Chase v. Van Camp Sea Food Co., Inc.

292 P. 179, 109 Cal. App. 38, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 504
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 10, 1930
DocketDocket No. 138.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 292 P. 179 (Chase v. Van Camp Sea Food Co., Inc.) 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
Chase v. Van Camp Sea Food Co., Inc., 292 P. 179, 109 Cal. App. 38, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 504 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

HAINES, J., pro tem.

The complaint in this cause alleges that on or about June 10, 1927, appellant Van Camp Sea Food Company, Inc., entered into an agreement with respondent, W. 0. Chase and one O. W. Chase, both of whom were originally plaintiffs, whereby they were to work for appellant in fishing and cleaning fish; that between June 10, 1927, and November 1, 1927, the said W. O. Chase and *41 O. W. Chase did work for appellant in fishing and cleaning fish for it; that, as consideration of such work to be performed by the Chases, appellant agreed to pay them $1.50 per ton for all fish which they should clean for it and “an additional 10% of all fish caught and delivéred to defendant (appellant) company from July 15, 1927, to October 27, 1927, amounting to One Thousand Six Hundred Seventy Two Dollars and Seventy Cents ($1672.70) ”. This latter allegation is, in itself, unintelligible, but other averments follow which, construed in the light of the evidence, seem to show its meaning to have been that appellant agreed to pay the Chases for such fish as they should catch and deliver to it, at the same rates at which packers in the region should from time to time be buying fish from other fishermen, and, in addition thereto, a bonus of ten per cent computed thereon, and that on that basis the aggregate price of the fish which the Chases caught and delivered to appellant in pursuance of the agreement, figured without the bonus, came to $1672.70, and, therefore, that, in addition to that sum, the Chases became, under the arrangement entitled to a bonus of $167.27. There is no allegation in the terms either of the quantity of fish delivered under the agreement or of the price per ton to be paid for all or any of it nor of the quantity of fish cleaned by the Chases or either of them. Performance of the agreement by the Chases is alleged, and part payment of the agreed compensation, but a balance, inclusive of the $167.25 bonus, aggregating $2,469.54 of money earned under the contract is claimed as still due, owing and unpaid from appellant to respondent W. O. Chase and the said O. W. Chase.

The answer admits an agreement entered into on or about June 10, 1927, between appellant and the two Chases whereby the Chases were to work for appellant in fishing and cleaning fish, states that the period of employment was to be from July 10, 1927, to November 1, 1927, and admits appellant’s agreement to pay $1.50 per ton “for hauling any fish cleaned” by the Chases (it being claimed in appellant’s closing brief that the use of the word “hauling” is a typographical error, the intention having been to admit the agreement to pay at said rate “for all or any fish” so cleaned). The answer, however, denies the bonus arrangement and denies any indebtedness to the Chases, by which it is ap *42 parent that the intention is to deny that anything payable to them under the terms of the contract remains unpaid, and denies all other allegations of the complaint not specifically admitted.

On the trial it appeared from the testimony of respondent W. 0. Chase who is the father of the said O. W. Chase, that a contract which was placed in evidence, consisting of a written offer by W. 0. Chase, accepted in writing by appellant, was made on April 1, 1926, whereby the elder Chase agreed to fish for appellant exclusively for five years beginning June 1, 1926, and to “split”, which in the parlance of the trade means to “clean”, all appellant’s “round tunas” during the life of the agreement, for which it was agreed that the said W. 0. Chase should be paid on demand “the regular prices for fish as obtained between the fishermen and the canneries on the date of delivery”, with ten per cent additional as a bonus, and also $1.50 per ton of fish “split” for doing the “splitting”. The contract provided that either party might terminate it by a notice in writing given to the other between May 1st and June 1st of any year of its life, but at no other time. It also undertook to provide, in the event of its breach by either party, for $1,000 liquidated damages to the other.

Respecting this contract, respondent W. 0. Chase testified as follows: “Q. ... Is this the one you claim to have been working under all that time,—this agreement of April 1, 1926? A. Yes, sir. Q. There never was any new one made? A. No, sir.”

He goes on to say that a new arrangement was twice discussed, but never made. On another occasion during the examination of this respondent the court remarked: “There is another complication. This suit is ‘W. 0. Chase and O. W. Chase.’ This contract seems to be only ‘W. 0. Chase.’ ”

The witness responded: “W. 0. Chase and O. W. Chase were partners. We were both the same thing.”

Elsewhere, however, he said: “I hired O. W. Chase to help me split the fish and paid him one-half of what we received out of it, and still owe him for the balance of his half of what’s coming.”

0. W. Chase, the son, testified with respect to his arrangements with his father: “We agreed to work on a 50-50 basis *43 and split this money between us 50-50 for all the fish that we cleaned.”

And again: “Q. Do you claim any part of this money that your father is suing for yourself % A. Half of it should be mine. It is .supposed to be mine—50 per cent. That is the way we worked.”

At the close of the plaintiff’s case in chief and while a motion for nonsuit was pending, plaintiffs’ counsel, with leave of the court, dismissed as to the son, O. W. Chase, leaving as the only plaintiff the respondent W. O. Chase. No leave to amend the complaint so as to make the date alleged as that of the contract conform to the date of the writing nor to allege that appellant contracted with W. 0. Chase alone, was asked, or granted and no amendment made. On the completion of the trial the court made findings to the effect that, on or about June 10, 1927, appellant employed respondent W. 0. Chase (the father) for the period extending from June 10, 1927, to November 1, 1927, to clean, catch and deliver fish to it at appellant’s place of business in San Diego and agreed to pay him $1.50 per ton for all fish cleaned by him there, and agreed, also, to pay him a bonus of ten per cent on the purchase price of all fish caught by him and delivered to appellant there between July 15, 1927, and October 27, 1927; that between June 10, 1927, and November 1, 1927, respondent under said contract cleaned there for appellant 3,227.9 tons of fish, and between July 15, 1927, and October 15, 1927, delivered there to appellant “a quantity of fish the purchase price of which amounted to” $1672.70. The court further found that there became due under the contract from appellant to respondent W. O. Chase for such cleaning of fish $4,840.85 (there being an error of $1 in the computation, .since, on the basis adopted, it would figure $4,841.85), and for fish delivered, $1672.70, and for the bonus on the latter sum $167.27; making in the aggregate $6,681.82 (this being $1 more than the footing of the three items as given in the findings, which error corrects the other error in computation just referred to). It was further found that on said sum there had been paid altogether $4,411.05, leaving a balance due from appellant to respondent O. W. Chase of $2,270.77. Judgment against appellant and in favor of respondent W. 0.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 P. 179, 109 Cal. App. 38, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-van-camp-sea-food-co-inc-calctapp-1930.