In the absence of a clear showing of its incorrectness, this
Court accepts the finding of the lower courts.
The object of construction of a contract is to effectuate the
intention of the parties in making it, and it should be interpreted
in the light of the circumstances surrounding the parties at the
time when it was made.
Although contracts relating to the same subject may be dated the
same day, they need not be construed together as one instrument if
all the parties to both are not in privity.
An agreement to pay a sum out of profits of a contract
held, in this case, not to depend on whether profits were
or were not realized by a subcontractor but only on whether such
profits were realized by the party making the contract.
29 App.D.C. 571 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE Day delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a question as to the proper construction of a
certain contract. It arises as follows: Cowardin, Bradley, Clay
Page 213 U. S. 361
& Company, hereinafter called the Cowardin Company, had a
contract with the government of the United States for the
construction of a filtration plant in the City of Washington. In
the partial performance of the contract, they had expended about
$1,300 in money and had contracted debts somewhat in excess of
$14,000. Afterwards, on May 26, 1903, the Cowardin Company sublet
the contract to the appellees May and Jekyll. By this contract, May
and Jekyll agreed to reimburse the Cowardin Company for their
expenditures, to pay the liabilities incurred by them, and to
complete the work for 90 percent of the contract price, permitting
the Cowardin Company to have 10 percent thereof as its profit. And
further, May and Jekyll agreed to lend the Cowardin Company $10,000
and to furnish $50,000 for the purchase of a plant for doing the
work. On August 25, 1903, May and Jekyll made a new contract with
the Cowardin Company, surrendering their subcontract, executed a
bill of sale to the Cowardin Company of the plant by which the work
was being done, and as to the debts which May and Jekyll had
contracted, the Cowardin Company agreed to assume the same, and to
procure the assumption thereof by anyone who might undertake to
complete the contract. The plant, including that purchased with the
$50,000, was to be transferred to the Cowardin Company, and all the
property to be conveyed in trust to certain trustees to secure the
payment of the debts of May and Jekyll. As to the $10,000 advanced
by May and Jekyll under the contract of May 26, 1903, of which
$8,000 remained unpaid, the following stipulation was made:
"Inasmuch as the parties of the second part [May and Jekyll]
have heretofore advanced to the parties of the first part [Cowardin
Company] the sum of $10,000 under the eighth paragraph of said
contract of May 26, 1903, and there now remains due to the said
parties hereto of the second part $8,000 thereof, $2,000 having
been paid thereon, the parties of the first part hereby covenant
and agree to repay the parties of the second part, or to their
order, the said sum of $8,000 out of the net profits which may be
realized by the parties of the first
Page 213 U. S. 362
part from the construction or erection of that portion of said
filtration plant which they have contracted with the United States
to construct or erect. The said $8,000, if the same shall not be
sooner voluntarily paid by the parties of the first part to the
parties of the second part, shall be reserved and paid out of the
10 percent of the contract price for said work which will be
reserved by the United States, and if the parties of the first part
shall not themselves continue said work under their contract with
the United States, but shall procure some third party or parties to
perform the same, or if the same shall be performed by any person
or persons on behalf of the parties hereto of the first part,
appropriate provision shall be made for the reservation and payment
of said $8,000 to the parties hereto of the second part, it being
distinctly understood and hereby declared to be the purpose of this
agreement that the repayment of the $8,000 shall be under the
contingency that the parties of the first part shall realize a
profit under said contract with the United States, and not
otherwise, and that, if any profit shall be so realized by them, it
shall be subject to the payment of the said $8,000, or so much
thereof as said profit will pay and satisfy."
On the same day, August 25, 1903, the Cowardin Company made a
contract with one Dean whereby, in consideration of the sale to
Dean and Shibley, afterwards the Sand Filtration Corporation of
America, appellant in this case, of the filtration plant, and of
the employment of appellant by a receiver to be appointed, to
complete the work, Dean agreed to pay to the receiver $65,000 in
installments, to complete the work, and further
"to comply with the provisions and conditions of one certain
agreement entered into between the grantors (Cowardin Company) and
May and Jekyll, a copy of which is hereto attached and to be read
as a part thereof, including, among other provisions, the payment
of the sum of $8,000 to the said May and Jekyll, as in the said
agreement is provided, and the payment of which is also assumed by
the said grantee (Dean)."
