Bush v. Koll

Bissell, J.,

dissenting.

I should be content to withhold my concurrence in the conclusions announced in this case, but for the opinion expressed as to the proper rule to be applied in the construction of the contract contained in the record. The apparent necessity to state what I believe to be ■ the ■ law on this subject leads me to fully state my views concerning this controversy.

The contract is set out in the principal opinion. The issues raised by the pleadings can be fairly gathered from it *56if it be read strictly with a view to ascertain what the contention was. Unless attention be specifically directed to that point, what I believe to be an important element in the settlement of the dispute is liable to be overlooked. I will therefore first state what I believe to be the issue, and demonstrate as far as may be the mistake committed by the trial court in submitting one question to the jury, and the absence of right on the part of the appellants, Büsh & Morse, to insist that the judgment was wrong because against what they contend is the law, in which position they are sustained apparently by the decision of this court.

It is their contention that the contract is one, substantially one, at their will and option, and that therefore no right of action could accrue to the plaintiff if they saw fit to terminate his employment. I shall discuss the legal aspect of this proposition subsequently. At present I am only concerned with a statement of the situation of the case with reference to this issue. There is no such element in the controversy presented to this court for adjudication. The suit is an action by Koll to recover his wages for the balance of what he says is an unexpired term of employment. He alleged the contract, a rendition of services to a specified date, a discharge, and a consequent damage, shown by proof of the amount of his unearned wage, with efforts to obtain employment and a failure. To this cause of action there might evidently be several defenses. In fact, there was but one, and this rested in a denial of the discharge. The denial was undoubtedly coupled with other denials of the various elements or items which on proof would demonstrate the plaintiff’s injuries. • This simple statement shows that there was no issue presented relating to the right of the defendants to end the contract at their will, and for this reason, if for no other, the cause cannot be reversed on the basis adopted.

I maintain further, that if it be conceded, ex gratia, that the case presented the question, the appellants are still concluded by. the findings of the jury, under the testimony and the instructions of the court. I am not prepared to overturn *57a well settled and thoroughly established rule of the courts of this state, which inhibits appellate tribunals to interfere with the verdict of a jury when it rests upon conflicting testimony. If it be insisted that the case is one exhibiting gross prejudice, the proposition should be made the subject of satisfactory demonstration. It is neither demonstrated in the opinion, nor do I believe the case fairly stated will admit it. Bearing in mind that this is not a suit to recover wages earned during a period of service, to which there was a defense of unsatisfactory service, and that it was not a case of a suit for wages accruing during an unexpired term where the defense was a rightful discharge under the contract, let us see how the case stands on the proof under this rifle. Premising that of necessity there could be no evidence of dissatisfaction with services which had never been rendered, it is possible that the case would admit of testimony to show the performance of the contract by the plaintiff during the time he worked. This however is exceedingly doubtful, because the law presumes that the service was satisfactory, since there was no termination of the contract, and no attempt on the part of either to end the engagement. This presumption of law was well supported by the plaintiff’s own testimony, who made oath to the expressed satisfaction of the firm. It cannot be said with strict observance of the language and force of the printed testimony that this was denied, by Bush & Morse. The only testimony tending in this direction is testimony of this description: “ I put this gas range in, and there seemed to be a disposition on the part of every one in the kitchen to fight it. They were not satisfied; there seemed to be a disposition on the part of the chef to fight the range. Up to the time we made the change of ranges the service in the kitchen was satisfactory. Mr. Koll was perfectly satisfactory to me until after the introduction of this range.” Mr. Morse’s testimony upon this subject was substantially identical. Considering the character of this testimony, strengthened by the legitimate deduction that there was evidently general trouble in the kitchen, with the *58history of what transpired at the time of the alleged discharge, and the jury might easily have found that Koll’s services as cook had been entirely satisfactory, and that the only trouble in the world was with the employees generally because of the change in the implements furnished. The jury would have a right to conclude from the fact that there had been no attempt to end the employment prior to the time of the discharge, that there was in fact no dissatisfac-' tion with the services which Koll rendered as a chef in the hotel. This question was submitted to the jury under an instruction which said: “ If you believe from the evidence that the defendants discharged the plaintiff because they were really dissatisfied with his services in the line of his employment, then you must find for the defendants, and it is not necessary that the defendants should have any cause for such dissatisfaction.” No charge on the subject, if one thus expressing the law were ever admissible, would have more fairly left to the determination of the jury the question of dissatisfaction. The evidence of dissatisfaction was extremely meager, uncertain, not clearly expressed, and not satisfactorily or definitely established. It was controverted by proof of the defendant’s declarations on the subject, of the circumstances of the transaction, by the natural and legal presumption springing from the absence of any attempt to exercise the right of discharge. The court by a most eminently fair instruction, more favorable to the defendants than the case entitled them to, left it to the jury to find the fact on this subject. The verdict was against the defendants and we are without right to interfere with that finding.

