Mealey v. Kanealy

286 N.W. 500, 226 Iowa 1266
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 20, 1939
DocketNo. 44566.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 286 N.W. 500 (Mealey v. Kanealy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mealey v. Kanealy, 286 N.W. 500, 226 Iowa 1266 (iowa 1939).

Opinions

Oliver, J.

This is an action at law by appellees against appellant for real estate commission based upon ,a written contract. Appellant, Lillian Kanealy, had certain negotiations with Thomas Berryman and wife for exchange of real estate. Appellees, J. R. Mealey and Charles M. Domback, represented both parties to the proposed exchange and submitted a contract for execution by said parties. The contract contained provisions relative to titles, abstracts, possession and conveyances as usually found in exchange agreements, the last paragraph having reference to appellees’ commission. As originally submitted the instrument was unsatisfactory to appellant, who refused to sign it until she had re-typed it and made certain changes. This was done in appellees’ office. The change made in the last paragraph was by adding thereto the following sentence, ‘ ‘ The commission being due and payable upon the transfer of the properties. ’ ’ As thus modified the paragraph read as follows:

“It is hereby acknowledged by both parties hereto that upon the signing of this agreement by both parties hereto, there shall be due and payable jointly to J. R. Mealey and Charles M. Domback as commission the sum of $200.00 from each party hereto and the said Charles M. Domback’s office, 304 Crocker Building, shall be the place that all papers necessary to complete this deal will be delivered. The commission being due and payable upon the transfer of the properties.”

Appellant then signed the contract and it was turned over to appellees who took it to the Berrymans and secured their signatures thereon. Appellees were not named as parties to the contract nor did they execute it.

The foregoing facts were established without substantial dispute by the evidence of appellees in their own behalf and by the appellant on her part. Appellant further testified concerning oral negotiations and conversations between appellees and appellant relative to the contract and commission prior to, at the time of, and subsequent to her execution of the contract. Certain evidence was also introduced by appellant tending to *1268 show that the exchange was never consummated because of the inability of the Berrymans to perform. Although there was some dispute upon the foregoing proposition it is not contended that the properties were ever transferred. At the conclusion of the evidence the court struck out all the oral evidence introduced on behalf of appellant and directed a verdict án favor of appellees. This appeal is from such rulings and the resulting judgment.

Primarily the controversy involves the interpretation of the last paragraph of the contract above quoted. The trial court interpreted this paragraph to mean the commission was due at the time the contract was signed, thus disregarding the final sentence, “the commission being due and payable upon the transfer of the properties”. This interpretation was based upon a secondary rule of construction mentioned in certain texts and decisions and referred to by appellees as holding, “Where there are two provisions in a contract, one repugnant and contradictory to the other, the former will stand and the latter will be rejected”. For convenience this may be termed “the rule of priority of clauses” under which the first of two repugnant clauses is preferred to the second solely by reason of priority of position. See 13 C. J. 535, sec. 497; 12 Am. Jur. 778; Elliot on Contracts, Vol. 2, p. 790; Chitty on Contracts, 11th Am. Ed. 128; 2 Parsons on Contracts, 513. This must not be confused with the rule that a proviso or clause which is repugnant to the general purpose and intent of a contract will be disregarded no matter where located in the contract. Reference will hereinafter be made to certain authorities based upon this latter rule.

The rule of priority of clauses is ancient and probably originated in the construction of deeds. Stukeley v. Butler, H. 12 Jac. Rot. 827, published in the year 1657, in the reports of Sir Henry Hobart, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, at page 168, discusses the case of a general grant followed by the word “viz.” and certain exceptions, and holds, “and I am of the opinion that the Yiz. as the whole sentence is, is utterly void. ’ ’ However, apparently, the viz. and resultant divided sentence governed the decision since the court also said, at page 171:

“And indeed in one sentence it is vaine to imagine one *1269 part before another; for though words can neither be spoken nor written at once, yet the mind of the Author comprehends them at once, which gives vitam & modum to the sentence.”

Blackstone’s Commentaries, published in 1768, contain the following, at page 379:

“ (3) That the construction be made upon the entire deed rather than upon disjointed parts of it * * *.”

At page 381:

“(6) That, in a deed, if there be two clauses so totally repugnant to each other, that they cannot stand together, the first shall be received and the latter rejected; wherein it differs from a will; for there, of two such repugnant clauses the latter shall stand. Which is owing to the different -nature of the two instruments; for the first deed and the last will are always most available in law. Yet in both cases we should- rather attempt to reconcile them.”

Even a proviso limiting the effect of the entire contract may be valid if it is not wholly repugnant to the general purpose of' the instrument. This is illustrated by Williams v. Hathaway (1877), L. R. 6 Ch. Div. 544, in the words of Jessell M. R.:

“I must decide this cáse against the plaintiff. The first question is one of law. It is said that if you find a personal covenant, followed by a proviso that the covenantor shall not be personally liable under the covenant, the proviso is repugnant and void. I agree that is the law; but that by no means applies to a case where the proviso limits the personal liability under the covenant without destroying it, thus leaving a portion of the original covenant remaining: in that case- the proviso is perfectly valid. There is no authority against that view.”

Although Williams v. Hathaway is not a recent decision, the rule stated was adopted almost verbatim in Chitty on Contracts, 19th Ed., 1937, chapter V, p. 108.

Various American Encyclopedias and text books refer to the rule of priority of clauses although they agree that it is to be employed only as a last resort. Peculiarly noticeable is the circumstance that the authorities cited in these works, to a considerable extent, do not support the text. Many of the cited *1270 cases, particularly the more recent, merely mention the rule and do not adopt it, while others turn upon the rule of a provision repugnant to the general purpose of the contract. This may be demonstrated by examining a few of the cases most frequently cited as supporting the rule of priority of clauses.

Vickers v. Electrozone Commercial Co. (1902), 67 N. J. L. 665, 52 A. 467, probably is not based upon this rule, but rather upon the rule against the destruction of the general purpose of the contract by a proviso.

Straus v. Wanamaker (1896), 175 Pa. 213, 34 A.

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286 N.W. 500, 226 Iowa 1266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mealey-v-kanealy-iowa-1939.