Body-Steffner Co. v. Flotill Products, Inc.

147 P.2d 84, 63 Cal. App. 2d 555, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 975
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 1944
DocketCiv. 12546
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 147 P.2d 84 (Body-Steffner Co. v. Flotill Products, 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
Body-Steffner Co. v. Flotill Products, Inc., 147 P.2d 84, 63 Cal. App. 2d 555, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 975 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

DOOLING, J. pro tem.

Defendant appeals from a judgment for damages rendered against it for failure to deliver certain canned tomatoes and tomato paste pursuant to six written contracts entered into between plaintiff and defendant. In five of the six contracts a standard form of printed contract of purchase and sale adopted by the Canners League of California and approved by the National-American Wholesale Grocers’ Association was used.

By typewritten reference in the body of each of these five contracts an attached multigraphed sheet dealing with certain contingencies that might arise out of the war emergency was made a part of the contract. In the discussion which follows we feel justified in treating this multigraphed sheet as a general amendment of the printed form designed to meet certain unusual trade conditions created by the fact of our country being in a state of war, and hence no different in legal effect than if the provisions of the multigraphed sheet had been printed in the body of a revised printed form. In the two contracts which were earliest in time (dated May 23 and June 3, 1941, respectively) into the printed form in the blank provided for the insertion of the buyer’s name were typed the words “B. H. Body, Inc. As Agents” and immediately below following the printed word “Remarks” were typed the words:

“Brokerage 5%
B. H. Body, Inc.”

It may be remarked parenthetically that B. H. Body, Inc. and plaintiff, Body-Steffner Company, are admittedly the same corporation.

In the three later contracts for which the printed form was *558 used the words “As Agents” do not appear after the plaintiff’s name but in the body of each contract after a description of the merchandise covered by the contract, and following the word “Terms,” among other typewritten provisions the typewritten words “Brokerage 5%” were inserted.

The sixth contract was in letter form addressed to defendant by plaintiff and accepted by defendant by signature at the bottom thereof. It read in part: “We give you herewith prices and terms covering option on 10,000 cases 2% Standard Tomatoes for delivery to the Government,” and recited among its terms “Brokerage—5%.”

Plaintiff recovered judgment on the theory that all six contracts were contracts of purchase and sale. Defendant contended that all six contracts were in fact contracts of brokerage or agency. In support of this defense questions were asked both on cross-examination of plaintiff’s witnesses and by direct examination of defendant’s witnesses and offers of proof were made in an effort to prove that it was the general and accepted usage and custom in the canning trade to use the standard form of purchase and sale contract for both sales and agency contracts; that in the trade this standard form of contract was always construed as a contract of agency and not as one of sale where a provision for brokerage was inserted in such contract; and that the word “brokerage” was always used and construed in the trade as providing compensation for an agent and was never used in the trade in the sense of a discount to a purchaser. Objections were sustained to all of such questions and offers of proof. In sustaining such objections we are convinced that the trial court committed prejudicial error.

It is a rule of practically universal acceptation in common law jurisdictions that however clear and unambiguous the words of a particular contract may appear on its face it is always open to the parties to the contract to prove that by the general and accepted usage of the trade or business in which both parties are engaged and to which the contract applies the words have acquired a meaning different from their ordinary and popular sense. (Civ. Code, sec. 1644; Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1861; Rest., Contracts, sec. 246(a); 2 Williston on Sales, 2d ed., sec. 618, p. 1556; 3 Williston on Contracts, rev. ed., sec. 648, pp. 1871-2, sec. 650, pp. 1874-9; 9 Wigmore on Evidence, 3d ed., sec. 2463, p. 204; 25 C.J.S., Customs and Usages, sec. 24, pp. 111-2; *559 17 C.J., Id., sec. 61, pp. 498-9; 12 Am.Jur., Contracts, sec. 237, pp. 762-3; note 89 A.L.R. p. 1228, et seq.)

The rale is clearly and simply stated in the Restatement of the Law of Contracts, section 246, Comment on Clause (a) in the following language: “The rule stated in the Clause is not confined to unfamiliar words or to words often used ambiguously. Familiar words may have different meanings in different places. A usage may show that the meaning of a written contract is different from an apparently clear meaning which the writing would otherwise bear.”

Thus, for example, such an apparently clear expression as “one thousand” may be shown by a trade usage to mean more than the number one thousand (Smith v. Wilson, 3 Barn.&Adol. 728, 110 Eng. Reprint 266) or less than that number (Soutier v. Kellerman, 18 Mo. 509; Louisiana Red Cypress Co. v. George Gilmore & Co., 13 Ga.App. 472 [79 S.E. 379]) or to be estimated in an arbitrary manner without regard to actual number (Brunold v. Glasser, 23 Misc. 285 [53 N.Y.S. 1021]; Walker v. Syms, 118 Mich. 183 [76 N.W. 320]), and the word “white” may, by similar usage, be shown to include its antithesis black (Mitchell v. Henry (1880), L.R. 15 Ch.Div. 181).

The whole subject has been so recently and comprehensively treated by our Supreme Court in Ermolieff v. R. K. O. Radio Pictures, 19 Cal.2d 543 [122 P.2d 3], that we need not discuss at length the many authorities cited by counsel on the subject. The court in that case stated the rule applicable here in a single sentence at page 550: “Parol evidence is admissible to establish the trade usage, and that is true even though the words are in their ordinary or legal meaning entirely unambiguous, inasmuch as by reason of the usage the words are used by the parties in a different sense.”

It is true that the parties by their contract may evidence an intention not to be bound by the usage. But the mere use of language which is prima facie inconsistent with the usage cannot be held to show an intent not to be bound by the usage where the usage gives to that very language a meaning different from that which would normally be ascribed to it. As pointed out in the Ermolieff case at page 551, in distinguishing certain cases holding that usage could not be resorted to where the language of the contract was such as to show that the parties intended that the usage should *560 not apply: “They did not involve a situation where the evidence was introduced to define a term in the contract.”

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147 P.2d 84, 63 Cal. App. 2d 555, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 975, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/body-steffner-co-v-flotill-products-inc-calctapp-1944.