Dissenting.
The proper determination of this suit depends on the construction of a contract of employment entered into between the plaintiff in error, the South Florida Farms Company to D. W. Stevenson, the defendant in error. The contract is set out in a letter from the South Florida Farms Company to D. W. Stevenson and his answer. These letters are as follows:
“Moore Haven, Florida,
July 10th, 1919.
Mr. D. W. Stevenson,
Moore Haven,
Dear Mr. Stevenson.
It is my understanding of our arrangement of today, that at. the earliest convenient moment, surely by August first next, .you are to assume the position.of Manager of this Company, in connection with your present engagements *245elsewhere, that your salary for this purpose shall be $250.-00 per mouth, that your duties shall consist of the entire control of all the business of the Company of every character in Moore Haven and the Moore Haven office together all of the Company employees but excluding the Company books that are to be continued with the present arrangement in Miami. That you are to make reports of progress at reasonable intervals to the Company President and to no one else. That the moving consideration for this arrangement is not only the management of the Company routine business but. also the disposal of all the Company holdings outside of the town of Moore Haven which consist of about 52,000 acres of land in Lee County and about 30,000 unsold acres in DeSoto County. It is agreed to by us that we will accept an average price of Twelve Dollars net per acre for the Lee Co. land and Twenty One Dollars net for the DeSoto Co. land, no deductions or commissions off to anyone but yourself. That if within two years from August first 1919 this entire unsold acreage is sold to net the above figures to this Company and on terms acceptr able to us, you are to receive from us a commission of five per cent. If all the lands in either but not both Counties is sold, your commission shall be two and half per cent. This arrangement to hold good on any excess price which may be obtained, the price mentioned herein being the absolute minimum.
If neither of the County holdings are disposed of in full, the entire commission falls and the salary mentioned above is to be your full compensation. In any event the commission is to be figured on what, is sold after August first 1919 and not to’ apply on anything sold prior to that date, nor to any personal property such as machinery, etc., sold nor to any land or buildings in the townsite of Moore Haven.
*246If this accords with'your understanding of the matter, will you please write me to that effect.
With best regards,
Very truly yours,
South Florida Farms Co.
By Clarence M. Busch, Pres.”
‘ ‘ Clarence M. Busch, President,
South. Florida Farms Company,
Miami, Florida.
Dear Sir:
Replying to your letter of July 10th, outlining an agreement between us covering the basis of my connection with your Company, will say that it is in accord with my understanding, therefore I am able to concur therein.
Yours very truly,
(Signed) D. W. Stevenson.
Cashier. ’ ’
The question presented arises on the rulings of the court on the demurrer to the declaration, motions to strike pleas, and on giving certain instructions to the jury and refusing to give others.
The defendant below by several pleas sought to vary the terms of a written contract by averring that notwithstanding the contract provided for the payment of commissions under certain circumstances if certain acreage “is sold,” that Stevenson was only to receive commissions on the land *247sold by him. The court properly sustained motions to strike these pleas, as they sought to alter 'and vary by parol evidence the terms of a written contract, and the cause was tried on the contract as written, without interpolations or amendments that varied its terms.,
I think the court was right in treating this as a contract of employment and not as a mere brokerage contract. It partook of all the characteristics of contracts made by the railroad companies or others owning large tracts of land, that maintain, a land department and employ managers to effect the sales of its lands. Such contracts of employment are taken out of the'narrow rules governing mere contracts of brokerage to which the rule of jus disponencli applies. , . . , .
The case of McManama v. Dyer (Mo. App.) 176 S. W. Rep. 1101, is strongly illustrative o£ the distinction between the employment of a manager of a business, the principal part of which may be the sale of lands for which he is to receive compensation partly by a fixed salary, and by commissions on all lands sold, and a mere contract of brokerage, where a person is employed to sell or find a purchaser for specific property.
In that case the bank became the owner of. a pool room which it desired to sell and employed McManama to conduct the business until a suitable purchaser could be found. McManama was to receive one-half the net proceeds from the business, and one-half the proceeds of the sale in excess of $200.00. A sale of the property was effected by some other than McManama, and in a suit by him to recover his commissions it was contended, as in this case, that his contract was one of brokerage, and as he did not effect the sale or did not produce a purchaser ready, able' and *248■willing" to buy the property, he had ho right to recover commissions.
• -Upon this point the court said: “In this case plaintiff, according to his version of the contract, was employed, not only to assist in finding a purchaser of the property, but also to conduct the business of running a pool hall for half the net profits, and was to half the net proceeds of a sale of the property after deducting $200.00 therefrom, regardless of whether or not he was a procuring cause of the sale. This was not the employment of a broker, but of a servant for a fixed period, i. e., until a satisfactory sale of the property could be effected.”
