The omission of a semicolon1 has fomented confusion from clarity. The focal issue is whether *706it was intentionally omitted or is an isolated grammatical/ typographical faux pas. The omission has allowed creative lawyers to obscure the clear intentions of the parties.
Mountain View Orchards appeals a judgment awarding Sackman Orchards damages of $55,799, including attorney fees and interest, for breach of warranty against encumbrances which Mountain View made in connection with the sale of an apple crop. We reverse.
On December 15, 1982, Sackman purchased an orchard from Mountain View along with the 1982 fruit crop which was then in controlled atmosphere storage at Welch Apples, Inc. The real estate contract provided:
PROPERTY SOLD: On the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in this Real Estate Contract, Seller agrees to sell to Buyer and Buyer agrees to purchase from Seller the equipment stated in Schedule 1 attached hereto and incorporated herein; the 1982 fruit crop[;] and the following legally described real property in Douglas County, Washington, with title free of encumbrances and defects, except as set forth on and subject to Schedule 2 attached:
(Italics ours.)
On March 25, 1985, Sackman brought this action against Mountain View for the storage and bin rental costs which Welch charged as the bins were delivered and later deducted from the sale of the apples. Sackman characterized the costs as an encumbrance because they were in existence at the time it purchased the crop from Mountain View.
The construction of a contract relies heavily on the parties' intent, which is determined by examining the entire agreement, its subject matter and objectives, the facts surrounding its creation, the subsequent acts of the parties, and the reasonableness of the parties' interpretations. Leija v. Materne Bros., Inc., 34 Wn. App. 825, 829, 664 P.2d 527 *707(1983) (citing Stender v. Twin City Foods, Inc., 82 Wn.2d 250, 254, 510 P.2d 221 (1973)). Mistakes in grammar, spelling, or punctuation should not be permitted to alter, contravene, or vitiate the manifest intention of the parties as gathered from the language employed. Schauerman v. Haag, 68 Wn.2d 868, 873, 416 P.2d 88 (1966) (citing Wick v. Western Union Life Ins. Co., 104 Wash. 129, 175 P. 953 (1918)).
Had the series, i.e., equipment; crop and real property, been separated by a semicolon after crop—or a comma used after equipment and again after crop—there would be no ambiguity. The omission of either resulted in filing this action, this appeal, and the differences in interpretation.
Examination of the entire contract supports Mountain View's position that the general warranty against encumbrance applies solely to the real estate. Immediately following the above cited paragraph in the real estate contract are legal descriptions of three separate parcels of land. These descriptions contain no reference to the crops. Attached to the real estate contract is Schedule 1, which contains a list of equipment transferred through the agreement and lists the encumbrances on that equipment. Thereafter, Schedule 2 lists the encumbrances or defects of title as to the three parcels of land. No schedule exists for the fruit crop, nor liens or storage charges thereon. The language of the contract as a whole, in conjunction with Sackman's representative's candid admission that it understood as the buyer it would be responsible for its storage fees after closing, supports the intent of the parties to limit the warranty against encumbrances to the real property. As noted in Suess v. Heale, 68 Wn.2d 962, 966, 416 P.2d 458 (1966): "Necessary implications are as much a part of an agreement as though the implied terms were plainly expressed." Therefore, the trial court erred, and we reverse.
The award of attorney fees to Sackman, based on the alleged violation of this provision, is also reversed.
*708Bill of Sale
Similarly, the bill of sale contains no express warranty as to existing encumbrances against the apples in storage. That document states in pertinent part:
[The] owners of the said property, goods and chattels [Mountain View] . . . ha[ve] good right and full authority to sell the same, and that they [Mountain View] will warrant and defend the sale hereby made unto [Sackman] . . . against all and every person or persons, whomsoever, lawfully claiming or to claim the same.
(Italics ours.) This stock bill of sale provision requires Mountain View to defend any action brought by a third party contesting Sackman's title or ownership of the apples. No such claim is made here. When Sackman sold the apples, the warehouse released them; when the check for payment of the apples came, Welch retained a portion of the proceeds for their storage costs. This is the normal procedure. At no time has Welch or anyone else asserted title to the stored apples.
Sackman notes that Welch's storage charges constituted a lien on the stored apples under RCW 60.60.010 at the time of closing and, thus, was an encumbrance against the apples. That statute provides the lien is in effect only so long as the property remains in the warehouse's possession. Here, any lien enjoyed by Welch was extinguished upon the sale and removal of the apples, prior to this lawsuit.
Regardless, a plain reading of the bill of sale establishes the provision in question is not a general warranty against encumbrances of any nature. The record reflects both parties assumed the storage charges would be prorated, with Mountain View bearing the responsibility for charges up to the date of sale and Sackman thereafter. Sackman representatives candidly testified they assumed and expected this allocation. The dissent notes that when two parties share in a common assumption, which is false, the party with whom the risk has been allocated by agreement, custom or law must bear the loss. Here, neither document speaks to storage charges. The finding of fact bases Mountain View's responsibility for all the storage charges on the *709quoted portion of the real estate contract. As noted above, this provision does not include the crop.
Apparently these parties, principally business and professional men living in the King County area, are aware of the manner in which an apple orchard is operated and apples are sold. It is undisputed both parties were aware the 1982 crop, at the date of closing, was in controlled atmosphere storage with Welch Apples, Inc. Both parties had to be aware these apples were incurring storage charges; yet, they failed to incorporate any allocation within their documents of sale. RCW 62A.l-201(25)(c) states that a person has notice of a fact, when from all the facts and circumstances at the time, he has reason to know it exists. Under these facts and these circumstances both parties were aware of the fact that storage charges were being incurred. Sackman, as is the custom, expected to pay the storage charge for the period it owned the apples. Therefore, it is inappropriate to read into these documents a provision that is not there.
The judgment and the award of attorney fees to Sack-man are reversed, and the case remanded for a pro rata allocation of storage charges up to the date of closing, December 15, 1982.
Green, J., concurs.
A semicolon is used to join two or more clauses, which are grammatically complete, to form a single compound sentence. W. Strunk & E.B. White, The Elements of Style 5, 6 (3d rev. ed. 1979). A "serial" comma is used after each term, except the last, in a series of three or more terms with a single conjunction, e.g., French, German, Italian and Spanish. W. Strunk & E.B. White, at 2. Some grammarians instruct that a comma is used in a series immediately before the *706single conjunction to avoid ambiguity or for stylistic uniformity, e.g., French, German, Italian, and Spanish. H.W. Fowler, A Dictionary of Modern English Usage 588 (2d ed. 1965).