The appellants and the appellees each took a mortgage upon a stock of merchandise to secure the payment of debts due them. The mortgage to the appellees was prior in date and first recorded, and the appeal presents the single question whether the court erred in refusing to declare the mortgage void as against the appellants’ mortgage. The clause in the appellees’ mortgage that gave rise to the controversy is as follows, viz.:
“ It is agreed that I” (the mortgagor) “am to hold possession of my said stock of goods during the will of said Orr & Lindsey, and retail the same and account to said Orr & Lindsey each week after this week for the proceeds of sales, and to pay $50 thereof, if not more, each week until said sum” (the mortgage debt) “is fully paid; said $50 per week to be paid without regard to the amount of sales.”
1. Mortgage: Benefit reserved to mortgagor. It is contended that this clause conferred upon the mortgagor the power to reserve the proceeds of the first week’s sales, after the execution of the mortgage, to his own use, and did not compel him to account, in any week, for more than $50, even though the proceeds should exceed that amount. If either branch of this argument is followed, it must be conceded that the mortgage is void, as far as the subsequent incumbrance is concérned. Gauss Sons v. Doyle, ante, and eases there cited.
The instrument is certainly ambiguous. The exact meaning of the contracting parties is not manifest. If the record informed us what the course of business, under the contract, was, that might throw light upon the meaning they assigned to it, and so give the basis of its correct construction.
“ Tell me,” says Lord Chancellor Sugden, “ what you have done under a deed, and I will tell you what that deed means.” Atty. General v. Drummond, 1 Dr. & W., Irish Chy., 353. But we are left to the naked legal construction without extraneous aid.
2. Doubtful Contract: Construction. It is one of the cardinal rules of interpretation that where an instrument is susceptible of two probable conflicting constructions, one of which imputes bad faith to either party, while the other would be free from such taint; or, if one interpretation would render the contract unlawful and the other lawful, the latter construction should be adopted. The law does not assume that it was the intention of the parties to commit a fraud or violate the law. 2 Whart. on Cont., sec. 654; Bishop Cont., sec. 583; Best Pr. Ev., sec. 347; 2 Whart. Ev., sec. 1249; Lorillard v. Clyde, 86 N. Y., 384.
Applying this rule to the case in hand, the meaning of the clause is that the mortgagor should sell for the mortgagees’ benefit and account to them for the proceeds; that if the proceeds of sales should not reach $50 a week that sum should be paid nevertheless, and that the first settlement and account of sales should be made the next week after the mortgage was executed. The circuit court upheld the mortgage and the judgment is right. See Gauss Sons v. Doyle, sup., and cases cited.
Affirm.