Whatever weight may be • given to this position, or however little force there may be in these suggestions, the appellants are not entitled to have the case reversed because the judgment is not supported by the law. I cannot admit that the contract is susceptible of the construction which the court puts on it, nor do I believe that the law governing contracts of this description is accurately stated. The opinion states two rules which are frequently invoked by the courts *59as guides' in the construction of contracts. They are to he interpreted according to the ordinary and usual signification of the words which they have used, due regard being had to the evident intention of the parties. Everybody must concede these general principles, but wide differences may occur when it comes to the matter of their application. Nothing seems to me clearer than that there has been a misapprehension, and a misapplication of the rules in the present case. To ascertain the true significance of a contract courts may not, as critics and philologists, look alone to the words of it. They are of deep significance, but the work of interpretation follows always that of criticism. Its true end is to find out the intent of the instrument, the sense of the words if they are ambiguous, and learn the purpose when the words express it obscurely. The rule of interpretation known as the rational, is as firmly fixed in the law, as the one more commonly invoked — the literal. As Rutherford puts it in his Lectures, page 104, “ Where words do not express' the intention perfectly, but either exceed or fall short of it, so that we are to collect it from probable or rational conjectures, this is rational interpretation.” In the endeavor to learn what this contract is, and what force shall be given to that word “ satisfactory,” we must inquire whether it is so used in the contract, and was inserted under such circumstances that it evidently expresses the intention of the parties, and is to be taken according to its literal meaning. The line which we are called upon to run must be fixed by setting our intellectual pegs as a surveyor drives his stakes, and we must proceed from point to point until the end is arrived at. According to the rules of rational interpretation, words are to be taken according to their ordinary sense, unless it be manifest that when they are thus used they are given a broader meaning than will accord with the intention of the parties, and may therefore under well settled rules be restricted in their signification. Potter’s Dwarris on Statutes, pp. 194-196,197.

There is another thoroughly well established principle of construction by which that compelling the courts to take *60words in their ordinary meaning is limited and modified, which is, that every contract must be so construed as that all parts of it will stand; for the law leads to the enforcement of every part, rather than the destruction of any, ut res magis valeat quam pereat. These recognized rules of interpretation greatly simplify the difficulty of settling the true meaning of the present agreement.

