Woodruff v. Bourbon Stock Yards Co.

149 S.W. 960, 149 Ky. 576, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 684
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 1, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 960 (Woodruff v. Bourbon Stock Yards Co.) 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
Woodruff v. Bourbon Stock Yards Co., 149 S.W. 960, 149 Ky. 576, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 684 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing

-Affirminff.

In May, 1908, the Bourbon Stock Yards Company became the owner of property, which had theretofore been owned and operated by the Central Stock Yards Company. It consisted of a tract of land, upon which had been erected a large brick building, known as the “administration building,” and in addition, large wooden buildings, in which the pens for stock were made. A spur track connecting the railroad was laid through the yard, so that the stock might be unloaded conveniently near the pens, in which it was to be placed. Not desiring to longer maintain and operate the yards, which had theretofore been owned by the Central Stock Yards Company, the Bourbon Stock Yards Company made it known that the buildings would be wrecked and the material thereof sold. Woodruff & Cahill, a firm doing business in the city of Louisville, learning of this intention, began negotiations with the officers of the Bourbon Stock Yards Company for at least a part of this wreckage. After having discussed the matter with the officers of said company, and perhaps visited the grounds on one or [577]*577more occasions, the following letter was addressed by Woodruff & Cahill to the Bourbon Stock Yards Company:

“April 16th, 1909.
“Bourbon Stock Yards,
City:
“We desire to submit the following proposition for the purchase of certain lumber, material, etc., located upon and formerly known as Central Stock Yards, to-wit:
“We will wreck, tear down, and remove from the premises of the Central Stock Yards, located at the end of Floyd Street in the Town of Highland Park, Jefferson County, Kentucky, all the buildings, lumber and material of every nature whatsoever, except the scales, troughs, racks, gates and the bricks thereon, and will pay at the rate of $6.50 per thousand feet for all lumber of not less than six feet in length. We agree to measure and pay for said lumber now in buildings, structures or sections before tearing down or wrecking the same, and to measure and pay for such lumber as is already down measuring not less than six feet in length before removing the same from the premises. If this proposition is accepted, we agree to begin the work tearing down and removing said lumber, material etc., at once, and shall prosecute said work as speedily as possible.”

This letter was received in due time, and on April 24th the following response thereto was sent to Wood-ruff & Cahill:

“Louisville, Ky., April 24, 1909.
“Woodruff & Cahill, City.
“Gentlemen: We will accept your proposition dated April 16, 1909, upon receiving satisfactory security. Payments to be made for each section upon measurement in advance, and before buildings are touched all remaining lumber less than six feet in length and trash to be removed from the premises by you free of expense to us and the ground left clear.
“Bourbon Stock Yards Co.,
“Per G. A. Birch, Supt.”
“W. F. Woodruff,
“ J. H. Cahill.”

[578]*578Upon the conclusion of this correspondence, Wood-ruff & Cahill began wrecking the building in which the pens were located, and continued the work until in August, when on the 9th day thereof they paid to the Bourbon Stock Yards Company, $2,653.60, the balance due said company, for material admitted by them to have been' received under their contract. The total amount paid during the progress of the tearing down of the building was the sum of $7,911.89. No further steps were taken by Woodruff & Cahill, so far as the record shows, until on the 8th of April, 1910, when they went upon the grounds of ,the Central Stock Yards Company and commenced removing the spur track, which ran through said grounds outside of the building in which the pens were located. Immediately that the officers of the Bourbon Stock Yards Company were notified that Woodruff & Cahill were proceeding to tear up the spur track, they filed a suit, in which they sought an injunction restraining the defendants from removing the track. A restraining order and temporary injunction were granted. On April 23rd, the defendants filed their answer, in which they set out their written contract, as embraced in the letters quoted, and pleaded that, under their contract, they were entitled to the rails and ties in the track and had the right to remove them. They made their answer a counter claim, and prayed that this right be adjudged to them. The affirmative matter in the answer was traversed in the reply, and later, by an. amended reply, the plaintiff alleged that by “inadvertence” the letters forming the contract did not fully set forth the agreement of the parties, and that, as a matter of fact, the only trash and waste matter which the defendants had the right to remove from the grounds, was such as came from the building in which the pens were situated and which they wrecked, and that neither party contemplated that the railroad track passed to the defendants, under the contract. Subsequently, and after a demurred had been filed to the reply as amended and a motion to strike it from the files had been entered, plaintiff offered, and was permitted, to file an amended petition, in which the same matter was set up. The affirmative matter in this amended petition was traversed. Proof was taken on each side in support of its contention, that for the plaintiff clearly showing that at the time the contract was entered into, nothing but the bun[579]*579ber in the wooden building, in which the pens were located, was sold, while the proof for the defendants was to the effect that everything on the grounds, except the brick in the administration building, scales and other articles excepted in the letter, were included. Upon consideration, the chancellor was of opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief sought, and the temporary injunction was made permanent. Being dissatisfied with that finding and judgment, the defendants appeal.

Three questions are presented for consideration: First, does the language of the contract, as embraced in the two letters referred to, when given its fair, reasonable and ordinary meaning, support the contention of appellánts, that the railroad ties and rails belong to them under said contract; and, second, if the contract is susceptible of this construction, is appellee, under the pleadings, entitled to have the contract reformed; and third, does the evidence show that the contract, into which the parties really entered was different from that embraced in the two letters? All of these questions are discussed at length in the able briefs filed by counsel, but, from the conclusion we have reached, it is necessary to consider only the first question.

The object of construction is to arrive at the intent of the parties, and this intent must be gathered from the language used in the draft of the contract. Where it is uncertain from the language used just what the contract means, it not infrequently happens that a consideration of the circumstances surrounding the parties, when the contract was written, makes clear'that which might otherwise be ambiguous and uncertain. Hence, it is a well recognized rule that a contract may be construed in the light of surrounding circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 960, 149 Ky. 576, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodruff-v-bourbon-stock-yards-co-kyctapp-1912.