Central Iron Works v. California Baking Co.
This text of 198 P. 817 (Central Iron Works v. California Baking Co.) 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.
Opinion
This action was instituted by the plaintiff to recover damages from the defendant for its ■ alleged breach of a contract by the terms of which the plaintiff was alleged to have had its aid for the steel work upon a certain structure in contemplation of erection by the defendant accepted, but performance thereunder prevented by the fact that the defendant did not construct the building for the steel work upon which the plaintiff’s bid had been made. The defendant by its answer denied that such a contract had ever been entered into by it, and the cause went to trial upon that issue, in the course of which a large amount of evidence was presented pro and con by the respective parties; and the cause being submitted the court made general findings to the effect that those paragraphs of the plaintiff’s complaint wherein it was alleged that the contract had been entered into between the respective parties to the action in substance as above stated were untrue, and that the paragraph of the defendant’s answer wherein the existence of any such contract was denied was true. Judgment was accordingly rendered in the defendant’s favor, and from such judgment this appeal has been taken.
The appellant’s two contentions are, first, that the defendant’s secretary in indorsing upon the plaintiff’s bid the words, “Accepted on behalf of the California Baking Company, M. Wiessenhutter, Secretary, ’ ’ had power to bind, and hence had bound, the corporation; and, second, that its board of directors by their subsequent conduct, with knowl *379 edge on the part of a majority of their number of the existence of such indorsement, had ratified the action of its secretary. On both of these questions the evidence is hopelessly in conflict. An instance of these irreconcilable conflicts in the testimony may be cited. The architect Righetti testified that a short while before the defendant’s secretary came to his office and affixed said indorsement to the plaintiff’s bid he had received a telephone message from Mr. Loesch, the president and general manager of the defendant, that he was sending Mr, Wiessenhutter to sign the bid. Mr. Loesch himself was dead at the time of the trial, and hence his testimony was not available; but the secretary himself testified that he had not been so instructed nor so sent nor authorized, but had acted entirely upon his own initiative in the matter, and had affixed his signature to the bid in question without authority or direction so to do but under certain persuasions on the part of the architect. In the presence of conflicts in the evidence of which the above is but one of many examples the trial court made its findings against the plaintiff’s contention.
The attitude of this court with relation to cases wherein the evidence is substantially conflicting is set forth clearly and at length in the ease of Anglo American Land Co. v. Heine, post, p. 472, [198 Pac. 1009], to which reference is made.
With the legal questions and cases presented by the appellant we have no present dispute, but the substantial conflicts in the evidence as to which these are sought to be applied leave no room for their application.
The judgment is affirmed.
Waste, P. J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on May 27, 1921.
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198 P. 817, 52 Cal. App. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-iron-works-v-california-baking-co-calctapp-1921.