California Canning Peach Growers v. Harris

267 P. 572, 91 Cal. App. 654, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 948
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1928
DocketDocket No. 3442.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 267 P. 572 (California Canning Peach Growers v. Harris) 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
California Canning Peach Growers v. Harris, 267 P. 572, 91 Cal. App. 654, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 948 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

BUCK (G. F.), J., pro tem.

Plaintiff is a nonprofit cooperative marketing association, organized in 1921 under the laws of the state of California. From the beginning the defendant John Harris was a member of the association and, with his fellow-members, had signed a marketing agreement with the association whereby he sold to the association, to be marketed for the benefit of himself, all of the peaches to be grown by him on a twenty-acre orchard for the next fourteen years.

During the years 1922 and 1923 defendant’s yearly crop was delivered and marketed under the terms of the marketing agreement. But during the season of 1924 the defendant sold his crop to other parties and failed to deliver any part of it to the association. Upon suit being brought by the association to recover the punitory damages provided for in the agreement, the defendant John Harris set up as a defense his claim that there was an anticipatory breach of the marketing agreement on the part of the association. Upon the trial of the case before the court, sitting without a jury, the court found in accordance with the defendant’s claim of an anticipatory breach that “during the summer of 1924, about the month of June, and shortly before any of the peaches mentioned in the marketing agreement were ripe and ready for delivery, the plaintiff association informed the defendant John Harris that it would not accept or receive said peaches or any part thereof; and that said plaintiff did *656 then and there fail and refuse, and ever since has failed and refused to accept said peaches, or any part thereof. ’ ’

The court, accordingly, after having granted a nonsuit as to the defendant Lizzie Harris, gave judgment in favor of the defendant John Harris, and against the plaintiff. Prom this judgment in favor of the defendant John Harris the plaintiff appeals, and bases its appeal upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the foregoing finding of an anticipatory breach on the part of the plaintiff such as would justify the defendant in failing to deliver his peaches to the association under the terms of the written agreement.

The rule, of course, is well established that a party to an executory bilateral contract may avail himself of a refusal of performance made by the other party in advance of the time of performance either as a basis for an action for damages or may himself set up such refusal as a defense to his own performance. (Civ. Code, secs. 1440, 1511, par. 3, 1515, and 6 Cal. Jur., pp. 457 to 460; Alderson v. Houston, 154 Cal. 1, 12 [96 Pac. 884]; Howard v. Galbraith, 13 Cal. App. 373, 377 [109 Pac. 889]; 13 Cor. Jur. 653, 654.)

As regards the nature and character of the refusal by one party which will justify nonperformance by the other, the rule is well stated in the case of Rauer v. Harrel, 32 Cal. App. 45, at p. 66 [162 Pac. 125, 133], as follows: “Before the salt company could avoid performance, defendant’s refusal to perform should appear to have been explicit, positive, and unequivocal. The rule stated by Mr. Benjamin is as follows: ‘A mere assertion that the party will be unable, or will refuse to perform his contract is not sufficient; it must be a distinct and unequivocal, absolute refusal to perform the promise, and must be treated and acted upon as such by the party to whom the promise was made. ’ (Benjamin on Sales, s

“In 6 Ruling Case Law, page 1025, the rule is thus stated: ‘In order to justify the adverse party in treating the renunciation as a breach, the refusal to perform must be of the whole contract or of a covenant going to the whole consideration, and must be distinct, unequivocal and absolute. ... It may be observed, however, that the renuncia *657 tion itself does not ipso facto constitute a breach. It is not a breach of the contract unless it is treated as such by the adverse party.’ (Hanson v. Slaven, 98 Cal. 377, 382 [33 Pac. 266]; Bell v. Bank of California, 153 Cal. 234, 242 [94 Pac. 889].)

“In Smoot’s case, 15 Wall. 36 [21 L. Ed. 107], it was held that mere assertion that the party will be unable, or will refuse to perform his contract, is not sufficient to terminate it; it must be a distinct and unequivocal absolute refusal to perform, treated and acted on as such by the promisee. Approved in Dingley v. Oler, 117 U. S. 5.03 [29 L. Ed. 984, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 850].”

For the purpose of showing an abandonment by the association of its contract by its claimed refusal in June of 1924, to accept future delivery of defendant’s peach crop, defendant testified that Ross Danison, one of the directors of the association, came to his place in June, 1924, and stated to him: “We cannot accept Elberta peaches.” Witness continuing: “I didn’t say anything to that. There wasn’t particularly so much conversation, only that they cannot receive those Elberta peaches. He said, the first time when he came over in June, that they cannot accept those Elberta peaches. After that my wife took charge of these peaches and says, ‘Since they refused I am going to sell them myself’; and I didn’t have anything to do with it any more. She sold them to the Kings County Packing Company or cannery.” Also, F. W. Brown, the district representative of the plaintiff, testified that he informed defendant of the contents of the marketing agreement and what would be the result if defendant broke his contract and asked defendant to go and see the only lawyer that witness knew of in Reedley and to talk to his neighbors before he violated the contract, and that defendant then “said that he could get more money for his freestones and that we would not accept his freestones.” The Elberta peaches, it seems, were freestones and the balance of his crop consisted of clingstone peaches.

Ross Denison, when called as a witness by the defendant, testified that he, Ross Denison, had an agreement with Mr. Pogooto, the manager of the plaintiff, to receive crops of peaches in the vicinity of Reedley. During the year 1923 *658 the plaintiff engaged in co-operative canning. Before that time all members’ peaches were sold to commercial canneries; Denison was asked to look after receiving for the Herbert Packing Company which was canning co-operatively for the association, part of the crop being sold to other canneries in Reedley in a raw state. The witness testified that it was part of his duty to solicit growers to designate the Herbert Packing Company as the receiving point, and in his conversation of June, 1924: “I asked Mr. Harris to designate the Herbert plant as a receiver for his peaches ... As I remember, I asked Mr. Harris for his cling peaches, stating that we could not handle the Elbertas. Now I can’t remember the exact words, but that was the essence of it ... I wasn’t the only one receiving from the association. The association was delivering to different plants. But I was the only one that received for the Herbert Packing Company for the association. Q. The variety of peaches and the tonnage that would be received was left by the association to you, was it not? A.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 572, 91 Cal. App. 654, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-canning-peach-growers-v-harris-calctapp-1928.