Chapin v. Brown

35 P. 1051, 101 Cal. 500, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1064
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1894
Docket18147
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 P. 1051 (Chapin v. Brown) 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
Chapin v. Brown, 35 P. 1051, 101 Cal. 500, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1064 (Cal. 1894).

Opinion

The Court.—

On August 15, 1887, the plaintiffs and the defendant were copartners, doing business in the firm name of “ Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Co.” Their business was that of manufacturing and selling lumber. They owned 160 acres of timber land, upon or near which they had built a sawmill.

On August 15, 1887, a written contract between the co-partnership and two of its individual members, namely, Chapin and the defendant, Brown, was executed, by which the copartnership agreed to sell to Chapin and Brown, and the latter agreed to purchase, all the lumber to be sawed from the timber then standing or fallen on the said 160 acres of land, “or that maybe sawed in the mill of the said parties of the first part (the copartnership) from other claims before finishing sawing the timber from the above-described claim” (the 160 acres), at the price of nine dollars per thousand feet, to be delivered in the mill-yard. The parties of the first part further agreed that after the year 1887 they would deliver, as aforesaid, “ an annual amount of one million feet or more at the option of the said second parties.” *502 The agreement contains other stipulations not relevant to the issues in this case.

On the same day (August 15, 1887) another agreement was executed between the copartnership and two others of its members, namely, T. E. Peckinpagh, and Charles Peckinpagh, by which the latter agreed to cut, haul, and saw into lumber all the timber on said 160 acres of land, and to stack the lumber in said mill-yard, for which they were to be paid six dollars per thousand feet. As to the amount of lumber to be sawed, they agreed to be governed by the above-mentioned contract with Chapin and Brown. For the purpose of performing this contract they were to have the use of said mill, but were to keep it in repair. This contract also contains matters not material to this case.

Chapin and Brown assumed to constitute a distinct copartnership, under the firm name of “North Fork Lumber Co.” and transacted the business under their contract with the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company in that name; but at some time prior to January 1,1888, Chapin assigned his interest in their contract with the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company to Brown, who agreed with him to perform all its obligations, and withdrew from the North Fork Lumber Company. Brown continued the business under the contract in the name of North Fork Lumber Company until January, 1888, when he assigned an interest in the contract to John Bar tram; and on May 1,1888, assigned another interest to B. F. Ellis. After these assignments Brown, Bartram, and Ehis constituted the North Fork Lumber Company, and conducted the business with the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company under the lumber contract in that name.

In the fall of 1888 T. E. and Charles Peckinpagh assigned their contract with the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company of August 15, 1887 (above set out) to the North Fork Lumber Company. By the performance of this contract on the part of the Peckinpaghs the North Fork Lumber Company became entitled to *503 receive from the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company six dollars per thousand, feet for manufacturing the lumber which they were to purchase from the latter company at the price of nine dollars per thousand. From and after this assignment by the Peckinpaghs, Charles Peckinpagh was employed by the North Fork Lumber Company at a salary, to do the sawing, and he continued in that position during the years 1890 and 1891.

The object of this action is to dissolve the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company, to compel an accounting between its members, and especially between the co-partnership and the defendant, who, it is alleged, owes the concern a balance of $3,090 for lumber delivered to the North Fork Lumber Company during the year 1890, under the contract first above mentioned, called the “purchasing contract.” The court found him to be individually responsible on that contract, and that he was indebted on that account to the other members of the company as follows: To Charles Peckinpagh, $427.45; to T. E. Peckinpagh, $471.85; to J. E. Chapin, $483.80, amounting to $1,383.18; and consequently that he was indebted to the copartnership (of which he was an equal member) in the sum of $1,844.14. The judgment was in accordance with this finding. The defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

1. The appellant contends that there was a novation of the purchasing contract by which the assignees of portions thereof were substituted for the original contractors (Brown and Chapin) by consent of the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company, and therefore that appellant is not individually liable, as found by the court. It is not claimed, however, that there was any evidence of such novation, or consent thereto, by the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company, other than the facts that the lumber was delivered to and paid for (so far as payments were made) by the North Fork Lumber Company, as constituted at the time of such delivery and payments. Brown never assigned all his interest in the *504 purchasing contract, but remained -a member of the North Fork Lumber Company during all its transactions with the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company. Nor is there any evidence that the latter company ever agreed or consented to discharge him or Chapin from their obligation on that contract, or to accept Bartram or Ellis in their stead for any part of such obligation. No objection on the ground of misjoinder or nonjoinder of parties to the action was made by demurrer or answer, or otherwise, in the court below, nor is any point made here on this ground. All the parties to the purchasing contract, and all the members of the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company were before the court, and, as there is no novation of that contract, neither Bartram nor Ellis was a necessary party to the accounting. The state of accounts between the members of the North Fork Lumber Company is immaterial for any purpose of this action.

2. The only other point requiring special consideration arises on the following additional facts: During the year 1890, while Charles Peckinpagh was doing the sawing for the North Fork Lumber Company, as aforesaid, he and a Mrs. Bearden sold and delivered to the North Fork'Lumber Company a lot of logs cut from other lands than the 160 acres belonging to the Sugar Pine Mill and Lumber Company, and to which the latter company held no title. These logs were sawed by Charles Peckinpagh during 1890, while employed by the North Fork Lumber Company, as aforesaid, and produced 683,923 feet of lumber, which was in the mill-yard, and thence removed by the North Fork Lumber Company. The evidence tends to prove that these logs were sawed with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiffs, and with an understanding between plaintiffs and the North Fork Lumber Company that the latter was to pay the former for the use of their mill in sawing those logs only fifty cents per thousand. C. M. Peckinpagh testified that he and Mrs. Bearden sold those logs to the North Fork Lumber Company; that he as an employee *505

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Bluebook (online)
35 P. 1051, 101 Cal. 500, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapin-v-brown-cal-1894.