Buxbom v. Smith

145 P.2d 305, 23 Cal. 2d 535, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 178
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1944
DocketL. A. 18380
StatusPublished
Cited by144 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 305 (Buxbom v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buxbom v. Smith, 145 P.2d 305, 23 Cal. 2d 535, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 178 (Cal. 1944).

Opinions

CURTIS, J.

This is an action for damages sustained in conjunction with a breach of two contracts of employment. The cause was tried before the court sitting without a jury, findings were made in favor of the plaintiff, and from the judgment based thereon the defendants now appeal.

The complaint sets forth two oral contracts contemporaneously made on February 12, 1939, and the purported cancellation of both of them as the preliminary basis for relief. One was a contract by which the defendants employed the plaintiff for a period of six months to handle the publication of a newspaper—a “shopping news”—to carry free of charge all advertising of a chain of public markets owned and operated by the defendant Smith and to carry at reasonable rates advertising of other merchants in the same area, the plaintiff to receive 25 per cent of the gross advertising receipts for his management services. The other was a contract whereby the defendants employed the plaintiff for the same term of six months to distribute weekly the newspaper above mentioned [539]*539at the rate of five dollars per thousand copies. The defendants purported to cancel these two contracts soon after they were made—the first some nine days and the second some six weeks following the date of agreement—and they refused to perform them further, both purported cancellations being without the plaintiff’s consent. It is also alleged that at the time of making the contracts the plaintiff was the owner of a distributing business and was engaged in distributing handbills, newspapers and advertising matter in the region where this newspaper was to be circulated, and that immediately after the contracts were made the plaintiff solicited advertising from merchants in the designated area, enlarged his distributing crews, employed additional supervisors, mapped out districts and routes for circulation, and prepared to handle the distribution of 40,000 copies of said newspaper. It is further alleged that immediately following the defendants’ purported cancellation of the second or distribution contract, “defendants employed plaintiff’s distributing crews and supervisors in said area.” The complaint finally enumerates seven items of damage sustained by plaintiff in connection with the breach of these two contracts, including the recital of “the sum of $5,000 for the loss of plaintiff’s trained organization, supervisors and good will and for general damages to plaintiff’s business,” and it concludes with a prayer for the aggregate amount of these several damage specifications, “for costs of suit and for such other and further relief as may seem just and equitable.”

No demurrer = was interposed to the complaint, but an answer was filed by the defendants herein denying specifically the material allegations of the plaintiff’s pleading. At the conclusion of the trial upon the issues as so framed, the court, in making its findings generally in the plaintiff’s favor, followed in substance the language of the complaint as above outlined, except as to damages. Specifically in this latter connection, while the court denied the plaintiff any commissions for the sale of advertising and his claim for certain miscellaneous expenditures in relation thereto, it awarded the plaintiff “the sum of $1,121.40, representing the profit which would have been derived by plaintiff from the distribution of said paper for the remainder of the term of said distribution contract,” the sum of $35 in compensation for two items of expense incurred with reference to preparation for performance of the publication contract, and “the further sum of [540]*540$4,000 for the loss of plaintiff’s trained organization, supervisors, good will and for general damages to plaintiff’s business.” Judgment accordingly was entered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants in the sum of $5,156.40, and costs.

The main point in controversy on this appeal concerns the amount of damages recoverable by the plaintiff in this action. However, before considering the principles of law relating to that question, certain preliminary observations should be made. The evidence establishes without conflict that the defendant Wright acted in all the matters involved herein as the agent of the defendant Smith and that this fact was at all times known to the plaintiff. The defendant Wright therefore contends that he is not liable at all for any part of the damage award. The plaintiff does not dispute this proposition, but, on the contrary, he states in his brief addressed to this court that “no question is directed to [a] reversal of the judgment against the defendant Wright. ’ ’ This unequivocal concession by the plaintiff will be accepted as determinative of this issue in favor of the defendant Wright, and there only remains to be considered the propriety of the judgment as rendered against the defendant Smith. There can be no argument under the record as to the authority of Wright to act for Smith in making the contracts here involved. The plaintiff testified that before these contracts were made, and at a time when he was negotiating with Wright on the subject, he saw Smith and told him he had been talking to Wright about distributing circulars, and discussed the newspaper, “and he seemed rather busy; and he said, ‘No, you take all those matters up with Mr. Wright; he handles all that; and anything you do with him is all right for the company. ’ ” Accordingly, the plaintiff made no further effort to deal with Smith directly but made his arrangements with Wright. This status of affairs was not controverted by any witness in the case, and Smith, though present at the trial, did not testify at all in challenge of the plaintiff’s account of these business dealings. Thus, the evidence amply sustains the finding of liability against the defendant Smith as a party to the contracts in question.

Passing now to a consideration of the principal question here presented for determination—the amount of damages recoverable in this action—complaint on this appeal is directed solely to the $4,000 item awarded “for the loss of [541]*541plaintiff’s trained organization, supervisors, good will and for general damages to plaintiff’s business.” It is argued that such award could be made only in some action sounding in tort, and that it therefore has no place in litigation premised on a “breach of contract of employment.” There can be no doubt as to the proposition that this damage assessment cannot be sustained as compensation for the direct breach of either of the six-month contracts here involved. Obviously, the item for loss of plaintiff’s distributing organization, etc., has no relation to the breach of the contract for managing the publication of the newspaper. For the purpose of fulfilling his obligations under that contract the plaintiff needed no such organization and could use none, and the defendants’ refusal to perform that contract could not have affected it. Equally plain is the fact that such item could not be a proper element of damages for breach of the distribution contract. That contract provided for the weekly circulation of newspapers at a definite price, and by the defendants’ acts the plaintiff was prevented from performing it after a short period of time. He was fully paid for the performance rendered, and his damages for that specified default on the part of the defendants would be limited to compensation for the performance prevented.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 305, 23 Cal. 2d 535, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buxbom-v-smith-cal-1944.