Benchley v. Durkee Famous Foods, Inc.

17 P.2d 1020, 128 Cal. App. 604, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1229
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 12, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8093.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 1020 (Benchley v. Durkee Famous Foods, Inc.) 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
Benchley v. Durkee Famous Foods, Inc., 17 P.2d 1020, 128 Cal. App. 604, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1229 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

The action is on a contract. Judgment in the court below went for the plaintiff and defendant appeals.

The complaint was drawn in two counts and the judgment was in favor of plaintiff on the first count only. Also, there was a cross-complaint by defendant, asking affirmative relief by way of money judgment. On the cross-complaint the plaintiff and cross-defendant prevailed. However, it seems conceded that if the judgment in favor of plaintiff upon his original complaint should lack support in the evidence then defendant should prevail upon its cross-complaint. The case is thus sketched inasmuch as sufficient of the details will hereinafter appear and an analysis of the entire case here would be merely historical in the sense of preserving names and places.

The present defendant and appellant is the successor of Glidden Food Products Company and throughout the briefs no reference is made to the Glidden company and the case is treated as though the present defendant was the party named in the original contract. We shall follow that pro *606 cedure, inasmuch as no point is made as to the liabilities assumed and the rights accrued to appellant, it being conceded that the latter in all respects stands in the position of the former company. In February of 1929 the plaintiff Benchley was engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling certain food products in the county of Alameda and throughout the state. Defendant was engaged in the same line of business although apparently upon a nationwide scale. In the month and year named plaintiff and defendant, after some prior negotiation, entered into the written contract around which centers the present controversy. The contract contained three parts, and the terms thereof follow: (1) Defendant was to acquire the business of plaintiff, at defendant’s option, any time between date of contract and July 1, 1929, at a stipulated price for the goodwill of the business, which was to include the brands, processes and so forth, plus the invoice value at the cost of the merchandise on hand, including manufactured goods, labels, advertising matter, cartons, cases and supplies. (2) Defendant was given the privilege of purchasing from plaintiff, at book value, such equipment as the defendant could use. The third provision is the one out of which the difficulty arises, therefore it may be given in full. (3) “It is also our understanding that should circumstances arise that make it advisable for the Glidden Food Products Company to continue to operate your present Plant, that we are to be given the opportunity of taking over your lease and purchasing all of your equipment at book value and continuing to operate the business at your present place of business. It is mutually agreed that this arrangement shall not be permitted to militate against your selling the lease and the equipment, in the event that you have an opportunity, the understanding being that before accepting a proposition for the sale of your lease and your equipment, that you will first advise us of your proposition, so that in the event we desire to exercise our option on the lease and equipment that we may do so. It is understood that when the deal is consummated, that you are to enter the employ of the Glidden Food Products Company, to take charge of the sales of nut margarine, from their Berkeley Plant; that the basis of your employment is to be agreed upon between yourself and the President of the Glidden Food Products *607 Company and is to consist of an agreed salary and a per■centage of the profits.” The contract was prepared in the form of a letter addressed to plaintiff by defendant. This may be noted so that the language of the contract may be better understood, the first person pronoun indicating the defendant and the second person pronoun referring to plaintiff.

It seems agreed that the contract was executed with reference to all of its provisions excepting those contained in paragraph three. It is further conceded that the contract was to be considered as three distinct contracts in so far as the subdivisions indicated. As hereinbefore noted, the present controversy involves only that portion of the written agreement as set forth in the third section. The expressed and agreed consideration for the entire arrangement, embracing the three divisions of the writing, was the extension of a $10,000' credit to plaintiff, and it is not questioned that this consideration was entirely paid.

The trial court found that the defendant exercised the option given in paragraph three (3) and failed to pay the purchase price of the lease and equipment. Accordingly ¡judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for the amount found by the court to be the book value of the lease and equipment.' The question on appeal in the case involves three points: 1st. Appellant contends that the complaint does not state a cause of action, due to fatal defects within the instrument sued upon. 2d. That if the defects are not within the instrument, the testimony at the trial conclusively shows them. 3d. The evidence is insufficient to support the findings and the judgment based thereon. Stating the problem of the first two contentions, considering them one, as does appellant, the claim is that the contract is unenforceable. The grounds of this claim are that the contract is a single entire obligation and that inasmuch as that portion thereof in reference to the future employment of plaintiff is too indefinite and uncertain to be specifically enforced the entire contract must fall.

Appellant has presented us with a remarkably exhaustive brief on the subject of entire and divisible contracts. Under its first contention, that the question of the *608 entirety of a contract should and must be determined from the four corners of the instrument, we have been cited to authority collected from every state in the Union. At the conclusion of this digest, appellant then concedes that the rule of this jurisdiction as expressed in an almost unbroken line of decisions is that the question of entirety is one of interpretation, to be determined according to the intention of the parties upon consideration of all of the circumstances. (Pacific Wharf etc. Co. v. Dredging Co., 184 Cal. 21 [192 Pac. 847]; Palmer v. Fix, 104 Cal. App. 562 [286 Pac. 498].) In the latter case the court adopts the definition of 13 Corpus Juris, page 561, declaring a severable contract to be one which in its nature and purpose is susceptible of division and apportionment. Paraphrasing, to some extent, the language of the Pacific Wharf case, supra, we note that the value to be paid for the lease and equipment in the instant case was to be ascertained and determined without reference in any way to the understanding as to future employment. As a matter of simple understanding the entire writing plainly manifests its purpose, and that purpose is obviously twofold. First, the defendant was to buy out the plaintiff, lock, stock and barrel, at its option. After this was done, and it will be noted that the language of the contract specifically states “when the deal is consummated”, then the parties were to agree upon the details of the plaintiff’s employment. The very sense of the transaction implies that plaintiff, as long as he is in business himself, will not seek or need employment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 1020, 128 Cal. App. 604, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benchley-v-durkee-famous-foods-inc-calctapp-1933.