Cossins v. Hershel California Fruit Products Co.

284 P. 1038, 103 Cal. App. 524, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 819
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 29, 1930
DocketDocket No. 3948.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 284 P. 1038 (Cossins v. Hershel California Fruit Products 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.

Bluebook
Cossins v. Hershel California Fruit Products Co., 284 P. 1038, 103 Cal. App. 524, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 819 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

*526 FINCH, P. J.

This is an action for damages for the defendant’s alleged refusal to accept and pay for tomatoes raised by the plaintiff and his assignors during the year 1926, and which the defendant had agreed to purchase, and for balances due for tomatoes delivered and accepted by the defendant. The complaint contains five counts, based on five separate contracts. The plaintiff is the seller named in the first contract, A. F. Donald and F. Ascrizzi in the second, C. C. Burnett and P. Giordano in the third, E. Leventini in the fourth and Thomas Lazini in the fifth. Judgment for damages was entered in favor of the plaintiff on the first four counts and for the defendant on the fifth. The judgment is in favor of the plaintiff also for the amount which the answer admits was due for tomatoes accepted by defendant. The defendant has appealed from the judgment in favor of the plaintiff.

Each contract provides that the buyer “has bought” the crop of “Early Anna” tomatoes to be grown by the seller upon a specified acreage during the year 1926 at $14.10 per ton, delivered f. o. b. cars “as hereafter directed by buyer.” The defendant supplied the sellers with seed, a part thereof being of a different variety from that specified in the contract. This departure from the terms of the contract appears to have been made by mutual consent and is not material here. It seems to have been understood between the parties that the tomatoes were to be delivered at Peltier station.

Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings in favor of the plaintiff. Some parts of the appellant’s argument go to the weight of the evidence rather than its insufficiency Since the function of an appellate court in this respect is to determine merely whether there is substantial evidence to support the findings, it is deemed sufficient to state the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff.

Early in July, when from two to four tons of tomatoes per acre were ripe and ready for market, the defendant refused to take them. This refusal constituted a plain breach of the agreements with the growers. However, at the defendant’s suggestion, the growers sold their tomatoes, as they ripened, to other buyers, until the defendant opened *527 its cannery, and they have made no claim for damages arising out of this first breach.

The defendant’s cannery was opened in the early part of August, and during the remainder of that month the defendant accepted the tomatoes shipped to it by the growers, making deductions, however, for those claimed to be of inferior quality. The cannery is located at San Jose. At the inception of the transactions in question, the defendant employed J. S. Triolo, who was engaged in the fruit and produce business in the city of Stockton, “to contract these tomatoes, supervise the loading, pay for the labor of loading, for the sum of 75 cents a ton on all contracts,” and also to inspect the tomatoes before shipment and “keep a proper daily report of each car that is shipped.” He or his assistant, Victor Ghiorzo, inspected all shipments of tomatoes involved in this action made during August but, apparently, not to the satisfaction of the defendant. About September 3d, the defendant employed John Vasconcellos to inspect the tomatoes of the Peltier growers. His first act was to reject tomatoes offered for shipment by the growers mentioned in the first three counts. The plaintiff testified that those so offered by him “were in good condition. They were sorted tomatoes, picked very carefully . . . and sorted. . . . We threw all the bad tomatoes in the ditches, absolutely trying to get by the inspector, and they were excellent tomatoes, in fine shape, solid; the boxes were well filled; they were not mashed. . . . I got plenty of instructions through Mr. Triolo from Mr. Hershel (president and general manager of defendant) to keep me from moving my 510 tons. . . . He gave me the instructions Hershel sent word that he didn’t want anything more to do with Cossins at all, he would receive no more tomatoes from his ranch. . . . He told me that about the second day after the inspection took place.” Triolo testified that shortly after September 3d Hershel “told me he wanted nothing more to do with Cossins.” Hershel’s statement appears to have been induced by violent language and conduct of plaintiff towards Vasconcellos at the time of the inspection mentioned. Triolo testified, without objection, as follows: “I said to him, ‘you are a tomato inspector?’ ‘Well,’ he says, ‘No, I can’t say I am. . . . I am in the tire business in San Jose.’ I said, ‘You have no experience in growing tomatoes or anything?’ He said, *528 ‘No, I have not, but I know just what I want to accept.’ . . . On one particular occasion I . . . brought the subject up, what kind of' tomatoes he (Cossins) had to deliver. Mr. Vasconcellos at that time informed me that they had to be perfect, no deductions were allowed. . . . He told me he would stand for no dockage at Peltier. ’ ’

Mrs. Burnett testified Vasconcellos said he could not accept the Burnett tomatoes inspected at the time mentioned “because they are not 100% pure. I told him, ‘You cannot raise anything like that.’ He said, ‘Well, I know that, but that is my instructions, not to take them unless they are 100% pure.’ . . . Perhaps not that word, but ‘perfect.’ . . . He said the tomatoes were good, but he could not take them because they were not 100% perfect.” Mr. Burnett testified that at another time Vasconcellos inspected two loads of tomatoes belonging to the witness and “said, ‘I reject these.’ I said, ‘What is the matter, those tomatoes are all right. ’ . . . He said, ‘ Those tomatoes are all right, those tomatoes are good, but my instructions are that they must be at Peltier 100% perfect. At Stockton I am allowed to make deductions and let them go on, but at Peltier they must be 100% perfect. ... I am sorry, I am not anything but a hired man, I must follow my instructions.’ ” Another witness testified that the tomatoes so rejected were “all right tomatoes, all in good condition, . . . Good, merchantable tomatoes.” Ghiorzo testified that Vasconcellos found a few of Burnett’s tomatoes “kind of cracked, and some with green ends at the stem, and he said that he could not accept those tomatoes under his directions. . . . That is, he could not accept them unless they were 100% perfect.” Triolo testified: “An Early Anna tomato has a characteristic or individuality, no matter how ripe it gets, there is always at the butt end of the tomato a sort of greenish spot. . . . That tomato will rot and still the green spot will be on it.” It was stipulated at the trial that the Early Anna tomato will not “ripen up so that the green spot where the stem has been will disappear and turn red.”

The plaintiff and his assignor Burnett made no further effort to deliver their tomatoes to the defendant, but sold as many of them as they could find markets for to other buyers at the best price obtainable, which was lower than the defendant had agreed to pay therefor, the market price *529 having fallen below such agreed price. The court gave judgment for damages in the amount of the agreed price of the unsold tomatoes, less the estimated cost of picking and delivering them.

The appellant contends that the growers did not make sufficient tender of the tomatoes to put the buyer in default.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Southern Pacific Milling Co. v. Billiwhack Stock Farm, Ltd.
122 P.2d 650 (California Court of Appeal, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 P. 1038, 103 Cal. App. 524, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cossins-v-hershel-california-fruit-products-co-calctapp-1930.