The complaint in this action charges the defendant with the breach of covenants, by which he had bound himself to maintain the plaintiff during his natural life; to furnish him with clothing, board, &c., and to look after and provide for all the plaintiff’s wants in sickness and in health.
The defendant denied the complaint, and also set up matters by way of defence upon the merits.
The action was referred to three referees to hear and decide, who, after hearing the proofs and allegations of the parties, made a report in favor of the plaintiff, and assessed his damages at $873.28. The report sets forth that the referees find, as matter of fact, that the covenants or agreement, although dated on the 9th day of March, 1849, was not, in fact, executed or delivered until the 22d day of December thereafter, on which day the said agreement took effect between the parties. The referees also find, .as matter of fact, that the defendant had broken said agreement, as alleged in the complaint, by reason whereof the plaintiff had sustained damages to the amount of $875.90, from which sum was deducted $2.62, allowed to defendant by way of set-off, leaving the amount due to the plaintiff as set forth in said report.
They also found, as matter of fact, that the sum of $76.70, parcel of said damages, accrued between the 10th day of February, 1852, and the 22d day of July next thereafter, at which time this action was commenced ; and that the sum of $799.20, the residue of said damages, accrued subsequent to the commencement of said action.
The referees also find, as matter of law, that the covenant of the defendant is an entire contract; ( that the breach thereof is a total breach, and assess the damages for the entire period— assuming that the probable duration of the plaintiff’s life is three years, he being at the time of the trial eighty-two years of age.
The first question which I propose to examine is, whether the proof established a breach of the covenants in said agreement on the part of the defendant 7
*421It appeared, by the written contract produced in evidence on the trial, that the plaintiff conveyed, by lease, to his son, (the defendant,) for the period of twelve years, if the plaintiff should so long live, and if not, then during his lifetime, his home-farm, situate in the town of Candor, in the county of Tioga; also all his personal property, excepting some lumber, also the use of a horse and harness, and a single-horse wagon when the plaintiff should want it for his use, also a desk, a chest, and all his notes, book accounts, and money on hand. The plaintiff agreed that, at the termination of the twelve years, if he should so long live, he would renew said lease for the further term of twelve years, or during his life, in case he did not live to the end of the twelve years, and that,he wmuld continue to renew said lease, from time to time, at the end of each twelve years, as long as he might live. The plaintiff further agreed that, at his death, all his personal property, notes, accounts and demands, and money, should become and be the absolute property of the defendant.
The defendant, in consideration thereof, agreed, on his part, to pay to Abel H. Potter the sum of one hundred dollars on his arriving to the age of twenty-one years; also to pay to the plaintiff the yearly rent of $150, and to pay all the taxes to be assessed upon said properly, and to maintain the plaintiff through life ; to find and provide for him good and respectable clothing, proper and reasonable board and lodging, to look after and provide for all his wants in sickness and in health, to procure and pay for all necessary medicine and medical attendance, and erect suitable grave-stones at his grave. And if at any time the plaintiff should become dissatisfied of living with the said defendant, then the said defendant should pay all reasonable charges for the plaintiff’s board and necessary expenses ; and in case the yearly rents, or any part thereof, should not be paid, or if default should be made by the defendant in any of the covenants on his part, then the plaintiff should have the right to enter into and to take possession of the farm and personal property, and hold the same discharged from said agreement.
On the trial of the action the counsel admitted that the lease *422was signed on the 22d day of December, 1849, although it bears date on the 9th day of March of that year. It was also admitted that the plaintiff left the defendant’s house on the 10th day of February, 1852, and this action was commenced on the 22d day of July thereafter. It appeared that the plaintiff, when he left the defendant, went to reside with his son Daniel Hart. When he was leaving the defendant followed him to the sleigh, and said to him, “ Father, I hear you are going to Daniel’s to board, and are going to leave me.”
The plaintiff replied, yes, he had left him, and should not live with him any more : he could not enjoy himself there, and should not stay.
The plaintiff gave no reason why he could not enjoy himself at the defendant’s. The defendant said to the plaintiff that, he forbid his going to Daniel’s, for he should not pay his board there.
No proof was given that the defendant had ever been requested by the plaintiff, or by any other person, to pay his board or maintenance after he left the defendant’s house on the 10th day of February, 1852.
A son-in-law of the plaintiff testified that he heard the defendant say, after the plaintiff left his house, he should not pay his board anywhere, because he was not obliged to do so; that the defendant had a home for the plaintiff, and that was the place for him; he had provided the plaintiff with everything he fvanted, and he had left without a cause for doing so.
It appeared in evidence that the plaintiff had a large comfortable room, w'hich was prepared for his use, and which he occupied at the defendant’s house. No other testimony was given or offered by the plaintiff tending to establish a breach of the contract on the part of the defendant. Not a single fact appears in the whole case, neither does it appear to have been pretended even, that the defendant, at any time or in any manner, had omitted or neglected to pay the rent and taxes, or to maintain the plaintiff, or provide him with good and suitable clothing, or to look after and provide for all his wants in sickness and in health, up to the day he left the defendant’s house, according to the letter and spirit of said agreement.