There is no dispute over the law governing brokerage contracts, but the contention of the defendant in error is that this was not a contract of brokerage, but a contract of employment, the compensation for which was to be a certain amount per month for a period of two year's, during-which time if all the lands, or. all the lands in either county, belonging to the South Florida Farms Company were sold, the servant’s compensation would be "augmented by the payment of commissions. That the contract was one of employment and not one of simple brokerage, seems established by its very terms.
The construction placed upon it by the court below is the obvious one, justified and supported by its very plain and clear language. The trial judge construed it as a "contract of employment, the compensation for which was to be $250.00 a month, and a percentage of 5 per cent, on sales of real estate, if all the land owned by the South Florida Farms Company in Lee and DeSoto Counties “is sold” within two years. From the contract it appears that the company was engaged in businesses other than selling lands. Stevenson’s duties were to “consist of the entire *249control of all the business of the company of every character in Moore Haven, and the Moore Haven office together all the employees of the company.” The keeping of the company’s books, however, was excluded, as that was “to be continued with the present arrangement in Miami.”
There is no better way to state what this contract means, than to use the very language of the contract itself. It is only when we seek to change its obvious meaning, that we must travel into the realms of construction and speculation.
Its obvious meaning, which was accepted by the trial judge, is a reasonable, fair and just one; whereas, if the construction sought to be' placed upon it by the plaintiff in error is accepted, the contract becomes treacherous, unfair and unilateral, and in so far as it promises compensation for diligent efforts on the part of Stevenson when completely performed by him or carried to the point of certain success, could be entirely thwarted at the option of the other party to the contract.
Where a construction leads to this result, it should not be adopted, particularly where, if the plain terms of the contract are accepted no such result will follow.
Stevenson claims that under the contract, he was to receive for his services, in addition to $250.00 a month for managing “all the business of the company of every character in Moore Haven,” a commission of 5 per cent, on the proceeds of the sale of about 82,000 acres of land in Lee and DeSoto counties outside the town of Moore Haven, “if sold for not less than the average price of $12.00 net per acre for the Lee county land, and $21.00 net for the DeSoto county land.”
The clause of the contract upon which he relies is, ‘ ‘ That *250if within, two years from-August first, 1919, this entire unsold acreage is sold to net the above figures to this company, and on terms acceptable to us, you are to receive from us a commission of five per cent. If all the land in either but not both counties is sold, your commission shall be two an.d.a half per cent.” (Italics are mine.)
In these few lines the expression ‘ ‘ is sold ’ ’ is used twice in relation to the sale of certain acreage within two years from August 1, 1919, upon which Stevenson was to receive a commission.
The words,-“is sold,”' are not qualified or limited to a sale by any particular party or parties. They-are broad and comprehensive,: and include Stevenson-, - The South Florida Farms Company, and anyone else.
A bit further on in the contract this paragraph is found: “In any' event the commission is to be figured bn what is sold after Augüst first, 1919, and not to apply on anything sold prior to that date. ” (Italics are mine.) Here again the terms “sold” and “is sold,” are used without any qualification appearing there or in any- other part of the contract to indicate that the sales referred to are limited to those, made by Stevenson.
The difference in. the meaning of the terms ‘ ‘ If any land is sold,” and “any land sold by you” is so. obvious that- if the South Florida Farms Company had had it in mind, it would certainly have inserted it in some one of these four places.
It was noticeable that on the oral argument, in discussing the. contract and expressing it several times in their own terms when not attempting to quote- it literally, counsel for plaintiff in error, used the terms “sold by him,” and “sold by you,” thus illustrating our position that with that thought in mind, it is almost'impossible to ex*251press it orally or in writing without the use of the words “by you,” or of the term “if you sell.”
The letter that is the basis of the contract was written by Mr. Busch, President of the South Florida Farms Company, and purports to set out what had been agreed on between the South Florida Farms Company and Stevenson. In four places, the terms ‘ ‘ is sold, ” “ are sold, ’ ’ and ‘ ‘ sold ’ ’ are used in relation to the commissions Stevenson was to receive, without once stating that the agreement was that he was to receive commissions only for the lands that he sold or that were sold “by you;” but when Mr. Busch attempts to state in his pleas, what was agreed on by him and Stevenson, he uses this language: ‘ ‘ plaintiff was given the right to sell the lands of the defendant company situate in Lee and DeSoto counties, and for which services he was to be paid a commission for all the lands he sold only during the time of his agency, provided all the lands or holdings in each or both counties, were sold.”
If that was the agreement why did he not so state it in his letter to Stevenson, which when accepted formed the contract? The letter was written on the day the verbal arrangement was made, and while fresh in the minds of both, and the pleas were written more than a year and three months afterwards.
