In construing a contract with the Commissary General for
supplies to post in Cuba described at one place as "remote from the
seacoast" and at another as "in the interior of the island,"
held that the two phrase meant the same thing and
interpreted the word "interior," and that the contemporaneous
construction of the Commissary General in refusing to take supplies
for a post about eight miles from Havana and the camping ground for
that city, that the contract applied only to posts remote from the
seacoast, was correct. Also
held that the written contract
could not be extended to places not specified therein by an
indefinite oral agreement.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case arises upon a contract between the Commissary General
of Subsistence and the claimant by which it was agreed that the
claimant should
"deliver to the commissaries of the United States troops
stationed at such posts and camps as are situated in the interior
of the Island of Cuba at such prescribed hours on such days as,
under the direction of their commanding officers, they shall
designate, such quantities of fresh beef . . . fit for immediate
use . . . as from time to time they may require."
The contract was to
"be in force from the fifth day of January, 1899, to the
thirtieth day of June, 1899, inclusive, or such less time for any
post as the Commissary
Page 199 U. S. 398
General of Subsistence, U.S. Army, may direct."
The claims made are two -- one for a refusal to take beef needed
for troops at Los Quemados during certain parts of the contract
time, and another for a refusal to take it at Havana and Matanzas.
The Court of Claims found the facts and dismissed the petition. The
reasons for the judgment were not given, but manifestly were that,
on the facts stated, the claimant had no claim as matter of
law.
The claim in respect of the ports of Havana and Matanzas is
based on a talk with the Commissary General before the contract was
made in which that officer stated that it was the purpose and
intent of the Department to cover the entire beef supply for the
island of Cuba by two contracts: one with Swift & Co., for
refrigerated beef, slaughtered in the United States and delivered
at points on the seacoast, the other with the claimant, for fresh
beef, and that, when Swift & Co. could not furnish beef, the
claimant's contract covered the entire island, both interior and
seacoast. It is enough to say that the claim based on this
conversation flies in the face of the contract, which confines the
undertaking of the United States to beef for camps in the interior.
The conversation is inadmissible, and if admitted, would not be
definite enough to change the plain meaning of the written words.
Brawley v. United States, 96 U. S.
168,
96 U. S. 173;
Simpson v. United States, 172 U.
S. 372,
172 U. S.
379.
The claim in respect of Los Quemados raises two questions, or at
least two were argued -- one, whether the words "such quantities .
. . as from time to time they may require" mean such quantities as
the commissaries may make requisition for, or such quantities as
they may need; the other, whether the camp at Los Quemados was
"situated in the interior of the island," within the true intent of
the contract. Our opinion upon the latter will dispose of the
case.
Los Quemados was the camp of the main body of troops in the
vicinity of Havana, and about six or eight miles from that city. It
was about two and a half miles from the beach of
Page 199 U. S. 399
Marianao, and connected with both points by rail. There was a
refrigerator plant there which had been erected by Swift & Co.,
so that, if the claimant regarded his contract as the supplement to
that of Swift & Co., there was notice on the face of the earth
that this point was supposed to be within their territory. The
original advertisement for proposals, referred to by the claimant
when he made his offer, spoke of "posts remote from the seacoast;"
a later one, also referred to, read "posts and camps in the
interior of the island." Obviously the two phrases were used as
meaning the same thing, and they may be considered in interpreting
the word "interior" in the contract.
Bradley v.
Washington, Alexandria and Georgetown Steam Packet
Co., 13 Pet. 89,
38 U. S. 101;
Stoops v. Smith, 100 Mass. 63, 65-66;
Prouty v. Union
Hardware Co., 176 Mass. 155, 158;
Bank of New Zealand v.
Simpson, 1899-1900 App.Cas. 182;
Bruce v. Moon, 57
S.C. 60, 68-69; 4 Wigmore, Evidence § 2465. When performance
of the contract began in January, 1899, beef was not ordered of the
claimant for this camp. On the twenty-sixth, he protested, but not
on the ground that Los Quemados was situated in the interior of the
island. His complaint was that he was to furnish all the fresh beef
except that furnished under Swift & Co.'s contract. The reply
from the acting Commissary General and the local chief commissary
was that his contract embraced camps in the interior, "and not
seacoast points," thus showing how the contract was construed at
that time. He does not appear to have suggested a different view,
although he seems to have kept on trying to get what orders he
could. During January and February, beef was purchased from third
parties. On February 21, he was notified that commissaries
throughout the island had been instructed to call on him to furnish
fresh beef under his contract whenever Swift & Co. could not do
so under theirs, and he furnished beef for Los Quemados for the
first thirteen days of March, and was paid for it. But it will be
observed that this action again was not on the ground that Los
Quemados was a camp in the interior.
Page 199 U. S. 400
While insufficient to modify the contract in the sense of the
claim first discussed, it was based on the willingness which the
claimant had shown to furnish beef to that greater extent. Pursuant
to the notice, it would seem that he furnished beef to various
points upon the coast.
On March 13, the call upon the claimant was stopped, and he
again protested. On May 4, the Secretary of War decided that the
camp at Quemados was an interior post, but called the attention of
the Commissary Department to the clause in the contract providing
that it should be in force from January 5 to June 30, 1899, or such
less time for any post as the Commissary of Subsistence might
direct. Accordingly, the Commissary General notified the claimant
that
"the suspension of the delivery of fresh beef under your
contract . . . is hereby made to cover the life of the contract
insofar as it relates to the post of Quemados."
The claimant, of course, relies upon this construction of his
contract so far as it favors him, while he repudiates the attempt
to terminate his rights under the last quoted clause. But this
interpretation was after the event, and was not accepted or acted
upon otherwise than to give the notice just mentioned. As we have
shown, the contemporary construction by the men on the spot was
different, and seems to have been accepted by the claimant. Taking
the instrument in connection with the facts that for camping
purposes Quemados was Havana, and that, as between the parties,
interior meant remote from the seacoast, we are of opinion that the
United States did not promise to take beef from the claimant at
that point.
Judgment affirmed.