*423It is insisted, however, by the plaintiff’s counsel, that although the defendant may have in all things fulfilled the contract on his part, yet the plaintiff had a right at any time to become dissatisfied, or, in other words, to quit the defendant and go elsewhere to reside, and to be provided for, whenever he might elect to do so, without any cause or provocation, and thereby work out a breach of the contract by the defendant, and render him liable to pay the money for the board and maintenance of the plaintiff at such place as he might choose to live, without even requesting the defendant to pay for his board and necessary expenses; and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages for his support and maintenance during the remainder of his life, by estimating the probable length of time he would still live. To my mind, such a construction of the contract in question cannot be upheld. The parties never intended to, and in fact have not made such contract.
The complaint is drawn to meet a different case; it is there alleged that the defendant had not paid all the necessary and reasonable charges for the board and expenses of the plaintiff; that he had wholly and utterly refused to pay such board and expenses, although often requested to do so.
The plaintiff entirely failed of proving any demand or request of the defendant to pay for the board or the necessary expenses of the plaintiff. Subsequent to the 10th day of February, 1852, no such request was ever made; no account or demand therefor was presented to the defendant prior to the commencement of this action. The testimony given, showing that the defendant said, at the time the plaintiff was leaving his house, he would not pay his board at Daniel Hart’s; and his afterwards remarking to Rosecrants, that he should not pay the plaintiff’s board anywhere, because he left him without provocation, and that he had a home for him at his own house, is not sufficient to sustain the allegation in the complaint of a request and refusal on the part of the defendant.
Rosecrants had no authority from the plaintiff to request the defendant to pay for board, neither did he make any such request of the defendant. The refusal, to be available as a breach *424of the agreement, should have been made to the plaintiff himself. or to some agent or other person authorized by him to call on the defendant. No legal request was ever made of the defendant to pay for the plaintiff’s support after he left the defendant’s house.
Before this action should be upheld against the defendant, the plaintiff must show a clear breach of duty on the part of the defendant, or some refusal to fulfil his covenants with the plaintiff. To make out such refusal the plaintiff should establish a request, by him, of the defendant to pay his expenses and board, and a neglect to comply therewith. The covenant of the defendant makes him liable to pay only reasonable charges for board and expenses. If the plaintiff had the right to elect to be dissatisfied, and to leave the defendant’s house without any fault or omission of duty on his part, he should be furnished with the claim for board and expenses, with a request to pay the same, before action brought to recover the same. This is a case where the defendant should be placed clearly in the wrong before he is made liable to prosecution and the payment of damages.
But there is another answer to this action, which, in my opinion, is unanswerable. The clause in the contract which provides that the plaintiff may quit the defendant whenever he became dissatisfied, was not intended to authorize the plaintiff to leave there without some reason or provocation for so doing.
The intention and object of the agreement between the parties was to secure to the plaintiff everything necessary and proper to render him comfortable through life—that he should be properly cared for in his extreme old age. The testimony very fully shows that the defendant, in this respect, performed his whole duty: not an unkind word or expression was ever given by the defendant or any member of his family: not a want or a desire of the plaintiff was ever neglected or refused; but, on the contrary, for ought appearing in this case, every want, every desire of the plaintiff wvas attended to, and every care bestowed that kindness and duty as a child or the obligations of his contract could require.
*425It is a settled rule of law that, in determining the meaning of a-contract, the subject matter and situation of the parties, as well as their intentions, should be considered. (Beach agt. Crain, 2 Com. 93.)
• Applying this test to the contract or covenant of the defendant, on which he is sought to be made liable in this action, I cannot believe that the parties intended to, or understood that the plaintiff might at any time, of his own volition, without any cause whatever, quit the defendant’s house, and go elsewhere to live, and then call on the defendant to pay the cash for the board and expenses of the plaintiff. The reasonable construction of the contract, and that intended by the parties, is, that they intended to secure to the plaintiff a suitable and proper support and maintenance at the defendant’s residence and homestead of the plaintiff, that all his wants should be provided for and looked after, that he might receive such treatment and attention from the defendant and his family as his great age and consequent infirmities required.
The referees also erred in deciding that the defendant had been guilty of a total breach of said agreement, and therefore had rendered himself liable to the payment of prospective damages. The provisions of the contract are such that a total breach could not take place even during the lifetime of the plaintiff, and still the referees held, as matter of law, “ that the defendant’s covenant is an entire contract, and that the breach of the same is a total breach.”
It is quite difficult to see how the covenant requiring the defendant to pay the funeral .charges of the plaintiff, and to procure and erect suitable grave-stones at his grave, could be broken during his life, or until after his death. The parlies could not have contemplated the performance,of this part of defendant’s contract while the plaintiff was living; and certainly'there is nothing in the language of the agreement that will w’arrant such construction of it. A total breach, therefore, had not occurred, and the decision in this respect cannot be upheld.
The report, therefore, must be set aside, and the judgment reversed. A new trial is granted—costs to abide the event.