On July 7, 1904, H. L. Badham, appellee, and A. H. McCormick, appellant (plaintiff below) executed a contract, of which the following were the substantial terms: “Witnesseth, that A. H. McCormick, of Birmingham, Ala., and the Dorchester Lumber Company, Badham, S. C., have entered into a certain contract as to his connection with and services to said Dorchester Lumber Company, to which contract this agreement is made a part.
“It is understood and agreed by and between H. L. Badham and A. H. 'McCormick that, as part of said contract, H. L. Badham will sell to A. H. McCormick $4,500.00 of stock of said Dorchester Lumber Company, to be paid for in dividends or earnings of said Dorchester Lumber Company after its present indebtedness of approximately $75,000 has been discharged, and that *341purchase price of said stock shall bear interest at 6 per cent, only after said dividends begin to accrue.
“It is further understood and agreed that in the event H. L. Badham should desire to sell his interest in said Dorchester Lumber Company, within two years from date he shall have option of purchase of said $4,500.00 of stock held by A. H. McCormick for sum of $2,500.00.
“It is further understood and agreed that in the event A. H. McCormick should, of his own accord, sever his connection with the Dorchester Lumber Company within two years from date, he shall surrender said $4,500.00 of stock.”
McCormick performed the personal services contemplated by his engagement, and the salary stipulated for was paid him.
At the time of the execution of the contract quoted H. L. Badham and his brother, V. O. Badham, each owned 500 shares of the 1,000 shares of the capital stock of the Dorchester Lumber Company, operating at Bad-ham, S. C. The corporation was heavily indebted, and for a part of this indebtedness H. L. Badham was an indorser. The provision made in the contract quoted for the sale of 45 shares of H. L. Badham’s half of the capital stock was to- serve, and did serve, as an inducement to McCormick to engage for his personal services in an effort to improve the operating and financial condition of the concern. Under the evidence and under the terms of the contract/ it was in the nature of, if not in fact, a reward for successful results.
The plaintiff thus describes the acts and conduct of H. L. Badham, in respect of the shares referred to in the instrument, at the time the contract was made: “Mr. Badham retained the stock; put in an envelope at the time of the contract. There were 45 shares of $100 each. The price at which the stock was to be paid *342for was agreed to be at par value. * * * Tbe 45 shares of stock be bad sold to me were at that time in Henry L. Badham’s bands. * * * Tbe stock I referred to in my direct testimony that Mr. Badbam put up in an envelope was tbe stock be assigned to me at tbe time tbe contract was made. I did not see tbe stock; be explained to me that he.put it in tbe envelope to keep it. I do not remember seeing any certificate for tbe 45 shares. I do not remember about tbe certificate. Tbe fact is that Mr. H. L. Badbam was to give me $4,-500.00 of bis, stock. * * * I did not read tbe certificate at tbe time it was put in tbe envelope. He showed it to me, and said: ‘Here is tbe stock; I will put it in tbe envelope and keep it.’ I did not know what it was; I took bis word for it.”
Tbe concern remained in a bad financial condition during plaintiff’s service therewith; due, be contends, to tbe unwise dominance of its direction and management by Y. C. Badbam. No dividends are shown to have accrued out of which, under tbe contract of July 7, 1904,.payment for tbe 45 shares was to be made. It is not shown that tbe indebtedness of tbe corporation mentioned in tbe contract of July 7, 1904, was paid.
By this action tbe plaintiff sought, in counts other than that numbered 12, redress or recompense for tbe failure of H. L. Badbam to perform bis alleged contract to invest plaintiff with tbe title to tbe 45 shares or to account for its value under tbe contract of July 7, 1904.
Tbe trial court gave effect in its rulings, adverse to plaintiff, to tbe view that tbe payment for tbe stock with dividends accruing after tbe discharge of tbe indebtedness mentioned in tbe contract of July 7, 1904, was a condition precedent to plaintiff’s right to tbe 45 shares of stock; or, to state it otherwise, to tbe obliga*343tion on defendant to perfect its transfer to plaintiff. The legal principles governing the inquiry here presented are, of course, well established. It is their application, only, that affords the basis of controversy in this connection.
(1) Whether parties to a contract have stipulated as for dependent or independent covenants, in respect of the obligations assumed thereunder, is, of course, a matter'of intention, common to both, to be collected from the contract itself, together with the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time and those attending the engagement they make, and in the light of the common sense of it.—Nesbitt v. McGehee, 26 Ala. 748, 755, 756; Fulenwider v. Rowan, 136 Ala. 287, 34 South. 975; Loud v. Pomona Land Co., 153 U. S. 564, 14 Sup. Ct. 928, 38 L. Ed. 822.
(2) “The parties have an undoubted right, if they please, to make their covenants dependent or independent throughout, or to make the covenants independent as to one thing, and dependent as to another. They have a right to mould their contracts to suit their mutual convenience and interests; and, when the courts ca.n ascertain their meaning, they are so to construe the contract as to give effect to that meaning, provided the purpose be lawful. They must be held to have intended the performance of their respective acts, in the order of time indicated by their covenants.”—Nesbitt v. McGehee, supra. The precedency of covenants “must,” as said by Lord Mansfield in his quotation in Nesbitt v. McGehee, “depend on order of time in which the intent of the transaction requires their performance.”