As under the law the Cowardin Company could not assign the
contract with the government, and as the company was in
Page 213 U. S. 363
financial difficulties, it was agreed that the receiver to be
appointed for the Cowardin Company should enter into a contract
with the Sand Filtration Corporation, successor of Dean, for the
carrying out of the provisions of the contract of August 25, 1903,
with the Cowardin Company. A receiver was appointed and a contract
made, and on August 27, a further contract was entered into whereby
it was agreed that the receiver was to deduct from the money to be
paid by the government, as the work progressed, the sum of $65,000,
and also the sum of $8,000 therein mentioned, and to pay the same
directly to the Cowardin Company instead of paying it to Dean, and
then receiving it back from him.
The Sand Filtration Corporation of America, successor to Dean,
completed the work, and, as the record shows, at a loss of $100,000
or more. Pleadings were framed and issues made up presenting to the
court the question whether the receiver should be ordered to pay
the sum of $8,000 to the Sand Filtration Corporation of America,
appellant, or to May and Jekyll, under the contracts hereinbefore
set forth. Upon hearing in the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia, the court directed that this sum be paid by the receiver
to May and Jekyll. From this decree the Sand Filtration Corporation
of America appealed to the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia, and that court affirmed the decree of the Supreme Court
of the District. 29 App.D.C. 571. The case was then appealed
here.
As we have said, the single question in this case is whether,
under the facts recited, this $8,000 should go to the appellant as
successor to Dean, or to May and Jekyll, as the courts below have
held. It is insisted for appellant that the proper construction of
the contract required payment of the $8,000 to May and Jekyll only
upon the contingency that a profit should be realized under the
construction contract with the United States -- that is to say, if
the construction of the filtration plant proved to be a profitable
job, then May and Jekyll were to be paid $8,000, or so much thereof
as the profits would pay. The record discloses that appellant,
successor of Dean, not only
Page 213 U. S. 364
made no profits, but, on the contrary, lost a large sum of
money.
Upon the pleadings and testimony, the lower courts have found,
and we accept the finding, in the absence of a clear showing of
incorrectness, that, without doing the work, the Cowardin Company
has made out of the contract a sum in excess of $8,000, paid from
the sums coming from the United States on account of the contract,
in manner aforesaid.
The object of construction is to effectuate the intention of the
parties in making a given contract. When the contract is in
writing, the language used should be interpreted in the light of
the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time the contract
was made. It is contended by the learned counsel for the appellant
that the agreements of August 25, 1903, were contemporaneous, and
must be construed together as one agreement, and that the effect of
such construction is to require the payment of $8,000 to May and
Jekyll only in the event that the contract should prove profitable;
and, as no profit was realized from the construction, nothing is to
be paid. But while these contracts were dated the same day, whether
they were executed at the same time or not does not appear, and
certainly Dean was not in privity with May and Jekyll. The $8,000
was to be paid out of moneys reserved, coming from the government,
and upon the contingency that a profit should be realized by the
Cowardin Company. There was no agreement that the payment of this
sum should be upon the contingency that any subcontractor, such as
Dean and his successor, should make a profit out of the contract.
If such was the intention of the parties, it is not so written in
the contract. May and Jekyll were to have the money advanced by
them repaid if "the party of the first part," the Cowardin Company,
"shall realize a profit under said contract." It is clear that the
Cowardin Company did make a profit, and we are unable to see that
it makes any difference that it was realized in the manner we have
detailed, rather than from the construction of the work. The
substance of the agreement between the Cowardin Company and May
Page 213 U. S. 365
and Jekyll looked to the repayment of the money advanced in case
the Cowardin Company realized a profit. This it has done, and we
think the conditions of the contract have been kept.
It is suggested by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in
error that, as the profit of $65,000 was realized by the Cowardin
Company by the agreements of August 25, 1903, and as they were
contemporaneous, the agreement for payment of the $8,000 only in
the contingency of profit cannot mean the $65,000 so realized by
the execution of the papers, but had reference to future profits in
doing the work.
But it is to be noted that the Cowardin Company was the only
party contracting with the United States, and had Dean thrown up
the contract, or failed to complete the construction of the work,
the Cowardin Company would still have been held on their contract
and bond. Until Dean or his successor completed the work, the
Cowardin Company was not absolved from liability so far as the
government was concerned, and it could not be known whether a
profit would be made or not.
As the Cowardin Company did realize such profit as required the
payment of the $8,000 to May and Jekyll by the receiver out of the
sums received from the government, the courts below were right in
so ordering.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia
is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dissenting: MR. JUSTICE McKENNA and MR. JUSTICE MOODY.