EMBRY, Justice.
This is an appeal by Mass Appraisal Services, Inc., from a judgment and amendment thereto entered 29 August 1980 and 15 October 1980 respectively. The action was to resolve disputes arising out of a contract of 13 September 1972 between Bernard Carmichael and Hunnicutt & Associates, Inc., defining those parties' respective rights, duties, obligations and compensation for the performance of anticipated mass reappraisal contracts with certain counties in the State of Alabama. We affirm.
This is a very complex case which was greatly clarified by the approach taken to it on the part of the skilled and learned trial judge. The opinion of this court will, we think, be more readily understood if we set out in the opinion the pre-trial order (from which we omit the exhibit attached thereto). It reads as follows:
PRE-TRIAL ORDER
I. STIPULATED FACTS
This suit arises out of a September 13, 1972 contract (hereinafter "basic contract") between Bernard Carmichael (hereinafter "Carmichael") and Hunnicutt & Associates, Inc.,
In anticipation of Carmichael's contracting with various Alabama counties to perform the mass reappraisal work required by Weissinger v. Boswell, 330 F.Supp. 615
The evidence is in dispute as to which party drew the basic contract.
Act 160 required each county of the State to reappraise all real property within the county. It further required the Department of Revenue of the State of Alabama to supervise and regulate the program of reappraisal of all real property in the State of Alabama by prescribing procedures and standards to accomplish the work to be done under the program. In early 1972, the Revenue Department of the State of Alabama issued such a statement of procedures and standards in the form of a PROPERTY APPRAISAL HANDBOOK. At Page 42 of the handbook is a "sample uniform contract" which the Department required the County Boards of Commissioners to use in contracting with the prime contractor for the work. Section II of the sample contract (pages 46-53 of the handbook) specifies the services to be performed by the prime contractor.
The basic contract (the parties' September 13, 1972 Contract) contemplated Carmichael using this sample contract to contract with Alabama counties and for Carmichael then to sub-contract that portion of the work specified in the basic contract to Hunnicutt.
The pertinent parts of the basic contract are:
Subsequent to the basic contract, Carmichael submitted bids (based upon bids supplied by Hunnicutt) to several Alabama counties. On the basis of those bids, Carmichael contracted (using the sample contract) with the Coffee, Macon, DeKalb, Calhoun and Henry County Board of Commissioners to reappraise real properties in these counties. Each of these contracts (hereinafter referred to as the county contracts) was solely between Carmichael and the respective county and there is no reference to Hunnicutt in these contracts. These five county contracts which are, for all purposes germane to these suits, virtually identical, provide, inter alia:
The Board of Equalization afforded property owners an opportunity to object to the amount of the appraisal or assessment or to point out alleged errors in the appraisal of their property.
Prior to the Board of Equalization hearings in each of the five counties, informal hearings were held as required by the county contracts at which the property owners in the respective counties were given an opportunity to review the appraisals of their property and point out alleged errors in those appraisals. Property owners were mailed notices of these hearings prior to their being held. Notices included, among other things, the time, date and place of the hearings, the appraised value of the owner's property, and a legal description of the owner's property, including acreage and/or lot, block and subdivision name. These information hearings were attended by Hunnicutt personnel.
Subsequent to Carmichael's contracting with the five Alabama counties, Carmichael and Hunnicutt entered contracts (hereinafter referred to as the county subcontracts) which provide:
The subcontracts were drawn by the law firm of Jones, Murray, Stewart & Yarbrough, acting as counsel for Bernard Carmichael. As with the county contracts, the subcontracts are identical.
This suit was filed by Hunnicutt after a dispute arose between Carmichael and Hunnicutt as to which party had responsibility to provide or pay a representative to attend Board of Equalization hearings in the five Alabama counties with which Carmichael had contracted.
Payments from the counties have been placed in escrow by Carmichael pending a decision in this case. Cost of the Board of Equalization hearings in the amount of $78,271.26 have been paid from the escrow account.
