Creighton v. Gregory

75 P. 569, 142 Cal. 34, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 892
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1904
DocketL.A. No. 1380.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 75 P. 569 (Creighton v. Gregory) 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
Creighton v. Gregory, 75 P. 569, 142 Cal. 34, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 892 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Plaintiff sues upon a written contract reading as follows:—

“Redlands, Cal., December 1, 1900.
“This is to certify that A. Gregory has bought and Dr. C. J. Creighton has sold his entire crop of navel oranges, now growing on his nineteen-acre place on Brookside Avenue at $1.92 per hundred pounds, delivered at the packing house of A. Grégory at Redlands. All fruit to be accepted and paid for, but it is agreed that C. J. Creighton will use due diligence in picking not to put in any split oranges that are not merchantable. Five hundred dollars ($500) paid down on contract, balance paid cash on delivery of fruit. All fruit to be accepted before March 15th, 1901.
“A. Gregory, Buyer.
• “C. J. Creighton, M. D., Seller.”

In his complaint for a first cause of action, plaintiff alleges delivery under the contract of part of the fruit between December 2 and December 6, 1900, and the balance between March 15, 1901, and April 4, 1901, except certain fruit referred to in a second cause of action. He alleges that there remains unpaid $690.26.

In the second cause of action it is averred that by the terms of said written contract the defendant was liable for certain other oranges which became overripe and decayed because plaintiff was not permitted to deliver the fruit, to plaintiff’s damage of $330.25. Defendant answered, admitting the execution of the alleged written contract; alleged that by its terms defendant was .bound to receive only merchantable oranges; that on January 1, 1901, a severe frost greatly damaged the fruit then on plaintiff’s trees and rendered them unsound and not merchantable, and therefore not within the contract; that thereupon, for the purpose of adjusting the loss by frost, an oral contract was entered into by the parties altering the written contract so that plaintiff should deliver, within a reasonable time, all of the fruit except split oranges, *37 and except such fruit as had become or should become by reason of said frost so split that it could not be delivered, and that defendant would accept the fruit so delivered and pay for the same as follows, to wit: $1.92 for each one hundred pounds of the first fifteen hundred boxes of said oranges delivered, and $1.42 for all of said oranges except the first fifteen hundred boxes delivered as aforesaid; that plaintiff.paid in full for all the said oranges, and in full execution of said oral contract. Facts as to the final payment are set forth which, it is alleged, constituted accord and satisfaction of plaintiff’s claim. The answer to plaintiff’s second cause of action is, that the fruit therein referred to was damaged and unsound by reason of the frost visitation already referred to, and could not be delivered for that reason and for like reason could not have been accepted if tendered.

Finding I is, that the written contract was entered into between the parties, and finding II is, that pursuant to the contract plaintiff delivered, and defendant accepted, between December 2, 1900, and December 6, 1900, 18,230 pounds of oranges, and that no more were delivered until March 15, 1901. These findings are not challenged.

Finding No. Ill is, that about January 1, 1901, a severe frost visited plaintiff’s orchard, and defendant at all times thereafter contended that much of the orange crop was so badly frozen as to be unmerchantable, and that as the damaged oranges could not with certainty be sorted from the good ones, defendant could not be compelled to receive any of them, and in any event was not obliged to accept oranges that had been rendered worthless by frost, and that his- contention was based on legal advice given defendant. The court also found that during the latter part of February, 1901, defendant notified plaintiff, and the latter admitted, that some of the oranges were frozen, and therefore worthless; that on March 5, 1901, defendant stated to plaintiff that defendant was not obliged to take any of said frozen fruit, but was willing to take the first one thousand boxes at the contract price if plaintiff would consent to take $1.42 per hundred pounds for the remainder of the crop. That plaintiff declined this offer, but stated that if defendant would pay him the contract price for fifteen hundred boxes, and would pay him at the rate of $1.42 per *38 hundred pounds for the remainder, he would consent thereto; that defendant accepted this proposition, and so notified plaintiff on March 17, 1901, and that thereafter plaintiff delivered the remainder of the orange crop at defendant’s packinghouse in Redlands. The foregoing facts found in finding III are challenged as not supported by the evidence.

It is found, and the facts are not disputed, that after March 17, 1901, plaintiff delivered the remainder of the crop at defendant’s warehouse in Redlands, and completed the delivery about April 4, 1901; that he delivered 203,187 pounds in all, and defendant paid at different times to plaintiff prior to April 20, 1901, the sum of twenty-four hundred dollars.

Finding VI is, that on April 20, 1901, plaintiff came to defendant to make a final settlement, and plaintiff then insisted on payment at $1.92 per hundred pounds for all the oranges; that the interview was “stormy,” in which defendant accused plaintiff of bad faith, and that defendant reminded plaintiff of his offer as found in finding III, and of defendant’s acceptance, and that he “had received all fruit which he had received after such acceptance on that understanding. Plaintiff then and there admitted the offer and acceptance, but stated that he made the offer for the sole purpose of getting defendant to receive the oranges. Defendant then and there told plaintiff that he would only settle in accordance with the modified agreement, $1.92 per hundred pounds for the first fifteen hundred boxes of oranges, and $1.42 per hundred pounds for the excess over the first fifteen hundred boxes. Plaintiff thereupon departed without malting any response theretoPlaintiff challenges only the last paragraph of this finding marked in italics.

It is then found (finding VII) that’ on the departure of plaintiff, and on the same day (April 20th), defendant had his bookkeeper make out the account between plaintiff and defendant, which showed fifteen hundred boxes (65,174 pounds) at $1.92 (the written contract price), $1,251.34, and 3,190 boxes (138,013 pounds) at $1.42 (the price as modified), $1,959.78, making in all $3,211.12, on which it was stated as paid $2,400, in cash, leaving still due $811.12. This statement was stamped “Paid Api. 20, 1901, A. Gregory,” and together with a check for the balance was mailed to plaintiff, but by *39 an oversight the check was not signed. “On the following day plaintiff returned to defendant’s office with this check,” and called attention to the omission of the signature. "Whereupon defendant affixed his signature thereto and personally handed the check to plaintiff,, who took the check without making any objection thereto. ’ ’ Plaintiff then went away with the check and on April 22, 1901, “received payment thereof at said hank, in full satisfaction of his demand against defendant, and applied the proceeds thereof to his own use.” Plaintiff made no further demand on defendant prior to the commencement of the action May 17, 1901.

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Bluebook (online)
75 P. 569, 142 Cal. 34, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creighton-v-gregory-cal-1904.