California Bean Growers' Ass'n v. Rindge Land & Navigation Co.

248 P. 658, 199 Cal. 168, 47 A.L.R. 904, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 253
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1926
DocketDocket No. Sac. 3567.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 248 P. 658 (California Bean Growers' Ass'n v. Rindge Land & Navigation Co.) 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
California Bean Growers' Ass'n v. Rindge Land & Navigation Co., 248 P. 658, 199 Cal. 168, 47 A.L.R. 904, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 253 (Cal. 1926).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The following opinion prepared by Mr. Presiding Justice Pinch, sitting pro tempore for Mr. Justice Lawlor, is adopted as the opinion and decision of the court.

“The plaintiff is a nonprofit co-operative marketing association and the defendant is one of its members. The general features of the plaintiff’s organization and the agreements which it makes with its members are similar to those considered in Poultry Producers etc. v. Barlow, 189 Cal. 278 [208 Pac. 93], California Canning Peach Growers v. Downey (Cal. App.), 243 Pac. 679, Poultry Producers, etc., v. Murphy, 64 Cal. App. 450 [221 Pac. 962], and Anaheim Citrus Fruit Assn. v. Yeoman, 51 Cal. App. 759 [197 Pac. 959], On the seventh day of August, 1918, the parties hereto entered into a marketing agreement by the terms of which the plaintiff agreed ‘to market’ and the defendant agreed ‘to consign and deliver’ to the plaintiff as ‘agent, . . . and not otherwise, all of the beans of every variety . . . produced by or for’ defendant ‘during the years 1918-19-20, ’ with certain exceptions which are not involved herein. The defendant delivered all of its beans produced during the year 1918 to the plaintiff but refused to deliver those of the years 1919 and 1920. Plaintiff brought this action to recover liquidated damages, as provided for in the agreement, alleged to have been sustained by reason of such refusal. The trial court entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed.

“The complaint alleges the execution of the agreement; that ‘plaintiff has performed all of the terms, conditions and covenants of said agreement on its part to be performed’; that the defendant refused to deliver the beans produced by it in 1919 and 1920 to the plaintiff; that ‘it would be impracticable and extremely difficult to fix and determine the actual damages suffered by plaintiff herein as the result of defendant’s failure to deliver said beans’; that the agreement provides that ‘inasmuch as it is now and *172 ever will be impracticable and extremely difficult to determine the actual damage resulting to the association should the grower fail to so consign and deliver his beans, the grower hereby agrees to pay to the association one cent for each pound of beans sold, consigned or marketed by or for him other than in accordance with the terms hereof, as liquidated damages for the breach of this contract, all parties agreeing that this contract is one of a series dependent for its value upon the adherence of each and all of the contracting parties to each and all of the said contracts’; and stating the amount of such liquidated damages.'

!“The answer is too long to be set out at length. In addition to copies of the articles of incorporation and the by laws of the plaintiff and the agreement beteween the parties, it contains about thirty pages of typewritten matter. Some of the allegations are of evidentiary matters and other 'are immaterial to the questions raised by the appeal. It, is alleged that the defendant was induced to become a member of the association and to execute the agreement by¡ "certain false representations and promises made” by the. plaintiff, that the plaintiff negligently failed to take proper "care of defendant’s beans of 1918 and allowed a part of| ¡them to be damaged by moisture and by rats and mice and that ‘excessive expenses’ were charged against defendant, 'but the evidence does not support such allegations. The answer ‘ denies that plaintiff has performed all or any of 'the terms or conditions or covenants of said agreement on its part to be performed’; states the quantities of beans produced by defendant in 1919 and 1920; alleges that it ‘agreed to deliver to plaintiff all of said beans ... in accordance with the terms of said agreement . . . and would have done so, had plaintiff prior thereto and at that time kept and performed its agreement’; that ‘plaintiff did not keep and perform its said agreements, as hereinafter appears.’ In subsequent parts of the answer it is alleged that during the year 1918 the defendant delivered to the plaintiff, under the agreement, 11,231 bags of beans of the aggregate weight of 1,004,000 pounds; that the fair market value thereof was six cents a pound; that in November, 1918, plaintiff paid the defendant on account thereof the sum of $4,300; that no other substantial payment was made until November 29, 1920, when $22,744.73 was paid; that *173 ’there was neither excuse nor occasion either for the delay in marketing plaintiff’s beans or for the delay in reporting, accounting and paying therefor’; that ‘said beans could have been sold before the bean harvest of 1919 and one year was under the then circumstances a fair and reasonable time in which to market and pay therefor ’; that ‘ plaintiff sought to have a tariff placed by congress on beans not produced in the United States and without right or authority, expended about $15,500 to that end prior to March 31, 1920’; that ‘it financed the 1919 growers out of credits from the 1918 crop and for that reason $1,262,012.90 of the proceeds of the 1918 crop were unavailale for distribution at March 31, 1920, and only $71,506.02 was available for that purpose’; that ‘some directors took their own 1918 beans out of plaintiff and sold them directly and individually and not in or by the association; that one of the present directors did not deliver his 1919 crop of beans to the association; that no action has been commenced against him; that the, chief officer of plaintiff sold 1918 beans and 1919 beans to private dealers direct and not through the association. ’ By way of set-off, counterclaim and cross-complaint, the defendant set up a claim against the plaintiff for the difference between the alleged value of its 1918 crop of beans and the amount it had received from plaintiff on account thereof. The defendant also prayed for an accounting.

“The following facts are taken from the evidence. The plaintiff was organized in the early part of 1918 and by the end of that year it had about 1500 members, who had delivered to it up to that time, under agreements essentially the same as that between the plaintiff and the defendant, about 1,000,000 sacks of beans. Due to the activities of the national food administration, the bean crop of California in 1918 ‘was the largest crop ever raised, almost double . . . the average crop. ’ Other food products were ‘abnormally large. ’ The warehouses of the. state did not have sufficient capacity to take care of all food products. In the fall of that year ‘there was more rain damage than had ever been known before. . . . Heavy rains came early in September. ’ The bean crop was damaged by these rains. ‘A large percentage of them were so badly damaged they could not be made into choice recleaned beans.’ ‘The grower was per *174 mitted to deliver to any public warehouse that he selected.’ The warehouses handled them ‘just as they handled beans of other persons . . . that were delivered there.’ The association endeavored ‘to get for those beans the best treatment in the warehouses that was possible.’ Large quantities of damaged beans were placed on the market. With the termination of war conditions, the ‘government . . . .went out of the market . . . and it was impossible to find any buyers who could take such a large quantity of beans. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 658, 199 Cal. 168, 47 A.L.R. 904, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-bean-growers-assn-v-rindge-land-navigation-co-cal-1926.