The parties have agreed on an accounting of all receipts and expenditures under the contracts and a computation of interest to August 25, 1980. It is attached as Exhibit A. The accounting assumes that payments from Macon County and from DeKalb County have been received.
II. ISSUES OF FACT
1. Whether Carmichael or Hunnicutt drafted the basic contract.
2. The quality of work performed by Hunnicutt is not an issue.
III. ISSUES OF LAW
1. Whether the contracts are ambiguous.
2. Which party under the terms of the basic contract, county contracts, and county subcontracts has the duty to provide or pay a competent representative to attend the Board of Equalization hearings in the five counties.
3. Do the hold-harmless agreements of the contracts include either [party's] attorney's fees and costs incurred in this suit?
VII. ACCOUNTING
The parties stipulate, based on the computations of Exhibit A attached hereto and incorporated herein, that:
(1) Should the court rule that Hunnicutt had the duty or responsibility to provide or pay a representative to attend the Board of Equalization hearings in the five counties, judgment against Carmichael and in favor of Mass Appraisal Services, Inc. should enter for:
(2) Should the court rule that Carmichael had the duty or responsibility to provide or pay a representative to attend the Board of Equalization hearings in the five counties, judgment against Carmichael and in favor of Mass Appraisal Services, Inc. should enter for:
The parties agree and stipulate that regardless of which of the two accountings
After considering the testimony of twelve witnesses and forty-four items of documentary evidence, both the testimony and the exhibits being quite voluminous, and without the aid of a jury, the trial court entered the following amended judgment which contains the findings and conclusions about which Mass Appraisal complains:
AMENDED ORDER
On appeal, Mass Appraisal states the issues to be:
As is readily apparent the focus of this appeal is on the primary question of whether the trial court erred when it found that the language contained in paragraph three of the contract of 13 September 1972 was ambiguous when considered in light of extrinsic evidence although not ambiguous on its face.
Able counsel for both parties have filed excellent briefs and made cogent and persuasive oral arguments, citing a plethora of authorities in support of their respective positions. However, reduced to its essentials, the judgment below stands or falls upon the determination of the answer to one single question: Did the trial court commit reversible error in holding there was no facial ambiguity in the terms of paragraphs three and seven of the 13 September 1972 contract, but were ambiguous when considered in light of extrinsic matters?
Mass Appraisal insists that once the trial court determined that no facial ambiguity was present in the basic contract, it could not proceed to examine extrinsic evidence. Indeed, this is the general rule regarding construction of contracts. Camp v. Milam, 291 Ala. 12, 377 So.2d 95 (1973).
However, it is the exception to this general rule, which neither party to this appeal has briefed or argued, that is crucial to the resolution of this case. This exception pertains to what is known as a "latent ambiguity," which was defined in Gibson v. Anderson, 265 Ala. 553, 92 So.2d 692 (1957), as follows:
Although Mass Appraisal argues against the admission of extrinsic evidence to aid interpretation, the language of the basic contract, standing alone, does not clearly obligate Carmichael to pay the cost of other persons attending hearings. A literal reading of the text simply mandates that Carmichael be present at all required hearings, while obligating Hunnicutt to furnish all data and information required by the state.
The provisions which impose these duties, however, must be read in light of all other
Paragraph two of the basic contract provides that "[i]f Carmichael is successful in receiving a contract with the State of Alabama... Hunnicutt will perform the original mass appraisal services bid upon...." In order to determine the services to which paragraph two refers, obviously it is necessary to inspect Carmichael's contracts with the counties which embody the terms bid upon.
As evidenced by the pertinent provision of these contracts quoted in the pretrial order, supra, the counties required the presence at the hearings of a witness who could testify to the actual steps taken in the appraisal process; also, one who could give an opinion of the value of the property appraised.
This requirement was made abundantly clear in a letter to Carmichael from Carrol Stough, Valuations Supervisor of the Ad Valorem Tax Division of the State, which said:
The parties do not dispute the fact that a Hunnicutt representative was required to attend the hearings.