It consists of two parts: first, there is the engagement of the employers; second, there is the correlative expressed obligation of the employee. It must be observed and borne in mind, that the contract by Bush & Morse is not on condition, not with a proviso, not subject, otherwise than as the law makes it, to the promise of the employee. This distinction is of very great importance when it comes to the consideration of the authorities cited in the principal opinion. Bush & Morse hired Koll for one year at $180 per month. That was their contract. There is no room for construction to ascertain what their term was, since they definitely entered into an agreement to employ Koll for one year at a fixed wage. Under the rule invoked by the majority, that a contract is to be construed according to its terms, manifestly that part of the engagement is definite and certain. It contains no condition, it is without a proviso except what may be contained in the promise of the employee. This presents the only question of the slightest difficulty. Koll agreed on his part to enter the service, to devote his entire time thereto, and to render good and satisfactory service during the time. Here then are two engagements on the part of two different persons, employers and employee, to do certain things. One of hiring for a year for a wage, the other an agreement to perform the service for which he is hired, for the term, and in a certain fashion. The contracting parties chose possibly an unfortunate word to express their intentions, but it seems comparatively easy to arrive at their intention when the circumstances and whole paper are considered. If the engagement had been to devote his entire time, and give his best endeavors to the faithful performance *61of his duties as chef, none could have imagined that hé had” undertaken to do anything except that which the law would imply from the acceptance of the employment. Evidently this was what the parties contemplated. If such is their manifest intention, the word “ satisfactory ” must be taken to possess simply this meaning, to wit, that Koll shall faithfully perform, according to his best ability, the services which he was hired to render. If he thus performs them, in the law it must be said 'that those services are satisfactory, and that the employers are without right to complain. The trouble with the principal opinion is, that they give to the word “ satisfactory ” a force beyond that even of its ordinary signification. It is made operative to destroy the promise made by the employers, since if it be held that the employee’s promise made in this form confers upon the hirers the right to discharge at will, it utterly destroys the year’s engagement into which they antecedently entered. In violation of the maxim ut res, etc., we have used one term of the agreement and one promise to destroy the prior term. This can never be done. Wherever clauses contain words that are contradictory, and they admit of two senses “ the court will adopt that construction which will best carry the just and reasonable intention into effect.” It seems to be very clear that there can be no legitimate construction of this contract, which will transform the expressed yearly hiring of the servant into a hiring at will, which will give to the employers the right to discharge without an allegation of the existence of a legal cause which must be established by competent proof. It brings the contract into too close an analogy with Lord Bacon’s description of Henry YII laws a “ nemo scit,” to hold otherwise would make contracts but traps for the unwary, and subject them to the uncertainties which prevailed, when according to the same philosopher, the magistrate was able to produce a manuscript decision of an unreported ease, and say “ Lo! I have the law in my side pocket! ” 2 Coke’s Institutes, 588.

According to the law as it is written, the position of the *62court seems not to be sustained by the authorities. All the cases which are cited are either cases- of hiring for an uncertain term and at the evident will of the employers, or else they are agreements to make sundry and divers things to the satisfaction of the persons for whom they are to be constructed. All the cases cited will be found to embrace matters purely of taste, and involve distinctively a selection according to the vendee’s conception of what such things ought to be. They relate to busts, clothes, and cases of that description, and, so far- as I can find in the books, there are no other cases announcing a similar rule save those where work is to be done to the satisfaction of a body which is clothed with a discretionary and quasi judicial power to determine the character of what had been performed. Wherever the contract is one of hiring, or where it includes the production of machinery, or the- sale of -goods manufactured, or to be manufactured, the rule is a totally different one. With respect; to contracts concerning such matters, well considered cases, based upon sound reason and logic, suited to the circumstances of the parties and their evident intention, have held that contracts may not be so construed as to give either party the right at his whim and caprice to reject that which he has contracted to purchase, or to refuse to pay the price of what has been supplied, under the agreement that he shall be satisfied therewith.

In cases of this sort the true rule is “ that which the law will say a contracting party ought in reason to be satisfied with, that the law will say he is satisfied with.” Duplex Safety Boiler Co. v. Garden et al., 101 N. Y. 387; Clark v. Rice, 46 Mich. 308; Daggett & Graves v. Johnson, 49 Vt. 345; Roy v Goings, 96 Ill. 361; Braunstein v. Insurance Co., 1 East & Smith, 783, (101 E. C. L. 782.)

In the latter case proof of loss claimed to be within the insurance was to be made satisfactory to the directors, and the question was, whether they could arbitrarily reject what had been furnished if it was ample according to the contract of the parties to establish that which they were called upon *63to prove. The court held that the clause must receive a reasonable construction, and that it would only bind the parties to produce such evidence as the directors might reasonably require. As one of the judges well put it “ the putting such a construction on a stipulation like this is opposed to the general rule, that when it is agreed that an act is to be done to the satisfaction of a party it must be understood to mean reasonably to his satisfaction.” Other judges put the decision upon somewhat similar bases, and held that the parties would have a right to insert whatever condition precedent they chose, but said if the condition is destructive of any right conferred by the contract, it must appear to have been so intended by the parties. Viewed in the light of these principles and these authorities, there seems to me to be but little ground for the construction which the court puts upon this agreement. I am unable to concur in any such conclusion. According to my views .of the law, the appellants have maintained no error'which entitles them to a reversal of the cause, and it should be affirmed.

Reversed.