purchaser. Then we have to determine what an hotelkeeper and
an intending hotelkeeper would, as business men, mutually
understand by the expressions we find in the contract. The
document consists of a printed form of contract for the sale of an
hotel lease, licence, goodwill and furniture. Blanks were left for
the date, the names and addresses of the parties, the duration of
the lease sold, the name of the hotel, the amounts respectively of the
purchase-money, of the deposit, of the first portion of the balance
and of the remainder of the balance of the purchase-money, the
allocation of the purchase-money between consideration for the
furniture and consideration for lease, licence and goodwill, the
amount of the purchase-money to be advanced, and the name of
the person who was to advance it. These were all filled in. The
bargain then is clearly one connected scheme. The relative effect
of any portion of that scheme on the rest depends upon its true
construction with reference to the whole. It was said by Lord
Moulton (then Moulton L.J.), in In re a Debtor (1), that "' the Court
in interpreting a contract will consider what its language would
connote in the understanding of business men of the time."
The subject matter of the purchase is stated to be " the existing
lease about ten years and five months, licence, goodwill and furniture
of the hotel known as Brooklyn Hotel." With reference to
the questions we have to determine, the construction of the contract
we take to be as follows: - By clause 1, the total purchase-money
is fixed at £10,800, payable partly by deposit of £300, leaving a
balance of £10,500. That balance of £10,500 is payable in two
portions, namely, £3,700 on or before the day preceding the
application for transfer of the licence, and £6,800 on the day before
the actual transfer. Clause 1 contains a most significant statement
as to the £6,800, namely, that it is "to be obtained by the said
purchaser and paid in cash; or a guarantee given for the same to the
satisfaction of the vendor." the day before the transfer, This
indicates a fact on which both parties proceed, that the purchaser in
that contract fixes the sum he cannot pay without " obtaining " it
somewhere, next that he will " obtain " it, and lastly, that when