Continental Nut Co. v. Slate

217 P.2d 673, 97 Cal. App. 2d 264, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1518
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1950
DocketCiv. 17207
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 217 P.2d 673 (Continental Nut Co. v. Slate) 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
Continental Nut Co. v. Slate, 217 P.2d 673, 97 Cal. App. 2d 264, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1518 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

WOOD, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of dismissal entered upon an order sustaining a demurrer to his amended complaint without leave to amend.

It was alleged in the amended complaint as follows: On October 23, 1946, one Gerhard W. Stiefvater was doing business under the fictitious name of Continental Nut Company at Chico, California. On November 22, 1946, he assigned his interest in said business to the Continental Nut Company, a corporation, and assigned to said corporation all the outstanding claims and debts due said Stiefvater. On October 23, 1946, defendant Louis L. Slate was a general partner of defendant Slate Almond Company, a copartnership. Slate became the president and general manager of defendant California Almond Orchards, Inc., a corporation, some time in April or May, 1946. In April or May, 1946, defendant California Almond Orchards, Inc., a corporation “succeeded to the business and assets” of Slate Almond Company, a copartnership, and said corporation conducted its business in substantially the same manner and through the same persons “as had the said Slate Almond Company, a copartnership.” Slate Almond Company, a copartnership, remained in existence during all times referred to therein and said Slate continued to be a general partner therein. Slate was authorized generally to carry on the business of defendant California Almond Orchards, Inc., a corporation, and to make the contract thereinafter referred to. For a number of years prior to October 23, 1946, said Stiefvater was engaged in the wholesale business of buying and selling almonds and walnuts. For many years prior to said date said Stiefvater made purchases of shelled almonds from the Slate Almond Company, a copartnership, “through said Louis L. Slate representing said copartnership, by oral agreements by telephone or oral conversations, and which said oral agreement was considered to be and constituted the agreement between the parties.” In several transactions consummated between said Stiefvater and said *266 Slate prior to October 23, 1946, there “was no written memoranda” or written agreement setting forth the terms of the purchase but “the same was made solely through oral conversations had on the telephone.” During that time said Stiefvater agreed to buy almonds and said Slate agreed to sell almonds, and deliveries were made under the oral agreement, and “the same” was recognized by said Stiefvater and said Slate as a sufficient contract “to consummate a purchase and sale agreement, ’ ’ and such transactions were accepted by them “as the mode, system and custom of doing business for the purchase of shelled almonds and like commodities without any further written contract being made between the parties. ’ ’ For the period commencing in April, 1946, to and including October 23, 1946, the defendant California Almond Orchards, Inc., a corporation, “permitted and held out said Louis L. Slate, its president, as the person with whom such oral contracts of purchase and sale of shelled almonds may be made by said Gerhard W. Stiefvater.” Such purchases had been made for a period of approximately two years prior to October 23, 1946, and “the condition, method and system of making purchases” remained the same and was followed by said Stiefvater on October 23, 1946, when he made an oral contract with said Slate, ‘‘ as president of defendant California Almond Orchards, Inc., and also as representing the Slate Almond Company, a copartnership” for the purchase of “600/100#” bags of shelter run almonds at 48 cents per pound to be shipped by said California Almond Orchards, Inc., and Slate Almond Company in December, 1946, or January, 1947, at the option of said Stiefvater. That “the oral agreement for the purchase of the same was made by long distance telephone at Oakland, ’ ’ and in said telephone conversation the defendants agreed with said Stiefvater that “they then and there sold to him 600/100 pound bags” of sheller run shelled almonds at 48 cents per pound, and that said purchase and sale was “then and there completed under the oral agreement then made,” and it was further agreed that by reason of the fact that said Stiefvater made the purchase “over the telephone at Oakland,” he was privileged “to further confirm said purchase and sale” by letter and memorandum after his return to Chico, and it was then agreed that “it would be some time around October 30th or 31st 1946.” It was further orally agreed in said telephone conversation that since said Stiefvater was in Oakland no written agreement or present written confirmation of sale was *267 required, but that “it would be understood between them that said sale was then and there made,” and that Stiefvater “could confirm the agreed terms of the purchase and sale and furnish shipping instructions after his return to Chico ’ ’; that in said telephone conversation ]t was understood and agreed, and Stiefvater so advised said Slate, that “he desired the said almonds then purchased by him to fill a definite commitment and order for almonds of that type and description with one of his own customers, ’ ’ that said Slate in making the oral contract knew and understood that said Stiefvater intended to use said almonds for the fulfillment of said commitment, and he represented to Stiefvater that it was “a firm and present sale to him” of said almonds, and that “the same would definitely be made available to him by defendants for the fulfillment of his said commitment” for the price and on the conditions then orally agreed upon.

It was further alleged therein that Stiefvater, pursuant to the agreement, did on October 30, 1946, “mail to defendants a written confirmation for the purchase of said almonds”; Stiefvater relied upon the representations and agreements of Slate and upon the mode, system and custom of doing business with Slate, and agreed to and did purchase said almonds at said price, and Slate agreed to deliver the same as per the oral agreement.

It was also alleged therein that at the time of said purchase and the mailing of the written confirmation said Slate had not advised Stiefvater that the name of the seller had been changed to California Almond Orchards, Inc., a corporation, but that Stiefvater was advised by Slate that the sale “was being consummated by him acting both in behalf of the partnership known as ‘ Slate Almond Company’ and the corporation, the name of which was subsequently ascertained” by Stiefvater to be the California Almond Orchards, Inc., a corporation.

It was also alleged therein that after the confirmation was mailed by Stiefvater to defendants none of the defendants recognized said oral agreement, but repudiated the oral contract and refused after repeated demands to deliver the almonds to plaintiff; that prior to the repudiation of the oral contract by defendants, Stiefvater, relying upon the oral agreement, resold in the course of his business to one of his *268 customers “the said 600/100#” bags of almonds purchased by him from defendants; said resale was the commitment for the almonds referred to in the telephone conversation and was a binding obligation upon plaintiff to deliver the almonds to his customer; plaintiff was obliged to and did deliver to said customer “600/100#” bags of almonds of the same variety “obtained by plaintiff by purchase in the open market.”

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Bluebook (online)
217 P.2d 673, 97 Cal. App. 2d 264, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-nut-co-v-slate-calctapp-1950.