(3) “Where a specified thing is to. be done by one party as the consideration of the thing to he done by the other, it is undeniably the general rule that the covenants are mutual, and are dependent, if they are *344to be performed at tbe same time; and if, by tbe terms or nature of the. contract, one is first to be performed as tbe condition of tbe obligation of tbe other, that wbicb is first to be performed must be done, or tendered, before that party can sustain a suit against tbe other.”—Phillips Const. Co. v. Seymore, 91 U. S. 646, 650 (23 L. Ed. 341) ; Loud v. Pomona Land Co., supra.
(4) Our interpretation of tbe contract accords with that prevailing in tbe court below, viz., that tbe payment of tbe price -for tbe stock with dividends accruing' thereon, after tbe indebtedness mentioned had been discharged, was a condition precedent to any obligation on Badham to transfer tbe stock to McCormick, or to any right in McCormick to require a transfer thereof by Badham to him! Tbe terms of tbe major, first provision of tbe contract, relating to tbe sale of tbe stock, shows an unmistakable intent to engage to sell in tbe future, upon the contingencies stipulated, thereby entirely refuting any idea of consummating a sale in prsesenti with only a postponement of tbe payment for tbe stock. Tbe engagement was to' sell when tbe dividends accruing paid Badham $4,500. Any other construction would contradict tbe terms of tbe major provision, expressing tbe dominating purpose, of tbe contract. Tbe other clauses — viz., that assuring Bad-ham the two-year option to buy this stock if be (Bad-ham) desired to sell bis interest in tbe corporation, and that stipulating for McCormick’s surrender of the stock if he voluntarily severed bis connection with the enterprise — must, necessarily, have been predicated of tbe effected purchase of tbe stock by McCormick, under tbe anterior provisions of the contract, wbicb made precedent conditions to be met by him in perfecting bis right to tbe stock. There is no inharmony of idea, or of purpose created by tbe major, first provision in this con*345nection and the subsequent clauses last referred to. It would be entirely unreasonable, and opposed to the manifest purpose the parties entertained, to interpret the instrument, which must be viewed as a whole, as if the first-clause invested McCormick with the title, the right to the stock, regardless of the anticipated payment for it through accruing dividends. Nothing could be clearer, under the contract and under the evidence, than that McCormick’s contribution of diligence and skill to the enterprise’s conduct should afford the sum out of which his promised st-ockholdership should be earned and paid for. The conclusion is unescapable that, until the conditions precedent were met, McCormick had, under the contract of July 7, 1904, no right to the stock, and no obligation passed to or was upon Badham to effect its transfer to1 McCormick. Nor.was McCormick in any position, under that contract, to implead Badham on any account in the premises until the conditions precedent had been performed, and his right to demand the stock had, been perfected. There was therefore no error in sustaining demurrers taking this objection to counts of the complaint. Additionally, the evidence showed without dispute that the stock was not paid for by dividends declared and accruing after the discharge of the indebtedness mentioned in the contract.
The twelfth count declares upon the breach of a subsequent agreement between defendant and plaintiff, alleged to have been made in the month of February, 1907. Its substance is this: That H. L. Badham was negotiating to sell his interest in the corporation to his brother, V. C. Badham, at and for $200 the share, and, in pursuit of this design, H. L. Badham, it is averred, “asked and obtained plaintiff’s consent to include the said'45 shares which defendant had sold to plaintiff *346in the said sale, and in consideration thereof the defendant agreed with the plaintiff; to account to the plaintiff or to settle with the plaintiff for the price of said stock; and the plaintiff avers that the defendant did thereafter, during the year 1907, close the said trade for the sale of' the said 500 shares of the stock in the said company to the said Y. C. Badham at and for the price of $200 a share, and the defendant was paid a large part of the purchase money therefor.” The further allegation is that H. L. Badham failed and refused to account to the plaintiff according to the agreement averred.
(5) The demurrer to this court was overruled. So there is no question of its sufficiency presented for review. The objection to the allowance of count 12 as an amendment to the complaint was overruled. The propriety of the general affirmative charge given at defendant’s instance cannot be justified by recourse to the assertion, even if it were well grounded, that error affected the allowance of count 12 as an amendment.
(6) As we have construed the contract of July 7, 1904, McCormick was without right to demand the transfer of the stock; the conditions precedent not having been performed. So when the agreement of February, 1907, declared on in count 12, whs made, he had only a contingent, inchoate, contractual right to impose upon Badham the obligation to sell the stock to him. The opportunity to afford the performance of the conditions precedent was McCormick’s contractual due, even though the period (three years) of its availability had nearly expired. The surrender, as it were, of this privilege by McCormick was a sufficient consideration to support Badham’s asserted promise to account to McCormick, as is averred in count 12. McCormick testified that the contract of sale between the brothers was *347made, and that the price was $200 a share. There was evidence to the contrary; but the conflict forbade the court’s taking from the jury this feature of the issue made by the averments of count 12. There was evidence tending to support every material averment of count 12. The fact, if so, that in consequence of V. C. Bad-ham’s inability or failure to meet his obligations under the contract of sale made by H. L. Badham and V. C. Badham, the contract of sale was rescinded by their mutual consent, was, of course, ineffectual to annul the agreement between H. L. Badham and McCormick, alleged and declared on in count 12, and to deprive McCormick of his remedy for a breach thereof, unless McCormick consented to the rescisión — a fact not shown in this record.
Our opinion is that the court erred in giving the general charge upon the issues made by count 12. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Beversed and remanded.
Somerville, de Graffenried, and Gardner, JJ., con- . cur.