The proposition submitted in writing to Mr. Stevenson by the South Florida Farms Company was to pay him a commission if all the land “is sold” without any qualification or limitation as to who was to sell it. That is the proposition that Mr. Stevenson accepted.
Having made such an offer, the president of the company should not now be heard to assert that he did not mean what he said, but that the proposition was submitted with the mental reservation that the land was to be sold by Stevenson only, before he could get any commission.
*252The construction sought to be placed upon the contract by the South Florida Farms Company not only makes the contract ‘ ‘ a trap for the unwary, ’ ’ but makes it a trap for any square dealing man who gives to the person with whom he is dealing credit for square dealings.
There is another line of reasoning from which it becomes apparent that if the contract is to be construed as contended for by the plaintiff in error, it is palpably unfair and unilateral. If it does not mean what it says — that is, that Stevenson would receive a commission on the sales, if all the land in either or both counties “is sold” within two years, without qualification by whom it was to be sold— then the company had the right to sell it or any part of it, or to enter into a contract with other person's to sell it, and thereby defeat, at its option, the earning of any commissions by Stevenson, without regard to how much work he may have done, or how much money he may have spent in advertising the property in his efforts to interest possible purchasers.
To illustrate: the contract provided that all the land in either or both counties must be sold within two years before Stevenson could earn a dollar of commission. He might sell 50,000 acres of the 52,000 in Lee county, and 25,000 out of the 30,000 in DeSoto county, and all his work and time and expense would go for naught if the residue was not “sold” within two years. He accepted the contract with full knowledge of that condition, and took the chance of loss of time, and money in advertising the property and finding a purchaser, if a sale of all the land was not effected, but he did not accept it with a construction that put it in the power of the South Florida Farms Company to prevent him from earning any commission after he had expended time, labor and money in finding a *253market for the property, and the contract rendered nugatory by the wilful act of the company by selling a single acre of the lands in Lee and DeSoto counties.
Under the construction sought to be placed on the contract by the plaintiff in error, the South Florida Farm Company upon learning from Mr. Stevenson by the “re-’ ports of progress” which he was required to make, that he had about concluded negotiations for the sale of the 52,000 acres in Lee county, and expected to close the trade in a short time, could prevent him from getting any compensation whatever from the sale of the land — because if the South Florida Farms Company had the right to sell any part of it without paying Mr. Stevenson his commission, and if Mr. Stevenson was to get commissions only in case he personally sold the entire 52,000 acres — it was within the power of the South Florida Farms Company to make his contract an absolute nullity, and prevent him from earning any commission whatsoever by selling 2000 acres, or even less, or withdrawing a small acreage from sale, and limiting Mr. Stevenson’s sale to the residue.
Should we change the plain terms of the contract and read into it the words “by you” in connection with the expression if the land “is sold,” when by doing so we place it in the power of one of the parties to wholly defeat the earning of any compensation whatsoever by Stevenson?
The contract after reciting the employment of Mr. Stevenson as manager, etc., contains this clause: ‘ ‘ That the moving consideration for this arrangement is not only the management of the Company’s routine business but also the disposal of all the Company’s holdings outside the town of Moore Haven,” etc. In the absence of testimony, it might be conceded that this is sufficiently ambiguous as to *254form a basis for a difference of opinion as .to whether this “moving consideration” was one that induced the South Florida Farms Company, or Stevenson, or both of them, to make the “arrangement” set out in the contract — although the letter seems the most reasonable — but reference to the testimony makes it clear that this was the “moving consideration” that induced bath parties to enter into the contract. At the time the arrangement was entered into Mr. Sevenson had an opportunity to engage in other enterprises which from their nature gave promise of greater compensation than $250.00 a month. His testimony is undisputed that at the time he and the South Florida Farms Company were negotiating for. this contract, he and Mrs. O’Brien and Mr. C. D. Bembo had arranged to organize a loan company for the purpose of making real estate loans. The company was incorporated at that time and Mrs. O’Brien and Mr. Bembo held the principal amount of the capital stock of the company which Stevenson was to manage. He was also negotiating “for the purchase of other lands, which were to be financed by the same parties.” After he entered into his contract with the South Florida Farms Company, he had to decline the management of the loan company, and abandon his negotiations for the purchase of other lands. He also severed his “connection at that time, practically, with the O’Brien interests.” His reason for giving up these other engagements was that he did not have time after accepting the employment of the South Florida Farms Company to give these other matters “the atention that was necessary.” It seems quite palpable, then, that the “moving consideration” referred to in the contract acted upon both parties. The South Florida Farms Company wanted to dispose of all its real estate in Lee and DeSoto counties, more than it needed a manager for the other branches of its business, and Stevenson looked *255to the larger compensation which would be derived from the sale of the lands, rather than to the small salary that went with the employment. The “moving consideration,” therefore, that induced them to make the “arrangement” was the sale of the lands.
