St. Paul Title & Trust Co. v. Sabin

87 N.W. 1109, 112 Wis. 105, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 110
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 1109 (St. Paul Title & Trust Co. v. Sabin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Paul Title & Trust Co. v. Sabin, 87 N.W. 1109, 112 Wis. 105, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 110 (Wis. 1901).

Opinion

Winslow, J.

The bond in suit was given by Sabm as principal and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company as surety to secure the reimbursement of the plaintiff for all necessary expenses and liabilities incurred by it in performing the conditions of paragraph 4 of the reorganization agreement which were to be performed by Sabin, and which he had not performed at the time the bond was given. The plaintiff contends that by the terms of said?paragraph 4 the defendant Sabin was required to procure releases of the claims of Kelson, Baldwin, McKay, and the Spring Yal-ley Land Company for lands taken for right of way purposes by the old company, and that, Sabin having failed to secure such releases, the amounts necessarily expended by the plaintiff in securing the same may be recovered in an action on the bond. On the other hand, the defendants contend that paragraph 4 only required Sabm to secure good title to said lands, and to secure releases of all valid claims against the property of the new company, and that under the principles laid down in the case of Kuhl v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 101 Wis. 42, not only was the title to the lands formerly owned by the parties named perfect in the new company, but said parties had no valid claim of any kind against the new company; and hence that the sums paid by the plaintiff in settlement of such claims were not within the terms of the bond. Thus it is readily seen that the vital questions in the case are simply as to the proper construction of the two instruments.

Taking up the reorganization agreement first, we do not see how there can be any doubt but that it referred to the claims of Kelson, McKay, Baldwin, and the Spring Valley [112]*112Land Company by its very terms. It expressly names the claim of title asserted by the Spring Valley Land Company to a portion of the right of way as one of the claims of which Mr. Sabin is to secure a satisfactory release, and it also includes generally “all other claims of title, by whomsoever made or held, that may exist or Ije held to any portion or portions of said right of way.” It appears that the above-named claims were substantially the only claims made to the right of way, and this fact seems conclusive that they were the claims referred to in the agreement. Eut, if there were any doubt of the meaning upon the face of the agreement itself, it would be removed by the acts of the parties under it by which it was given a practical construction. The evidence shows without dispute that Mr. Sabin became a director and a member of the executive committee of the new railroad company; that a meeting of the executive committee was held May 22, 1897, at which h'e was present and presided, and that a resolution was then passed, without dissent, empowering the president and counsel of the road to “ take such action in relation to the unsettled right of way matters by compromise, condemnation proceedings, or otherwise, as they may think best.” This makes it clear that Mr. Sabin knew that condemnation proceedings were contemplated. It further appears without dispute that in the latter part of the year 1897 Mr. H. 0. Baker, of the St. Croix county bar, was employed to commence and prosecute the condemnation proceedings; that he prepared the necessary petition, and filed it in March, 1898; that both before and after the filing of the petition he had numerous interviews and conducted an extensive correspondence with Mr. Sabin, in the course of which Mr. Sabin was kept fully advised of the steps being taken, and approved of them. In these letters the position assumed by Mr. Sabin is unmistakably that of the responsible party to the litigation, who is advising and directing his attorney. The let[113]*113ters run from January, 1898, to December, 1899, and are too numerous and lengthy to quote, and this statement of their import must be sufficient. It also appears that on July 9, 1899, Mr. Sabin, by letter to Mr. G. D. Braman, stated that he would pay $2,916 to clear up the Spring Yal-ley right of way; that in November, 1899,he authorized the plaintiff, by letter, to settle the Baldwin claim for $400, and the McKay claim at an amount not exceeding $2,000; and that in pursuance of the authorization so given the various settlements were made. The final letter to Mr. Baker, written December 6, 1899, after the settlements were all made, is very significant as to the view Mr. Sabin then took of his relation to the condemnation proceedings. He says:

“ I would like personally to have carried on this fight, but from your recent conversation, and after looking over the whole situation, 1 made up my mind that in the end it would cost as much to make the fight as it would to settle. . . . I have concluded it was better to make the best of a bad bargain, and try and get out of it as cheaply as possible. The next thing, of course, will be settlement with the trust company, which is bad enough.”

It will be noticed that these condemnation proceedings were in progress when the amicable action to foreclose the lien upon Sabin's bonds was brought by the trust company, and that judgment in that action was rendered July 295 1898, some twenty days after Sabin had authorized the settlement of the Spring Valley claim; and that the bond in suit was given in October following that settlement, and just prior to the settlements with Baldwin and McKay. That Mr. Sabin has practically construed the reorganization agreement to mean just what the plaintiff now claims to be its meaning is not open to doubt upon these facts. That the settlements were favorable settlements, and the amounts paid were only such as were reasonably necessary, does not seem to be controverted, except in the case of the Nelson claim, to which reference will be made later.

[114]*114"While these considerations seem conclusive as to the construction of the reorganization agreement as between Sabin and the plaintiff, it is contended that they are not conclusive as to the construction of the bond upon which the action is brought, especially as to the liability of the appellant the Fidelity & Guaranty Company, which is simply a surety on the bond, and whose obligation is sbriotissimi juris. The bond was given more than two years after the reorganization agreement was signed. The conditions of paragraph 4 of the agreement were imported bodily into the bond by its very terms. Certainly the surety should have investigated and ascertained for himself what those conditions were, and must be held to be bound by them. He cannot now be heard to say that he was not informed as to their character. He has agreed that they shall be performed, whatever they are. It is true that a surety is a favorite in the law, and that his liability will not be extended by construction; but when it becomes necessary to construe a contract which he has made the same test is to be applied as in construing any other contract, namely, "What was the intention of the parties as disclosed by the instrument read in the light of the surrounding circumstances ? Brandt, Suretyship & G. § 94. If we are right in our conclusion that paragraph 4 of the reorganization agreement requires no construction, but on its face definitely refers to the claims under consideration,— in other words, if the clause is clear and unambiguous,— the surety must, of course, be bound equally with the principal by its clear meaning.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 1109, 112 Wis. 105, 1901 Wisc. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-title-trust-co-v-sabin-wis-1901.