court subsequently concluded that the trial judge should have construed the contract as a matter of law, and it entered judgment n. o. v. for defendant. The question on appeal is whether its action in this regard was correct.

William S. Jermyn, defendant, was, as owner, lessee or otherwise, interested in several operations for the mining, preparation and sale of anthracite coal. Plaintiff’s assignor, Frank McCormack, was engaged in general construction work and the business of coal stripping. Coal stripping consists of the removal of the soil, rock or “over-burden” on seams of coal which lie near the surface and cannot be safely or economically mined by subterranean operations; such coal is known as “outcrop coal”, being the out-crop of the vein as it rises up *163 from the basin; after the coal is exposed it is dug out by means of excavating shovels.

McCormack and defendant met on January 29,1940. Defendant discussed the stripping of a tract in which he had some kind of interest, and expressed great confidence in the belief that it was underlain by large veins of coal. According to plaintiff’s testimony — which, of course, is alone to be considered for present purposes— defendant agreed that, if McCormack would bring over some equipment which he had been employing on a neighboring operation and would strip this tract, defendant would pay him $1.85 per ton if the coal proved to be discolored and $2.00 per ton if “grade A”. Defendant further agreed, in the words ascribed to him by McCormack, that “if there is no coal there I will pay all expense of moving the equipment and rental on your equipment.” In another part of his testimony McCormack quoted defendant to the effect that “If the coal wasn’t there he would pay us our expenses, and a fair equipment rental value on our machinery.” McCormack started the operation but no coal was discovered until February 22, when 313 tons were obtained; on investigation, however, this proved to be, not the ordinary “out-crop” coal, but the contents, of a “stump”, which is the base or remains of a worked-out pillar left after previous mining operations in order to support the surface. Defendant, still optimistic however, directed McCormack to continue, which McCormack did for several weeks but without success. A year and a half later this suit was brought to recover the sum of $10,327.52 representing the rental value of the equipment, the expense of labor, and the cost of material and supplies. At the trial a credit was allowed to defendant of the amount received from the sale of the 313 tons recovered and sold, leaving a net claim of $9,736.07, for which amount the jury returned a verdict in plaintiff’s favor.

Defendant testified that no such contract as claimed by McCormack was entered into, but, in any event, con *164 tended that plaintiff was not entitled to recover even if McCormack’s version was correct, inasmuch as the reimbursement for expenses depended on “no coal”- being discovered, whereas in fact 313 tons were obtained from the operation. Plaintiff countered with the argument that not only was the “stump coal” not the “out-crop coal” which had been the subject-matter of the contract within the contemplation of the parties, but that it was in such an insignificant and unappreciable amount that, from a practical standpoint¡ it was “no coal” within the meaning of the contract as the parties understood and intended those words.

The learned trial judge charged the jury that if the coal recovered from the operation was “out-crop coal” and “coal of the quantity within the common understanding of the parties” they would have to find for defendant, otherwise for plaintiff. He refused to affirm defendant’s points for charge to the effect that the words “no coal” precluded plaintiff from recovery, that McCormack could have protected himself-in entering into the contract by stipulating that if no coal of profitable or sufficient quantity was discovered he would be entitled to his expenses, but that, not having done so, the jury must accept the words “no coal” as intended to mean the absence of any coal. The court entered judgment for defendant n. o. v. on the ground that thé trial judge should have affirmed those points 'and not'have'allowed the jury to give an interpretation to a non-technical word other than what it imported in ordinary and common usage..

In the case of a. disputed oral contract there is a well marked distinction between the relative functions of court and jury. There are three successive stages of inquiry: first, what were the ■terms of the contract; second,-what was the tinderstanding of the parties as expressed by those terms; third, what was the legal effect of the agreement as thus determined and interpreted. The authorities are clear to the effect that the *165 first two of these processes are for the jury as questions of fact; the last is for the court as a matter of law.

“Now, it is obvious-that the sense of'words used in conversation, and what the parties meant to express by them, is for the jury to determine, and not for the court. It is the conceded province of the court- to expound the meaning of "an instrument, but that it extends not to words uttered,, of which there can be no tenor,-is evident from the uniformity with which it .is spoken of in reference to the interpretation of writings. . . . That the construction of .an- oral agreement belongs to the- jury, ... is so often repeated in our own reports that I forbear to enumerate the cases. . . .”: Chief Justice Gibson in McFarland v. Newman, 9 Watts 55, 59. “The rule 'however is undoubted, that the meaning of words used in conversation, and what the, parties intended,-to express by them, is exclusively for the jury to determine”: Brubaker v. Okeson, 36 Pa. 519, 521, 522. “The sense of words used in connection itíith what the parties intended to express by them is exclusively for the jury to -determine. The judge may not put a legal interpretation on oral words,-and make it a matter of positive direction. It is the province of the court to expound the meaning of an instrument, but not of words uttered of which there can be no tenor”: Maynes v. Atwater, 88 Pa. 496, 497. “If the contract is verbal, it is, of course, the exclusive province of the jury to inquire, and ascertain what the parties, meant; if it is in writing, its construction is for the court”-: Forrest v. Nelson, 108 Pa. 481, 488. “What was said and done, what was intended by what was said and done, are questions of fact for the jury”: Fulton v. Lancaster Co., 162 Pa. 294, 297, 29 A. 763, 766. “Where a contract is made orally, the question of its effect is not one of mere interpretation, declaring the legal meaning of terms employed. The inquiry then is, in the first place, What was the language used by the parties? and, in the second place, What was intended and understood by them when they used it?

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 477, 351 Pa. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormack-v-jermyn-pa-1944.