Whether a contract is ambiguous is a question of law for the trial court. Holt v. Davidson, 388 So.2d 548 (Ala.1980); Miles College, Inc. v. Oliver, 382 So.2d 510 (Ala.1980). The court properly afforded Carmichael the opportunity to show that collateral documents, specifically Carmichael's contracts with the counties and the letter from Stough, created a latent ambiguity in the basic contract. Furthermore, in light of the fact that the contract terms do not clearly allocate the burden of paying the costs of attendance at the hearings by Hunnicutt's representatives, the trial court properly determined that paragraphs three and seven were ambiguous as a matter of law.
Once the court concludes the instrument is ambiguous or uncertain in any respect, determination of the true meaning of the contract is a question for the factfinder, in this case the trial court, and the surrounding circumstances, including the construction placed on the language by the parties, are taken into consideration in order to ascertain the intention of the parties. City of Montgomery v. Maull, 344 So.2d 492 (Ala.1977); Miles College, Inc. v. Oliver, 382 So.2d 510 (Ala.1980).
In light of the fact the evidence in this case was adduced ore tenus, the findings of fact by the trial court made after a determination that ambiguity existed as a matter of law, are to be accorded a heavy presumption of validity, and they will not be disturbed unless palpably erroneous. Ford v. Alabama By-Products Corp., 392 So.2d 217 (Ala.1980).
Mass Appraisal contends, however, that evidence relied upon by the trial court included inadmissible testimony. The evidence complained of was certain testimony of John E. Green, an individual who, as a prime contractor, had entered into a mass appraisal contract similar to the one between Carmichael and Hunnicutt.
Mass Appraisal objected to this testimony, citing Loftin's Rent-All, Inc. v. Universal Petroleum, 344 So.2d 781 (Ala.Civ. App.1977), particularly for its statement of the rule of res inter alios acta. That rule excludes evidence of acts, declarations, and dealings between those not parties to the action. From the Latin: Events or things between others.
We are of the opinion the trial court committed error in allowing Green's testimony regarding his unrelated contract. No inference which may be found from the interpretation of the parties to a collateral contract can be accepted as shedding light on the intention of the parties when executing or performing the contract in dispute between the parties to this action. However, we cannot find that reversible error resulted from admission of this testimony.
There is substantial evidence of record, exclusive of Green's testimony about this collateral contract, to support the trial court's conclusions from its findings of fact regarding the contract in dispute here. Much of this evidence came from testimony by Green as an expert on matters other than about his contract.
The record reveals that Green was instrumental in organizing, on behalf of the Department of Revenue, the state's mass reappraisal program, under, and according to which, Carmichael and Hunnicutt entered into their contract. Additionally, Green wrote the appraisal manual by the terms of which all contractors and subcontractors in the program were required to operate. He also acted as an advisor to the Department of Revenue throughout the mass reappraisal program. Based on these qualifications, in addition to an extensive educational, publishing, and work background in the appraisal profession, Green testified it was the responsibility of the subcontractor who did the actual appraisal work to staff the Board of Equalization hearings and he knew of no prime contractor involved in the program who had assumed that responsibility.
We have also considered Stough's letter requiring attendance at Boards of Equalization hearings by a Hunnicutt representative in light of Hunnicutt's stated obligation under paragraph seven of the basic contract to furnish the state and counties with all information required by the state in compliance with its property appraisal handbook and appraisal manual, "and in accordance with any ... directives appertaining thereto, whether the same are now in existence or not."
Considering this evidence together with the evidence of record in its entirety, which we have carefully examined, we must conclude that the trial court's admission of Green's testimony concerning his own mass appraisal contract with an unrelated party was error without injury which does not warrant reversal because we find no substantial rights of appellant were injuriously affected. Rule 45, ARAP.
Furthermore, we detect no palpable error or manifest injustice in the trial court's findings that the expense of staffing the Board of Equalization hearings was an obligation of Hunnicutt, subsequently Mass Appraisal, under the basic contract. Applying the ore tenus rule, the judgment is due to be and is hereby affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
FAULKNER, JONES, ALMON and ADAMS, JJ., concur.
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