There is another stipulation in the contract, which if the construction sought to be placed upon it by the plaintiff in error is adopted, makes the contract grossly unreasonable, and places it in the power of the South Florida Farms Company to reduce Stevenson’s commissions by half. It is this: “If all the land in either but not both counties is sold, your commission shall be two and a half per cent.” This is a rather unusual stipulation, but there is a reasonable basis for it if its plain language is accepted, but if a strained construction is placed upon it, it becomes a concealed spring-gun.
Under the plaintiff in error’s construction, if Mr.-Stevenson sold at a price and on terms satisfactory to the South Florida Farms Company the entire 52,000 acres in Lee county, and was about to sell the 30,000 acres in DeSoto county, thereby earning 5 per cent, on both transactions, it would have been within the power of the company not only to deprive him of any commission on the 30,000 acres in DeSoto county, but to cut his commission' on the 52,000 acres in Lee county from 5 per cent, to 2y2 per cent.
These are some of the injustices, the traps for the unwary, the 'concealed spring guns, which this contract contains if the construction contended for by the plaintiff in error is adopted. On the other hand, against the construction placed upon the contract by Mr. Stevenson and by the trial judge, all that can be said is that the amount of the verdict, $61,884.03 is too much money for a man to make out of sales of lands amounting to $1,236,880.75, in *256about three months, when, apparently neither party contemplated that all the lands would be sold much before the expiration.of the two years’ life of the contract.
If the trial judge’s construction of this contract is rejected, we must not only reject the plain, obvious, everyday meaning of the terms and expressions used; add other words either by interpolating them ourselves or permitting the defendant below to prove them by parol, and substitute a one-sided, unfair and unreasonable contract for one that is fair and reasonable, but we must also reject this entire clause as meaningless; “In any event the commission is to be figured on what is sold after August first, 1919, and not to apply on anything sold prior to that date. ’ ’
It is apparent that both parties had in mind that between the date when the arrangement was entered into and August 1st when Stevenson’s work was to commence, there might be sales of land, this clause was inserted to make clear that Stévenson was not to receive commissions on such sales. This was entirely unnecessary if the intention of the parties was that Stevenson was to receive commissions only on sales made by him, as he could not make any sales prior to August 1st.
On the other hand, if the obvious meaning of the contract is accepted, this clause indicates that Stevenson was to receive commissins on all lands “sold” after August 1st, but not to any lands sold prior to August 1st, 1919. His right to sell the lands was not to begin until August 1st, and there could be no sales of land made by him prior to that date. What then was the use of this clause if Stevenson’s right to commissions was limited to sales made by Mm?
*257Here we have a contract that is a model of clearness and conciseness: its form and language indicate that great care was taken by the President of the company to define clearly and exactly what was the arrangement between him and Stevenson; great particularity was exercised in stating the requirements under which Stevenson would be entitled to commissions, and these requirements are stated affirmatively and negatively. So clearly, fully and precisely were the terms of the arrangement stated by Mr. Busch, President of the company, that Mr. Stevenson accepted them without the change of a word, or the crossing of a “t” or the dotting of an “i;” a condition seldom found when one party attempts to express in writing to another, what had been agreed upon verbally between them.
The contract as construed by the court below is an harmonious whole, needing no interpolations, no eliminations.
As sought to be construed by the plaintiff in error, we must interpolate in four places the words “by you,” and we must eliminate the clause about when Stevenson would begin to earn commissions, as useless and meaningless.
The foregoing discussion assists in the consideration of the order of the Circuit Judge overruling the demurrer to the declaration.
I think that the declaration was not subject to the attack made upon it by the demurrer, and the court was right in overruling it. Under the construction that I place on the contract, that it was one of employment for a period of two years, and that Stevenson was to receive commissions on the sale of 52,000 acres of land in Lee county and 30,000 acres of land in DeSoto county, if all the land in either or both counties was sold within two years, it gave him the exclusive right to earn these commissions. The exclusive *258right ‘ ‘ to sell, ’' does not mean that the person having sneh right should be the only person who could execute a deed of conveyance for the property sold, but the effect and meaning of the term, and particularly as used in this contract, is that during that period no one else should have a right to sell under conditions or circumstances that would deprive an employee of his commissions.
In that sense, he did have the exclusive right to sell, and there is no variance between the declaration and the contract sued upon.
I think the construction placed upon the contract by the trial judge was the obvious one, that it was the only fair one, and that his rulings on all matters when this question was presented were correct.
Taylor, J., concurs.