California Pear Growers Ass'n v. Herspring

213 P. 518, 60 Cal. App. 503, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 14
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 2552.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 213 P. 518 (California Pear Growers Ass'n v. Herspring) 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 Pear Growers Ass'n v. Herspring, 213 P. 518, 60 Cal. App. 503, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 14 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action was for the balance of the purchase price of pears sold by the plaintiff to the defendant and plaintiff had judgment, from which defendant has appealed. The contract between the parties was in writing, executed on July 17, 1919, and we may quote the following provisions:

“1. Subject to delivery by growers under the standard pear crop agreement of the seller, the seller agrees to sell and the buyer agines to accept and buy from the seller 1000 tons, more or less, windfall pears, at the price of thirty-five dollars ($35.00) per ton, f. o. b. riverbank, Sacramento River, during the season of 1919. 2. Said pears, up to the said quantity of 1000 tons, more or less, shall be delivered from any of the following grower-members of the seller, namely, as per list attached, all of whom are known to the parties hereto and the location of whose ranches and points of delivery are also known to the parties hereto. 3. Deliveries hereunder shall not begin prior to July 25th unless by mutual agreement or by consent, a.t the suggestion of the buyer. ... 5. The pears shall be two inches and up, free from sunburn and immature pears and from pears which have begun to rot. ... 6. The buyer shall inspect all fruit at the time of delivery and shall accept or reject the pears at *506 the drier. No rejection shall he made except on notice to the grower and for defects herein specified. ... 8. The fruit shall be weighed at the drier. If there are no facilities there for weighing, the seller will accept the weights at the drier on tested scales or at the nearest public weigher and a certificate of weights shall be signed by the buyer and delivered immediately to the seller. ... 9. The buyer further agrees to pay for all the pears delivered hereunder immediately upon delivery. 10. It is expressly agreed that all of the pears delivered hereunder shall be used by the buyer for drying only and shall not be sold or delivered directly or indirectly to any canner under any circumstances without the written consent of the California Pear Growers Association, and only upon such terms and conditions as the said Association may specify in writing.”

The plaintiff is a nonprofit, co-operative marketing association whose members are growers of pears and the fruit was to be furnished by those whose names appeared on said list attached to the contract. The ranches upon which the pears were produced are located upon the Sacramento River and defendant’s drying plant is just outside the city of Sacramento. After the execution of the contract defendant made arrangements for the transportation of the pears from the river bank by the Southern Pacific steamers to Sacramento and thence by the Northern Electric Railroad to his said plant. The fruit was of an inferior grade, shaken from the trees by the wind, of an extremely perishable nature, and requiring prompt shipment and speedy attention for drying. Not only by reason of the character of the pears, but also of the excessive heat of the summer and the lack of refrigeration was there necessity for economy of time in the shipment and the preparation of said fruit for drying. Prompt and expeditious carriage was furnished by said transportation companies and the fruit arrived in good season at the dryer. As to this there seems to be no dispute between the parties, but there is a vital disagreement as to the quality and condition of a large part of the fruit when it was delivered, and this controversy is the cause of the litigation. That much of the fruit was discarded and destroyed because it was unfit for drying or indeed for any use is shown without conflict and is not denied by respondent; but the association’s claim is that “Mr. Herspring’s plant was en *507 íárely inadequate to accommodate the quantity of fruit purchased under this contract. As a consequence, the pears arrived at the dryer and were there compelled to stand unloaded for days. Deterioration was inevitable. When the fruit was eventually removed from the cars, a large quantity had become unfit. With each day the congestion became heavier and the period of delay longer. Hence, the quantity of spoiled fruit constantly increased.” Appellant’s position, stated generally, is that such condition was not due to any fault on his part, but that such fruit was defective when received, and therefore the loss should fall upon the association. The trial court took the view that the pears complied with the terms of the contract and would have continued of such quality if they had been unloaded and dried within a reasonable time; that the delay, which caused their deterioration, was a circumstance for which respondent was not responsible and hence the loss should be borne by appellant. This characteristic and determinative factor in the case appealed to the learned trial judge as follows: ‘‘The fruit season does not wait on anybody. You ship your fruit when it falls, when it accumulates, it does not keep. You can’t hold it back to meet the necessities of anybody. It has got to be handled during that time, and anybody who buys that sort of fruit buys it with knowledge that it is a touch and go proposition; that it is a work of days and hours to preserve it, or it is lost; and Mr. Herspring undertook the purchase of a short-lived fruit, the picking of which could not be regulated by its owners; it had to be shipped as it fell during the season when it was available ; and without the experience that the business required, without an established plant, without a worked out system, without efficient help^-one who had had experience in those enterprises could see how such an enterprise would fail that was so loosely associated, together, and the inevitable result happened. I have no doubt that Mr. Herspring did the very best he could under the circumstances, but his plant does not seem to have been qualified to handle such a large amount of fruit as came to him under the terms of his contract.”

That this theory thus announced clearly implying, if not expressly stating, that the failure in the character of the fruit was chargeable to the fault of appellant and not *508 to that of respondent, finds support in the evidence, cannot for a moment he doubted.

First, as to the quality of the pears when shipped, we find the growers testifying without contradiction that the fruit answered and fulfilled every requirement of the contract. This testimony showed further that the condition of the pears was such that it would continue unimpaired for from four to ten days after shipment. As an illustration of this testimony we may quote Albert A. Brown as follows: “I am a member of the California Pear Growers Association and shipped windfall pears to Jos. Herspring & Co. for the Association. I personally inspected the pears shipped by me. There were none less than two inches, free from worms, no withered or rotten pears among them. There were no sunburned pears.” He further testified that they would have remained in good condition “about three, four, or five days at the ranch easily enough.” Since the pears were shipped promptly and were only one or two days in transit it is a fair inference from the testimony of these witnesses that the fruit was in good condition when received by appellant and would have answered the purpose if it had been promptly attended to. There was much other testimony to strengthen and confirm the inference. Mr. Fred C. Brosius, the county horticultural commissioner, testified as follows: “Q. Did you see the pears consigned to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
213 P. 518, 60 Cal. App. 503, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-pear-growers-assn-v-herspring-calctapp-1923.