Acton Rock Co. v. Lone Pine Utilities Co.

186 P. 809, 44 Cal. App. 597, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 579
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 4, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 3021.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 186 P. 809 (Acton Rock Co. v. Lone Pine Utilities Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acton Rock Co. v. Lone Pine Utilities Co., 186 P. 809, 44 Cal. App. 597, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 579 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

*598 FINLAYSON, P. J.

This is an action for rent on the lease of an electric shovel, and likewise to recover for failure to redeliver the shovel in good condition after termination of the lease. Defendant appeals from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor.

On November 1, 1913, plaintiff was the owner of a Model 50 Marion Electric Shovel, then standing upon its own trucks on a siding of the Southern Pacific Company at that company’s station at Tejunga, in Los Angeles County. It had been brought from Marion, Ohio, on its own wheels, attached to a train of cars. On November 1, 1913, plaintiff and defendant, through the president of the former and the vice-president and manager of the latter, orally agreed upon a lease of the shovel to defendant for one year, commencing November 1, 1913, for the sum of $3,650, being at the rate of ten dollars per day. On the same day a written instrument, embodying the terms of the oral lease as well as an option giving defendant the optional right to purchase the shovel, was executed by plaintiff, and thereupon given to defendant for execution by it. Later it was executed by defendant and returned to plaintiff. As the written instrument bears date January 17, 1914, it may be presumed that that was the date of its execution by defendant.

The writing, so far as material to the questions presented on this appeal, is as follows:

“This agreement, made and entered into this 17th day of January, 1914, by and between Acton Bock Company, a corporation, hereinafter termed the ‘lessor,’ as party of the first part, and Lone Pine Utilities Company, a corporation, hereinafter termed the ‘lessee,’ as party of the second part, witnesseth: That for and in consideration of the rental hereinafter specified, and of the conditions and covenants hereinafter set forth on the part of the lessee to be performed, the lessor does by these presents lease and demise unto the said lessee that certain Model 50 Marion Electric Shovel, owned by said lessor and now located at Tejunga, in the county of Los Angeles, State of California, for the period of one (1) year, commencing on the first day of November, 1913, and ending on the thirty-first day of October, 1914; said electric shovel to be delivered by the lessor to the lessee at the commencement of said term f. o. b. ears at Tejunga, *599 California. . . . And in consideration of the premises the said lessee does hereby hire from the lessor said electric shovel for said period of one year, and does covenant and agree that it will pay rental for said electric shovel at the rate of ten dollars per day, including Sundays, said rental to be payable ... in the sum of thirty-six hundred and fifty and no/100 dollars ($3,650.00). . . . The said lessee does further agree that ... it will return said leased property to the lessor in good order and condition (reasonable wear and tear thereof excepted) by delivering said electric shovel f. o. b. cars at any shipping point in Southern California designated by the lessor.”

Until some time in February or March, 1914, when it was washed off the tracks of the Southern Pacific Company and thrown upon its side by freshets due to a heavy flood, the shovel remained at the railroad company’s siding at Tejunga, resting on its own trucks. After it was washed off the railroad tracks in February or March of 1914, it remained on its side until replaced by plaintiff. This was after the expiration of the term of the lease. At the time when the oral lease was made by plaintiff and defendant, which was also the day when plaintiff executed the written instrument, November 1, 1913, defendant expected to use the, shovel in Cajon Pass, San Bernardino County, and to pay the freight for hatiling the shovel from Tejunga to Cajon Pass and back again at the expiration of the lease, unless, in the meantime, it elected to exercise its optional right to purchase the shovel. At all times after the execution of the written lease by plaintiff on November 1, 1913, until washed off the tracks by the flood of the following spring, the shovel, upon its own wheels on the siding at Tejunga and without any cost to defendant other than the payment of the freight from Tejunga to Cajon Pass, or other destination, was in a condition to be moved to Cajon Pass, or elsewhere by defendant or by the railroad as defendant’s agent.

In pleading its cause of action, plaintiff, in its complaint, alleges: “That on or about the 17th day of January, 1914, said plaintiff entered into a certain agreement in writing with said defendant wherein and whereby said plaintiff leased and demised unto said defendant, and said defendant hired from said plaintiff, one Model 50 Marion Electric Shovel for the period of one (1) year, commencing on the *600 first day of November, 1913, and ending on the 31st day of October, 1914, for the rental of Ten ($10.00) Dollars per day, including Sundays, which said rental, to wit, the sum of Three Thousand Six Hundred Fifty ($3,650.00) Dollars, said defendant agreed to pay on or before the 31st day of October, 1914.” This allegation, though not stating all the facts, conforms to the facts so far as it goes. There was an oral lease on November 1, 1913, and, on that date, there likewise was a written lease, embodying the terms of the oral lease, but executed by plaintiff only. It was not until January 17, 1914, that defendant obligated itself in writing, though it had orally leased the shovel on the first day of the preceding November.

[1] Appellant claims that because the complaint alleges, and the court finds, that the written contract was entered into on January 17, 1914, to take effect as a lease from November 1, 1913, it is impossible as a contract of lease— that it was impossible of performance, and that, therefore, no cause of action is alleged in the complaint or found by the court. There is no merit in this contention. Assuming, for the purpose of the decision, that, because the contract gives defendant the optional right to purchase, the contract is within subdivision 4 of our statute of frauds (Civ. Code, sec. 1624), and assuming further that the contract is indivisible and that no part of it became binding on defendant until signed by it, nevertheless the oral agreement was not absolutely void or invalid; it merely lacked the necessary evidence of its existence—evidence which later was supplied when defendant signed the written contract and returned it to plaintiff. (In re Balfour, 14 Cal. App. 261, [111 Pac. 615].) Or if, until the writing was signed by defendant, the contract should be deemed to be invalid, in so far as the creation of any obligation by defendant is concerned, nevertheless, the execution of the instrument by defendant, on January 17, 1914, not only supplied the necessary legal evidence but confirmed the oral lease that had been made on the first day of November next preceding, and which was evidenced by the writing that day signed by plaintiff. And from the date of the execution of the instrument by defendant, the previously made lease, now evidenced by a writing signed by defendant, but which it had consented to on November 1, 1913, was valid and enforceable as a lease made *601 on November 1, 1913—as much so as if the writing had been signed on that date by defendant as well as plaintiff. (In re Balfour, supra.)

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Bluebook (online)
186 P. 809, 44 Cal. App. 597, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acton-rock-co-v-lone-pine-utilities-co-calctapp-1919.