Shultz & Co. v. Johnson's Administrator

44 Ky. 497, 5 B. Mon. 497, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 16, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 44 Ky. 497 (Shultz & Co. v. Johnson's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shultz & Co. v. Johnson's Administrator, 44 Ky. 497, 5 B. Mon. 497, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 46 (Ky. Ct. App. 1845).

Opinion

Judge Breck

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of covenant, brought by William H. Johnson, administrator of Elijah Johnson, against the plaintiffs in error, upon the following obligation;

"An agreement made this day between Elijah Johnson, of the first part, and C. Shultz & Co., of the second part, all of the county of Mason, and State of Kentucky, witnesseth; that the said Elijah Johnson, of the first part, engages to furnish C. Shultz «fe Co., of the second part, six successive crops of hemp of his oion raising, embracing each year all the hemp he can raise upon not less than one hundred, nor more than one hundred and sixty acres of land each year, the hemp to be well cleaned, and of fair quality for the season in which it is raised, and delivered to the said C. Shultz & Co. in Maysville, within a reasonable time after the breaking season in each year; and upon the delivery of each crop, as above, the said C. Shultz & Co. is to pay him, the said Johnson, at the rate of five dollars for ea.ch and every one hundred and twelve pounds of hemp, excepting the present crop, the growth of this year — this crop is supposed to be about ten or twelve tons, and is to be delivered any time between the first of January, 1841, and the first of Aug. next, at the election of said Johnson, for which he is to [498]*498receive of C. Shultz & Co. the cash market price in Mays-ville, at the time of delivery.
Decree of the Circuit Court.
Maysville, Sept. 29„ 1840.
Elijah Johnson,
G. Shultz fy Co.

The declaration alledges, that Johnson departed this life, in the county of Mason, in 1842, intestate — that he delivered the crop of hemp on hand at the date of the covenant sued on, and went on to raise from one hundred to one hundred and sixty acres of hemp in each year, and to deliver the same according to his contract, till his death — that after his death, the plaintiff, as his administrator, with the aid and assistance and approbation of the heirs of said intestate, went onto prepare for market, and deliver the crop, which was growing in 1842, at his death, all of which crops were received and paid for by the defendants. That still further complying with said contract, the plaintiff, with the aid and assistance of the children and heirs of his intestate, proceeded, in the spring of 1843, to sow and in that year to raise one hundred and sixty acres of hemp, on the farm on which his intestate died, and of w’hieh he was seized when said contract was made. That the crop thus raised in 1843, the defendants refused to receive, claiming by the death of the intestate, to be released from said contract.

Various pleas were fried by the defendants, to several of which issues were made up, and the residue were disposed of by demurrer, either to the plea or the replication.

A verdict and judgment having been rendered for the plaintiff, the defendants have brought the case before this Court for revision.

The principal question in the case arises upon the demurrers to the second and seventh pleas. The second plea alledges, that to raise and prepare hemp for market, is a matter of much science and skill, and knowing that said Johnson possessed the requisite science and skill for that purpose, the defendants entered into the contract sued on, by which they agreed to take six successive crops of hemp of his, the said Johnson’s own raising, and none other, and that the crop of hemp of 1843 was rais[499]*499ed by the plaintiff, and that under said contract they were not bound to receive and pay for the same.

Contracts should be so construed as to carry out the intention of the parties, tho’ it may be necessary to depart from the strict letter.

The seventh plea alledges, that the hemp tendered by the plaintiff to the defendants, was not hemp of Elijah Johnson’s own raising.

Whether the Court below was right in sustaining demurrers to these pleas, presents the first and most important question for consideration.

The demurrer brings up the sufficiency of the declaration, which depends upon the construction of the contract.

It is contended for the plaintiff’s in error, that the contract died with Johnson, and of course that the administrator or plaintiff below, could not maintain the action.

The contract is drawn concisely, and saving the expression, of Ms own raising, very perspicuously. And even in regard to that clause, we have less difficulty in determining what the parties intended by it, than in determining what effect it should have upon the contract.

The rule is well settled, that in the interpretation of contracts, they should be so construed as clearly to carry out the intention of the parties, notwithstanding such construction' might be a departure from the strict letter.

In view of this rule, let us examine the contract in question.

It is perfectly evident that it was not contemplated by the parties, that the hemp upon not less than one hundred, nor more than one hundred and sixty acres, was to be raised by the labor of Johnson alone. The labor of a single individual would obviously be utterly inadequate to such an undertaking; and the expression of Ms own raising, must therefore, receive a different and more liberal construction.

It is recited in the covenant, that both parties reside in the county of Mason, and we have a right, we think, to presume, from the subject matter, as well as from the terms of the contract, that Johnson was a farmer of that county, and in the habit of raising hemp — that he had land, and, to use a common expression in reference to labor, had the requisite force for cultivating as much thereof in hemp as required by the contract. As a farmer [500]*500anda hemp groioer, possessed of the land and the labor, therefore, he entered into the contract, stipulating to furnish Shultz & Co. with all the hemp he could thus raise in each year for six successive years, upon the specified quantity of land. The hemp and crops which he might thus raise, would be of his own raising, according to the general import of the expression, and in that sense the parties, no doubt, understood and used it.

As a general rule, the personal representative is bound to perform the contracts of his testator or intestate -whether named or not, unless something is to be done by the person contracting. The rules by which contracts are determined to be personal.

But conceding, as contended by counsel, that Johnson could perform the contract, by renting the land and hireing the labor, still the expression, of his own raising, very clearly implies that his vocation and business was farming and raising hemp, and that the several crops which he stipulated to furnish, were to be his own crops, raised by him or under his personal superintendence and direction. The provision, that the hemp was “to be well cleaned, and of fair quality for the season in which it was raised,” is not at all inconsistent with this construction. It defines the quality, whileJhe expression, of his own raising, identifies the hemp, the crops which he was to deliver, and by whom to be raised.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Ky. 497, 5 B. Mon. 497, 1845 Ky. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shultz-co-v-johnsons-administrator-kyctapp-1845.