A lease of Indian land for cattle grazing, for two years at a
minimum rental of $31,950 per year, provided that the number of
cattle to be grazed should "be limited to an average of 9,000 head,
the maximum number at any one time not to exceed 11,500 head," and
that "any excess over and above such maximum number shall be paid
for at the rate of $4.50 per head for each and every head of such
excess number," in addition to the rental named.
Held, reading these with other provisions of the lease
and with the written proposal therefor, and considering the subject
matter,
(1) That the average of 9,000 head was for each year separately
to be paid for by the minimum rental, and that the additional
charge of $4.50 per head applied to all in excess of that average,
and not merely to any excess over 11,500 head grazed at any one
time. P.
260 U. S.
425.
(2) The $4.50 charge was neither a penalty nor liquidated
damages. P.
260 U. S. 427.
(3) The act of one of the two lessees who was in charge of the
leased area in admitting additional cattle to graze was the act of
both. P.
260 U. S. 427.
273 F. 391 affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the circuit court of appeals affirming a
judgment recovered by the United States in the district court in an
action for rent against two lessees and their surety.
Page 260 U. S. 424
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
With the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, certain
lands of the Crow Tribe of Indians in Montana were leased to George
B. Kirby and Charles McDaniels for the grazing of cattle for two
years beginning February 1, 1916. A bond, in which the United
States Fidelity & Guaranty Company joined as surety, was given
by the lessees for the faithful performance of their obligations.
The lease required them to pay a minimum rental of $31,950 per
year, and to abide by the following provision:
"And it is further agreed that the number of cattle to be grazed
on the territory described above shall be limited to an average of
9,000 head, the maximum number at any one time not to exceed 11,500
head, and that any excess over and above such maximum number shall
be paid for at the rate of $4.50 per head for each and every head
of such excess number in addition to the rental herein named."
The lessees paid the rental of $31,950 for each of the two
years, but failed to pay an additional sum claimed under that
provision for cattle grazed in excess of the prescribed
average.
On behalf of the tribe, the United States sued the lessees and
the surety company to recover the additional sum so claimed, and
the defendants answered, denying that there had been any excess
grazing. The issues were tried to the court, a jury being waived by
written stipulation. The court found that there was no excess
grazing during the first year, but that the cattle grazed during
the second year exceeded "the contract maximum average of 9,000
head for the year" by what was "equivalent to 6,968 head for one
year." For this excess, a recovery was allowed at
Page 260 U. S. 425
the rate of $4.50 per head, which was affirmed by the circuit
court of appeals. 273 F. 391. The defendants prosecute the present
writ of error.
The chief controversy is over the meaning and effect of the
provision we have quoted from the lease. Pointing to it, the
defendants contend (a) that any grazing in excess of an average of
9,000 head was prohibited, and therefore was a trespass for which
no recovery could be had in a suit on either the lease or the bond;
(b) that the additional payment at the rate of $4.50 per head was
to be made only for any excess over 11,500 head grazed at any one
time, and (c) that the intended average of 9,000 head was for the
full two-year period, and not for either year taken separately.
Both courts below rejected these contentions.
The provision relied on was loosely framed, and, if read alone,
might well be regarded as of uncertain meaning. But it is to be
read with other provisions of the lease, with the written proposal
of the lessees whereby the lease was obtained, and in the light of
the conditions which naturally prompted some provision on the
subject. When it is examined in this way, the explanation for it
and its meaning are shown to be as follows: the parties recognized
that, pasturage being an annual crop, is lost if not utilized
before the next growing season, and they evidently intended to deal
with each year as a distinct period. A minimum rental of $31,950
was to be paid to the lessors for each year. Payment of that sum
was to give the lessees the right to graze 9,000 cattle on the
leased area for the particular year. But it was not practicable to
have a definite number grazing throughout the year, for marketing
some and bringing in others would cause the number to vary
materially. So an average of 9,000 head was agreed on. This would
permit a shortage in one part of the year to be made up by a
corresponding increase in another part. But, to prevent this
privilege from being carried to extreme lengths, the provision for
an average
Page 260 U. S. 426
was qualified by saying "the maximum number at any one time not
to exceed 11,500 head." The purpose of that provision, as thus
qualified, was to define the grazing which might be done for the
minimum rental of $31,950 -- in other words, to show that the
grazing which might be done without further payment was limited to
an average of 9,000 cattle. But the parties recognized the
propriety of making some provision respecting the possible grazing
of a larger number, and the charge to be paid for it. Accordingly,
they said in a succeeding clause that "any excess over and above
such maximum number shall be paid for at the rate of $4.50 per
head." The maximum number there intended was evidently the number
which might be grazed for the minimum rental -- that is to say, an
average of 9,000 head, for, of course, the point to which that
rental extended must have been the one at which the charge for
additional grazing was to begin. It was not intended that any
grazing should be free, but, on the contrary, that all that was not
covered by the minimum rental should be paid for at the rate of
$4.50 per head. The district court aptly said:
"The language of the lease, that this $4.50 per head is payable
for 'any excess over and above such maximum number,' does not
necessarily import only cattle over and above 11,500 head, the last
antecedent and maximum
eo nomine, but, consistent with the
writing and construction, can be and is taken to import cattle over
and above 9,000 head, the first antecedent, and also a maximum,
although not in terms so characterized. Nine thousand head are the
maximum for the year as a whole, the principal thing, and the
11,500 are the maximum at any time (and for such time as will serve
to accomplish the 9,000 maximum), an incidental thing. . . .
Defendants' argument that, by the terms of the lease, they are to
pay only for excess over 11,500 head, and that, for all between
9,000 head and 11,500 head, they would be amenable only to the
Page 260 U. S. 427
relevant criminal law applicable to trespassers, is
untenable."
The circuit court of appeals construed the lease in the same
way, and we think that construction is the correct one. As the
three contentions before stated all depend on a contrary
construction, they must fail.
The $4.50 rate is assailed as being a penalty, or liquidated
damages, and therefore condemned by a statute of the state. We
think it is neither a penalty nor liquidated damages. It was not to
be paid for any breach of contract, but as compensation for
particular grazing contemplated in the lease and not covered by the
rental otherwise fixed. Whether the state statute could affect a
contract made by the United States on behalf of Indian wards need
not be considered.
At the trial, it appeared that the additional cattle were
admitted to and grazed on the leased area by one of the lessees,
who had special charge of the operations under the lease, and there
was a conflict in the evidence as to whether the other lessee
consented to or acquiesced in those acts. The district court ruled
that the conflict was immaterial, and that the acts of the lessee
in charge were the acts of both. Complaint is made of this, but it
obviously was right.
Kendall v. Carland, 5 Cush. (Mass.)
74;
Goshorn v. Steward, 15 W.Va. 657, 664.
Judgment affirmed.