This is an action to recover balance due on a contract for harvesting grain for the defendant. Judgment was for plaintiff, and defendant contends that there should be a deduction of eight hundred dollars from the judgment, on the ground that plaintiff did not harvest the grain in a good and farmer-like manner as he had contracted to do, and the evidence, and a stipu*64lation. made to serve in lieu of evidence, shows that there resulted an unnecessary loss to that amount.
It was stipulated in the contract that plaintiff “ will harvest, thresh, and sack all of the grain now growing on the Fruit Vale estate in Fresno county, and belonging to the said Kearney during the current season of 1893; that he will harvest all of said grain in a thorough and farmer-like manner, without waste or unnecessary loss; that he will begin such harvesting as soon as any of said grain is thoroughly ripe and fit for harvest, and will thereafter work continuously until the entire harvest is completed. That for the purpose of performing said work he will use one or more eighteen-foot combined harvesters, which shall be and be maintained in thoroughly good working condition.”
A great deal of testimony was taken at the trial on both sides upon the question as to whether the grain ought not to have been sooner harvested, and whether, in consequence of delay, there was not unnecessary loss resulting from the grain being shelled out by the wind, or the growth of weeds, which prevented an efficient harvesting thereof. Many of the facts were then agreed upon by a stipulation made at the trial, as follows:
“ It is hereby stipulated and admitted by the parties hereto, for the purposes of the present action, that the plaintiff entered upon the performance of the contract referred to in his complaint and annexed to defendant’s answer, to wit, on or about the twelfth day of June, 1893, and as soon as defendant’s grain was ripe and fit for harvesting; and that the plaintiff harvested the grain on defendant’s land in a thorough and farmer-like manner, without waste or unnecessary loss (except such loss as may have resulted from the delay hereinafter specified), and that the plaintiff worked continuously with an eighteen-foot harvester, and its appliances and crew until the work was completed, to wit, August 29, 1893, and that on August 12, 1893, he brought another harvester to work, and both harvesters and their crews and appliances were thereafter continuously engaged in *65the work until it was completed, and both harvesters were maintained in a thoroughly good and working condition.
“That after grain is fully ripe and fit for harvesting in the neighborhood in which defendant’s grain was, it is liable to be shelled out by wind and other causes and thereby lost. The defendant’s ground was subirrigated, on which there was a tendency for weeds to grow in and among the grain, and the longer they were permitted to grow, the greater was the probable loss in harvesting, by reason of such weeds growing as high or higher than the grain, and interfering with the threshing and cleaning of the grain while passing through the harvester. That by reason of all the grain not being harvested within forty days after it was fit for harvesting, there was a loss through its shelling out and by reason of such weeds interfering with the harvesting and cleaning of the grain, and such loss, the parties agree, amounted to eight hundred dollars, and no more; and if as a matter of law, under said contract, it was the duty of the plaintiff to have provided sufficient means to have threshed all the defendant’s grain without waste or unnecessary loss, then it is agreed that the damages resulting from, his not furnishing other machines and appliances than those hereinbefore indicated amounted to eight hundred dollars, and no more; and if, on the other hand, it is found as a matter of law that it was not the duty of the plaintiff to avoid waste or unnecessary loss, then that the defendant is not to be allowed any damages in this action.”
The contract itself must be construed in view of the surrounding facts as shown in the stipulation. It is there expressly admitted that there were special reasons why the grain should be harvested as soon as possible after it was ripe, and that the grain was not harvested within forty days after it was fit to be harvested, and that not to so harvest it entailed waste and unnecessary loss to the extent of eight hundred dollars, and it is further stipulated that if it was the duty of the plaintiff, *66under the contract, to harvest the grain so as to avoid waste and unnecessary loss, then defendant is entitled to the said amount as damages, otherwise not.
The stipulation cannot, of course, be construed to mean by the phrase “unnecessary loss” any loss which it would be possible to avoid by the greatest possible care and diligence and by the best possible appliances. Such interpretation would make the stipulation a farce or a trick. One party was contending that the agreement to harvest the grain in a good and farmer-like manner required that it should be harvested in time to avoid unnecessary loss—that is, such loss as would not be suffered if it had been so harvested in proper time— and the stipulation must be held to mean also that the loss was eight hundred dollars more than would have occurred if the grain had been so harvested.
I think we may start out with the proposition that no one would be likely to contract for the harvesting of his grain in a manner which would entail unnecessary loss in that sense, and much less would he, in such a contract, provide that the harvest may be so gathered as to cause such loss.
Plaintiff contends that two conditions in the contract do have that effect, and, in substance, he contends that they were put in the contract for the express purpose of saving plaintiff from liability for such loss, provided he commenced the harvest in due time with one harvester and continued the work without cessation until it was finished, and while at work did good work. In other words, the contract provides the test of due diligence, and that if at least one harvester is used it shall be deemed enough.
The two stipulations in the contract referred to are that plaintiff will harvest all the grain now growing during the current season of 1893, and that he will use one or more harvesters, and keep it or them in good working condition. It is difficult to give any meaning to the phrase “ current season ” which shall indicate a time within which the work must be done. If it means *67the time within which that grain should be harvested, it is favorable to defendant. If it alludes to the time of harvest generally, it is very indefinite. We all know that grain ripens at different times on different kinds of soil and in different localities. No practical meaning can be given to it other than the harvesting season for that crop.
The necessity for a quick harvest must depend greatly upon the season. The contract covered two thousand three hundred acres of growing grain. In that locality high winds are frequent at that time of the year, and it seems that early harvests are essential to good harvests in a farmer-like manner, not only because of prevailing winds which cause overripe grain to shell, but also because at that time weeds begin to grow which interfere with harvesting and entail loss. These facts were known to the parties when the contract was made. Now the parties could not know that the season would not be such that grain would be almost wholly lost unless unusual exertions were made for a quick harvest. On the other hand, they did not know blit it would ripen slowly so that one harvester would suffice. I think it part of the common knowledge that combined harvesters are comparatively a recent improvement. By this stipulation the parties agreed that it should be harvested wdfch a combined harvester, and that one or more should be used as the condition of the grain should indicate, and as would be necessary that it might be done in a good and farmer-like manner and without waste and unnecessary loss.
If there is any doubt as to the purpose of the clause in regard to the use of one or more harvesters, it must, if possible, be construed so as to effectuate the general intent manifest in the contract. The construction given by the respondent seems unreasonable, and makes the contract such as no one in his senses could have deliberately made. (See on this subject, Civ. Code, sec. 1650.)
The case is remanded, with directions to modify the judgment by deducting eight hundred dollars, with interest on that sum from August 29, 1893.
*68Harrison, J., Henshaw, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.