C. O. Bashaw Co. v. Wood & Stevens, Inc.

236 P. 346, 72 Cal. App. 94, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 388
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1925
DocketDocket No. 5083.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 236 P. 346 (C. O. Bashaw Co. v. Wood & Stevens, 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
C. O. Bashaw Co. v. Wood & Stevens, Inc., 236 P. 346, 72 Cal. App. 94, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 388 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The trial court, sitting without a jury, awarded the plaintiff a judgment as for moneys laid out and expended by plaintiff’s assignor in behalf of defendant. The defendant has appealed under section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

*96 The story as recited in the findings is told first by affirmative allegations in response to the first count contained in plaintiff’s complaint, which is a common count as for moneys laid out and expended. The story is told again by affirmative findings in response to the second count pleaded in the complaint which purports to plead the facts. The latter findings are (1) that the plaintiff is a corporation; (2) that the defendant is a corporation; (3) That Herbert B. Gray Co. is a corporation; (4) that on August 7, 1919, the defendant requested Herbert B. Gray Co. to accept from defendant 574 fifty-pound boxes 100/120 prunes and consigned the same to Gray’s correspondents in London and that Gray consented to do so without making any charge for his services; (5) that Gray thereupon consigned the prunes to Crichton, London; (6) and that the defendant furnished to Gray a description of the goods which Gray accepted and on which Gray offered the goods for sale in London and acting on that description Crichton sold the prunes and remitted to Gray as the net amount of the cash sales $3,281.98; (7) that on the arrival of said prunes in London, England, the purchaser thereof rejected the same because of the condition of said prunes and demanded back the purchase price that had been paid therefor; that said Alexander Crichton & Co. notified said Herbert B. Gray Co., Incorporated, and said Herbert B. Gray Co., Incorporated, notified said defendant of the fact of said rejection; that said defendant did thereupon authorize said Herbert B. Gray Co., Incorporated, to use its own judgment in settling with said purchaser or in accepting said rejection and in otherwise disposing of said prunes; that said Herbert B. Gray Co., Incorporated, acted in good faith, with diligence and care, and accepted said rejection and instructed said Alexander Crichton & Co. to return said purchase price and to endeavor to sell said prunes elsewhere; that said Herbert B. Gray Co., Incorporated, instructed said Alexander Crichton & Co. to advance the money to repay said purchase price and promised to repay to said Alexander Crichton & Co. any deficit that might remain upon the resale of said prunes; that the acceptance of said rejection was for the best interests of said defendant; that the market value of prunes of the character offered for sale and according to the description furnished by said defendant had risen since the time of said *97 sale in London, England, and that if said rejection had not been accepted, the said Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, might have been rendered liable for substantial damages.

That Herbert E. Gray, the president of Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, went personally from New York to London, inspected the prunes and acted for Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, with reference thereto; that the condition of said prunes on the arrival of said Herbert E. Gray in London was such as to require immediate and prompt attention if same were to be resold; that it was necessary for Herbert E. Gray, representing said Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, to act immediately; that a case of necessity existed for prompt and immediate action in the interests of said defendant; that said Herbert E. Gray acted reasonably, in good faith, and without negligence in authorizing said Alexander Crichton & Co. to return said purchase price and to endeavor to resell said prunes.

That said defendant was promptly notified by said Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, of the acceptance of said rejection, the return of said purchase price and the instructions given to said Alexander Crichton & Co. to resell said prunes, and that upon the return of said Herbert E. Gray, the president of Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, to New York, from London, England, where he had inspected said prunes and had acted for and on behalf of said Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, said defendant did not repudiate or object to said action, but approved and ratified the same with full knowledge of all of the facts, and promised that it would take care of any amounts owing to said Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, as soon as the net proceeds of said resales of said prunes were ascertained; (8) that Crichton accepted the return of the prunes, repaid the purchase price and thereafter made diligent efforts to resell the prunes and later returned to Gray a bill for $2,265.28 for the difference between the amounts received from the sale of the prunes and the expenses incurred; that Gray paid Crichton and thereafter assigned his claim to this plaintiff; (9) that Gray acted gratuitously and in accordance with the instructions of the defendant, and with diligence and in good faith; (10) that the defendant did not at any time sell the prunes to Gray; (11) that when the prunes arrived in London the same were in bad condition and that Gray “acted reasonably and in the interest of said defendant in authorizing the ac *98 ceptance of said rejection, and the return of said purchase price, and the immediate resale of said prunes, and in not submitting the claim of the purchaser to arbitration or litigation. The court further finds that the condition of said prunes on their arrival in London, England, was not due solely or at all to the negligence or want of care of the purchaser of the prunes subsequent to his securing title to the same. The court does not find the particular time or place the said prunes became or were bad but does find that said Herbert E. Gray Co., Incorporated, acted reasonably and in the best interest of said defendant in all that it did respecting said prunes.”

The evidence showed without conflict that before the prunes arrived in London that Crichton on August 25, 1919, sold to Badcock, Bishop & Co., London, under a c. i. f. contract representing them to be “Rosenberg Bros. & Co. pack average of the season of 1918,” that contract contained a covenant “all questions or disputes arising under this contract shall be referred to two arbitrators, one to be appointed by each party. In case such question or dispute arises respecting quality or condition, the buyer shall accept the goods and the arbitrators shall decide only the question of allowance (if any) to be made to the buyer. The arbitration shall be held in London and shall be claimed within seven days of the first arrival of the goods at the wharf at London or before removal from the quay in Liverpool or other ports.” The evidence introduced at the trial consisted of the oral testimony given by Herbert E. Gray and the deposition of H. W. Brown, one of the agents of Alexander Crichton & Co. The testimony of those two witnesses was to the effect that the prunes were “fermenting,” “full of life,” and “in very bad condition.” The evidence showed affirmatively that neither the purchaser .nor the seller demanded an arbitration.

We now take up the points made by the appellant. For reasons which will presently appear, we do not take them up in the order made by the appellant. The fifth point made by the appellant is a claim that plaintiff’s assignor exceeded-his authority in accepting the rescission. The appellant states the point in five different ways.

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 346, 72 Cal. App. 94, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-o-bashaw-co-v-wood-stevens-inc-calctapp-1925.