Hageman v. Holmes

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

We think the circuit court erred in ruling on propositions of law touching the true construction of the bond. The undertaking of the obligors expressed in the bond is to pay “said costs for opening Armour avenue in front of said above described' property.” The antecedent of the word “said,” preceding the word “costs,” is “a special assessment now pending on said property,” recited under a whereas which immediately precedes the clause in which the undertaking is expressed. The charges legally taxable in the special assessment proceeding', frequently called “cost” or “costs,” are not mentioned in the statement of the facts under the whereas and could not be the antecedent of the word “said,” but the obvious meaning of the word “costs” is the sum or amount of the expense entailed upon the premises in the special assessment proceeding, to which the word “said” has reference.

The position of counsel for appellant is stated in the brief, as follows: “We insist that the contract, taken in all its language and in view of the situation of the land and the parties at the time it was made, shows a clear intention that decedent and her husband should pay for opening up Armour avenue whenever and however that should be done, and that the parties have not used any language in their contract which precludes the court from adopting this view.”

It will be perceived this position is based more largely upon the deductions which counsel draw from the “situation of the parties and the land” than from the meaning to be drawn from the language of the contract or bond. Indeed, the argument of counsel for appellant, carried to its logical conclusion, in practical effect is, the court should view the transaction from the standpoint occupied by the parties, "and should consider the situation of the property and determine what contract would, under such circumstances, have been made by a purchaser who was a thoughtful and prudent man and versed in affairs of trade and business, and should declare the contract which was made was that which such a purchaser would have made, unless the language of the bond precluded the court from giving that meaning to it. The .situation of the parties, and the subject matter of the contract and the intention of the parties in making* it, may be considered by the court as guides to the proper construction and interpretation of the language employed in a written instrument; but, as Mr. Parsons said, “if the contract is false to the actual meaning and purpose of the parties or of either party the remedy does not lie in construction.” (2 Parsons on Contracts, 617.) The liability of the promising party to a written contract must affirmatively appear from the language of the instrument when properly interpreted and construed, and the liability so appearing cannot be extended or enlarged on the ground, alone, the situation and circumstances of the parties justified or demanded further or other liability. Moreover, it is by no means clear the situation of the property and of the parties justifies the conclusion the parties understood the obligors were bound to defray the cost of opening* the avenue “however and whenever” it might be opened. It is beyond question the parties considered the fact access could not be had by means of any public way to the premises sold by the obligors, in the bond to appellant. They considered also the fact an ordinance had been passed to open the avenue along the greater length of the premises and that proceedings were then pending in the courts to' effectuate the purpose of the ordinance. It is clear the parties acted in the transaction upon the basis the pending assessment proceeding* would provide an avenue leading to and from the lots, and it only remained for them to arrange the consideration to be paid for the lots with reference to which of them should bear the liability of paying the assessments adjudged against the lots in the assessment proceeding. The result was, the vendors of the property agreed to pay such assessments. Whether the assessment of benefits to the premises had been confirmed and fixed by the judgment of the courts does not expressly appear. If the benefits had been assessed the assessments would constitute a lien on the property, and the covenants of the deed would operate to require the grantors therein to discharge them. (Starr & Cur. Stat. 1896, chap. 24, par. 167, p. 778.) The fact the parties deemed it necessary to enter into a special agreement or bond obligating the grantors in the deed to pay the special assessments would indicate the assessments had not been confirmed against the premises. The fact no sum was named in the body of the bond proper as a penalty, and “the amount for special assessments,” etc., was inserted as a substitute for the penalty, further indicates the amount of the assessment to be levied on the premises had not been determined. It would therefore seem the bond was executed for the reason the assessments which it was understood would be made in assessment proceedings were not liens upon the land, and hence not covered by the obligation of the covenants of the deed. The office the parties intended the bond to fulfill was to create a liability on the part of the vendors to pay the assessments, which did not devolve upon them by the covenants of the deed. It is manifest it did not occur to the parties .the special assessment proceeding might be abandoned and dismissed. The course they would have pursued had it so occurred to them can be but a matter of mere conjecture. The appellant might have declined to buy the premises at all, or preferred to defer the trade until assured means of access to the property would be provided. The vendors might not have been willing to guarantee the proceeding would be pushed to a final conclusion. Nor does it follow from the fact they were willing to assume to pay the amount to be assessed in the pending proceeding as benefits to the premises for the extension of the avenue to and beyond the premises, they would have been willing to obligate themselves to pay whatever amounts might at any time thereafter be assessed for the opening of the avenue. Had such agreement been demanded they might have refused to complete the sale of the premises. They knew property of private owners must be condemned in order to extend and open the avenue. They knew the property necessary to be condemned in the pending proceeding, and its present value, were fairly matters of judgment. It might be, the property necessary to be condemned would in the future increase in value by reason of the erection of expensive buildings thereon or because of the rapid rise in the price of property in that locality. Furthermore, the width of the strip to be condemned for the avenue, the manner in which the roadway of the avenue was to be paved, and the nature, character, locality and description of the improvement to be made by the opening of Armour avenue in the pending proceeding, were known, and it could not be known what character of an improvement made by future ordinances might or would be. There could be no assurance as to future conditions, or that the amount which such an undertaking would entail upon them to pay would not exceed the total consideration to be paid for the property.

The view of the Appellate Court is correct that the liability of the obligors in the bond sued on is limited by the true construction of that instrument to payment of the assessments imposed on the premises in the special assessment proceeding which was then pending.

The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.