Barsotti v. Imperatrice

275 P. 892, 97 Cal. App. 569, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 33
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 15, 1929
DocketDocket No. 3326.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 275 P. 892 (Barsotti v. Imperatrice) 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
Barsotti v. Imperatrice, 275 P. 892, 97 Cal. App. 569, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 33 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

This action involves a contract for the sale by the plaintiff to the defendant M. A. Caldaralla Company, a copartnership, of four carloads of grapes. The complaint originally contained three counts. In the first it is alleged that the defendant Imperatrice gave his personal cheek to the plaintiff in payment of the agreed price of the first carload, but that the check was “dishonored and the payment thereof refused.” In the second count it is alleged that the carload of grapes referred to in the first count and a second carload were delivered to the defendants, of the total agreed value of $1,849.77, only '$500 of which has been paid. In the third count it is alleged that upon the *571 delivery of the two carloads of grapes mentioned, the defendants “breached and violated said contract in that they failed and refused to pay plaintiff for said grapes according to said contract or at all. That by reason of the breach and violation of said contract by the defendants as aforesaid, plaintiff, in order to minimize loss to himself, after due diligence, found a buyer for 43 tons of grapes, which was the amount thereof remaining undelivered to defendants and originally covered by said contract, and plaintiff received the purchase price of $57.50 per ton for said grapes. That said price was the highest price obtainable for said grapes in Madera, California, on said date.” Deducting the amount alleged to have been received for the forty-three tons of grapes from the amount they would have brought at the agreed price of $60 a ton leaves an alleged loss of $107.50. Judgment was demanded for the amount of this loss and the alleged unpaid balance due for the first two carloads of grapes, or a total of $1,457.27. The fourth count, added by amendment, is, in substance, a combination of the other three and it need not be further noticed. A copy of the contract is attached to and made a part of the complaint. It provides:

“This certifies that Nello-Barsotti . . . has sold to M. A. Caldaralla Co. all the hereinafter mentioned fruit crops buyers shall find suitable for local eastern markets, . . . delivered at Madera Team, not later than Sept. 10 to start, . . . price 60.00 F. O. B. Madera in car. . . . The seller agrees to pick and deliver all of said fruits at his own expense, in good condition, entirely free from mildew, or smut, or rain, or sand damage and free from any damage, whatsoever, and at the times directed by the buyer. The buyer agrees to pay for said fruit upon completion of the delivery thereof and presentation of weight tags therefor, at the office of the buyers at 419-421 Davis Street, San Francisco, California. . . . This contract is understood by both parties to constitute an absolute sale, but until delivery has been completed seller agrees to and assume all risks of loss or damages of whatsoever kind or nature to any undelivered part of said crop. Time is of the essence of this agreement and no understanding other than herein expressed shall vary or modify the transaction.”

*572 The first count of the complaint stated a cause of action, if any, against defendant Imperatrice personally. The trial court granted his motion for a nonsuit. Judgment was entered against defendants Caldaralla and Osborn for the amount demanded and they have appealed.

The only breach of the contract by the defendants alleged in the complaint is that they “failed and refused to pay plaintiff for said grapes,” the grapes which had been delivered, “according to said contract or at all.” Since the contract provides for payment “for said fruit upon completion of the delivery thereof” and the complaint shows that delivery had not been completed, the facts alleged therein do not show a breach of the contract by the defendants and are not sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

The evidence shows that the first carload of grapes left Madera for San Francisco September 6th at 8:30 A. M., and the second carload September 8th at 11:25 P. M. September 9th, M. A. Caldaralla Company wired the plaintiff : “Car Grace number 32,587 (the first car) arrived September ninth all molded and fermented will not accept it you had no right to hold that ear there three days for payment according to the contract advise me what you want done with this car.” On the next day plaintiff replied:' “Refer to telegram grapes were not held on track for nonpayment your agent shipped the car himself.” Subsequently the plaintiff sold the remainder of the grapes to E. E. Desmond and then, September 15th, he sent the Caldaralla Company the following telegram:

“Because of your failure to perform under your grape contract with me dated Aug. 26, 1925, I now declare contract cancelled.” The plaintiff testified: “When I find out that I could not get any more shook from Mr. Caldaralla and I had some of those grapes and I went to work and entered into a contract with E'. E. Desmond, and then I sent that telegram;” and that the reason he stopped shipping grapes to the Caldaralla Company was because that company did not furnish him boxes for the grapes. Jack Placía, who was employed by the Caldaralla Company to ship grapes from Merced to San Francisco, testified that, after the shipment of the second carload, he offered to furnish boxes and that the plaintiff replied: “I don’t want any more boxes, because I am through with Mr. Caldaralla.” *573 The contract provides that the seller shall pick and deliver the grapes “at the times directed by the buyer.” By reason of that provision, the evidence is uncertain as to whether the buyer was in default in failing to furnish boxes at any time prior to plaintiff's sale of the remainder of the grapes to Desmond. But if it be conceded that the evidence is sufficient to prove that the Caldaralla Company was so in default and that the respondent may rely upon such breach of the contract without having alleged it, the judgment must be reversed on other grounds.

The complaint does not allege that the grapes delivered to the defendants were of the quality specified in the contract. The “further and separate defense” of the defendants alleges that the grapes so delivered were “mildewed and moulded and in bad condition.” The burden was on the plaintiff to prove that such grapes were of the quality agreed upon. The contract provides that the grapes shall be “in good condition, entirely free from mildew, or smut, or rain, or sand damage and free from any damage whatsoever.” The defendants introduced evidence to the effect that such grapes were “mouldy, rotten and leaky, ... in very bad shape, . . . very soft,” with some red berries and “quite a few” green berries; that “most of the grapes was red berries and soft berries and the poorest Zinf andel grade in the county.” In plaintiff’s behalf, the man who had charge of picking the grapes testified that when the grapes were picked their condition was “pretty good”; that he did not see any red or green or soft berries among them or any sand on them. The plaintiff testified: “I know they were good grapes. I know they were first-class grapes. ... Q. You don’t know anything about grapes, do you, or the grape business, do you ? A. No, sir. . . . Q. You will say that those grapes were all sound and not in a decayed condition and not mouldy? A. I will say that they was A-l grapes. I don’t know about mouldy, but what was there was very good grapes.” There was other evidence to the effect that the grapes were all United States grade number 1.

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Bluebook (online)
275 P. 892, 97 Cal. App. 569, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barsotti-v-imperatrice-calctapp-1929.