California Sugar & White Pine Agency v. Penoyar

139 P. 671, 167 Cal. 274, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 454
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1914
DocketSac. No. 2009.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 139 P. 671 (California Sugar & White Pine Agency v. Penoyar) 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 Sugar & White Pine Agency v. Penoyar, 139 P. 671, 167 Cal. 274, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 454 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

In this action to recover damages for the breach of a contract, there was a jury trial resulting in a verdict and *276 judgment in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff appeals from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

The defendants were lumbermen owning timber lands, and operating a sawmill in Siskiyou County. Plaintiff was a corporation engaged in the purchase and sale of lumber. On May 15, 1909, the parties entered into a written contract, whereby defendants agreed to sell, and plaintiff to buy, all the lumber of specified grades which defendants should manufacture at their sawmill during the year 1909. The contract contained this clause: “All of said lumber shall be graded, on the basis of the rules for grading California sugar and white pine as published by the second party (i e., the plaintiff) by Mr. S. J. Hollihan, or some other grader whom the second party may designate for that purpose, and the decision of said Hollihan, or said other grader, with respect to the grades of such lumber, shall be final and conclusive upon the parties hereto, and the cost of inspection and the expense of the inspector shall be borne equally by both parties hereto share and share alike.”

It was then provided that the lumber should be delivered in piles and piled by defendants on a described parcel of land, and thereafter loaded on cars as ordered by the plaintiff. The prices for the various grades were stated, and payment was, under the contract to be made as follows: On the tenth day of each month plaintiff was to advance to defendants fourteen dollars per thousand feet for all lumber so delivered (i. e. piled) during the preceding month, and thereafter, when the lumber should have been loaded, plaintiff was to pay defendants, on the tenth day of each month, for all lumber loaded on cars during the preceding month, the prices specified for the various grades, less the fourteen dollars per thousand feet already advanced. By a further provision the first parties (defendants) “agree and guarantee that the amount of lumber of the kind and quality herein contracted to be sold and delivered by the first parties to the second party shall amount to at least one million seven hundred and fifty thousand feet.”

The complaint was in three counts. The first is based on a breach of the clause last quoted, alleging that defendants had delivered to plaintiff only nine hundred and ninety-five thousand five hundred feet of lumber (instead of 1,750,000 as *277 agreed) and that plaintiff had thereby been damaged in the sum of $3,018. The second count alleges that plaintiff had expended, in the inspection of lumber furnished under the contract, the sum of $588.30, one-half of which, or $294.15, the defendants had refused to pay, although bound under the contract to do so. The third count was based upon an advance or loan of $183.57 by plaintiff to defendants.

The defendants admitted the execution of the agreement. The answer to the second and third causes of action consisted merely of denials of the expenditures and advances claimed to have been made by plaintiff.

In answer to the first count, the defendants denied that plaintiff had performed all the conditions of the contract on its part, and in this regard alleged that none of the lumber was graded upon the basis of the rules as published by plaintiff and according to the contract, “but defendants allege the fact to be that all of said lumber so delivered was graded contrary to said rules and contrary to the covenants of said contract; and defendants show that said lumber was graded by said grader, S. J. Hollihan; and in grading said lumber, said grader rejected a large amount thereof, to wit: about five hundred thousand feet, board measure, all of which was of the proper grade to be, and which fairly graded according to said contract, should have been received by plaintiff in fulfillment of said contract; that by reason of said Hollihan rejecting said lumber, defendants were damaged in a large sum, to wit: the sum of $2500.” The answer contains a further plea to the effect that the plaintiffs refused to pay defendants the sum of $655.75, due on April 10, 1910, for lumber delivered during March, 1910, and that, upon such refusal, defendants refused further to perform said contract.

The verdict was general in favor of the defendants, and plaintiff specifies the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a verdict against it on each of the three counts.

We find nothing in the evidence to warrant a finding against the plaintiff on the second and third causes of action.

The second is based on the provision of the contract that “the cost of inspection and the expense of the inspector shall be borne equally by both parties ...” The contract named S. J. Hollihan as the grader who was to make the inspection, and he did in fact make it. His testimony, which *278 was not contradicted, was that he was engaged in this work for 77% days, and that his wages were one hundred and fifty dollars per month and expenses. He then went on to say that his “wages and expenses while at this work were $3.70 a day.” The last statement would seem to make his wages, together with expenses, come to less than the wages alone, figured at the rate of one hundred and fifty dollars per month. The appellant interprets the testimony as meaning that the portion chargeable to defendants was $3.70 per day, which would make the claim on this count .$287.67, or $6.48 less than the amount sued for. But even if the total of wages and expenses be taken to have been $3.70 per day, there was nothing offered by defendants to meet plaintiff’s demand for reimbursement of one-half of this amount for the 77% days.

Likewise, with respect to the third count, the testimony of plaintiff’s president was that the unpaid balance of advances made by the plaintiff to defendants was $183.57. Not only was there no direct contradiction of this testimony, but one of the defendants, in a letter, and again while a witness at the trial, admitted an indebtedness for advances of $167.65.

The only attempt to support the verdict on the second count is by the claim that Hollihan was assisted in the grading by one Davidson, Hollihan acting for the buyer and Davidson for the seller. This fact, assuming it to have been established by the evidence and to have been material to the issues raised, constituted no defense. The contract provided for inspection by Hollihan, or some other grader designated by the plaintiff, and evidently contemplated that the grader, while compensated by both parties, was to act primarily as the representative of the buyer. There is, therefore, no ground for the claim that the expense of Hollihan’s grading Avas not incurred pursuant to the contract. In answer to the contention that the verdict on the third count is unsupported, the respondents urge that the sum due was offset by defendants’ damage through improper grading, and that plaintiff’s refusal to pay the amount due from it in, April, 1910, justified defendants in failing to further comply with their contract. As to these suggestions, it is sufficient to say that the defenses thus attempted to be made are affirmative *279 in their nature, and that neither of them is presented by the answer to the third count.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 P. 671, 167 Cal. 274, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-sugar-white-pine-agency-v-penoyar-cal-1914.