Baldwin v. Napa & Sonoma Wine Co.

81 P. 1037, 1 Cal. App. 215, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 1905
DocketNo. 17.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 P. 1037 (Baldwin v. Napa & Sonoma Wine 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
Baldwin v. Napa & Sonoma Wine Co., 81 P. 1037, 1 Cal. App. 215, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 71 (Cal. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

COOPER, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff to recover damages for breach of a contract for sale of wines by plaintiff to defendant. The ease was tried with a jury, and a verdict returned for plaintiff in the sum of $3,997.17, upon which judgment was entered. Defendant made a motion-for a new trial upon the grounds of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict; that the verdict is against law,, and errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to by the defendant. The court granted the motion in genera'.' terms.

All presumptions are in favor of the order made by ihetrial court, and an order granting a new trial will be affirmed, here if it is found to be justified upon any statutory ground included in the notice of intention and properly in the record. This court will examine the entire record upon which the-order was based, and if there be found in the record any error which would have justified the court in making the-order it will be affirmed. (Kauffman v. Maier, 94 Cal. 276, [29 Pac. 481]; Churchill v. Flournoy, 127 Cal. 362, [59 Pac. 791].) One of the grounds of the motion was the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, and in such ease the-motion is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the court,, and an order granting a new trial will not be reversed unless it appears that there was an abuse of such discretion. (Bledsoe v. Decrow, 132 Cal. 314; Estate of Motz, 136 Cal. 560, [69 Pac. 294.].)

The contract was made March 29, 1898, and its material. *217 parts, so far as necessary to be stated for the purposes of this opinion, are the following:—

“This agreement, made March 29th, A. D. 1898, by and between C. A. Baldwin of Beaulieu, West Side, Santa Clara County, California, and Napa and Sonoma Wine Company of San Francisco, a corporation:
“C. A. Baldwin sells and the Napa and Sonoma Wine Company buys the following wines at present in the cellar at Beaulieu:
8,500 gallons Red Wine 1893 at 30 cents per gallon to be taken until January 1st, ’99.
9,000 gallons Red Wine 1894 at 35 cents per gallon.
15,000 Ct 11 tt 1895 “ “ tt tt it
17,500 tt tt tt 1896“ “ tt tt tt
2,000 tt White tt 1894“ “ tl tt • tt
2,200 tt tt tt 1895 “ “ 11 tt tt
22,000 tt Red it 1897
3,000 tt White t i 1897
3,000 tt 6 t tt 1896 at 35 cents per gallon.
“All of the above per gallon delivered f. o. b. cars San. Francisco; cash less three (3) per cent.
“All wines except 1897 have been accepted; the 1897 wines the purchaser will examine and finally accept at the same price before April 1st, 1899, if he finds them to be equal in quality to previous vintages.
“Wines to be taken in carload lots one at a time, the buyer agreeing to take seventeen thousand five hundred (17,500) gallons each year before September 1st.
“C. A. Baldwin during this contract turns over all his trade foreign and on Pacific Coast he has at present, and all orders that he may get, to the Napa and Sonoma Wine Go. excepting only his trade with G. S. Nichols on the Atlantic Coast, for which he will reserve fifteen hundred (1,500) cases of each vintage; Mr. Baldwin reserving further privilege to sell his common wines not mentioned above in the general market. ’ ’

The complaint alleges that although the plaintiff fully kept and performed the contract on his part, the defendant failed and refused to carry out or fulfill the contract on its part in several particulars, all of which is denied by the defendant.

*218 One of the main allegations relied upon is, that defendant refused, and continues to refuse, to accept or pay for any further shipments of wine under the contract. The evidence upon this issue was sharply conflicting, and we think the court did not abuse its discretion in granting a new trial for this, if for no other reason.

The important question was as to who was at fault, or who committed a breach of the contract. The contract, made March 29, 1898, provides that 17,500 gallons of wine shall be taken each year before September 1st. There is some controversy, however, as to whether 17,'500 gallons were to be taken before September 1, 1898, as there had then expired only about five months of the first year of the contract. But the parties themselves, by their eorrespendenee and acts, construed the contract as calling only for a pro rata of the 17.500 gallons up to September 1, 1898. The letters of defendant to plaintiff show that defendant placed that construction on the contract. Lagarde, plaintiff’s manager, who had full authority in the premises, testified that only 10,304 gallons were taken by defendant before September 1, 1898, and that he wrote to defendant, “this completes your first year’s contract,” and that when the question came up as to the first year being a short one the witness said: “I believe it was understood between Mr. Priber [president of defendant] and myself that would fill it for that year, and afterwards 17.500 gallons would have to be taken each year.” The contemporaneous and practical construction of a contract by the parties is strong evidence of the meaning of “quivoeai terms. (Keith v. Electrical Engineering Co., 136 Cal. 178, [68 Pac. 598].) The rule would apply with still greater force in a case like this, where the plaintiff is claiming a breach of the contract. He will not be allowed to claim a breach as to the time up to September 1, 1898, when he agreed with defendant that 10,304 gallons completed the first year’s contract. We will, therefore, pass to a consideration of the year beginning September 1, 1898.

While the contract provides that defendant shall take 17.500 gallons of wine each year before September 1st, it does not provide that defendant shall take any particular wine first, nor does it provide that the white or red wine, nor the wine of any particular year, shall be taken first, nor the *219 manner in which it shall be taken, by defendant. Therefore defendant had the right, up to September 1, 1899, under the terms of the contract, to take 17,500 gallons of any of the wine sold to it, provided it give plaintiff reasonable notice, so as to enable him to deliver it. The complaint alleges that up to September 1, 1899, the defendant took and paid for only 17,923 gallons, and has failed and neglected to receive or pay for any greater amount, although often requested by plaintiff to do so. The contract included three thousand gallons of white wine of 1896 at thirty-five cents per gallon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P. 1037, 1 Cal. App. 215, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-napa-sonoma-wine-co-calctapp-1905.