Culley v. Cochran

62 P.2d 168, 17 Cal. App. 2d 498, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 602
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 13, 1936
DocketCiv. 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 P.2d 168 (Culley v. Cochran) 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
Culley v. Cochran, 62 P.2d 168, 17 Cal. App. 2d 498, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 602 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

Plaintiff instituted this action to recover from the defendant, Constable of Westmoreland Township, Imperial County, the value of 24 tons of hay which it was alleged the plaintiff owned and the defendant had wrongfully converted. Defendant’s answer denied that plaintiff owned the hay and that defendant had taken it from plaintiff’s possession. Trial of the action resulted in the rendition of a judgment in plaintiff’s favor from which this appeal has been taken.

Appellant presents three contentions in his effort to secure reversal of the judgment. These contentions are: First, that a certain written instrument received in evidence during the trial of the action is a lease contract; second, that the evidence showed that appellant in taking the hay acted under written instructions to attach the same in another action and without knowledge that any one other than the defendant in the attachment action claimed to be the owner of the hay or entitled to its possession; third, that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the trial court’s finding that appellant converted 24 tons and 340 pounds of hay. It is apparent that all of the aforesaid contentions in effect resolve themselves into an attack upon the trial court’s findings on the familiar ground of evidentiary insufficiency.

Examination of the transcript on appeal demonstrates that the following facts were developed by the evidence submitted to the trial court: Approximately 24 tons of baled hay were seized by appellant as constable under a writ of attachment issued by a justice of the peace in an action entitled Ross *500 v. Orr, filed in said justice court. Appellant in attaching the hay acted in accordance with written instructions given him by the plaintiff in said action. At the time the hay was attached it was taken from a certain ranch known as the Goodsen ranch and the defendants in said attachment suit were then residing in a dwelling house located on said ranch. The ranch had been leased by the owner to respondent herein and the latter had entered into a written contract with respect to it with the Orrs to which contract more explicit reference will hereafter be made. The hay which was attached was grown on the Goodsen ranch and all expense incident to its cultivation and harvesting including the cost of irrigation was borne by respondent.

The written contract to which reference has been made was entered into between respondent and the Orrs, defendants in the attachment action, on July 30, 1927. This instrument, after making reference to a prior contract between respondent and Dan Orr with respect to the maintenance of a dairy herd by Dan Orr on a ranch operated by respondent, contains a lpngthy description of a certain transaction which had occurred between Orr and his wife and respondent whereby the latter sold to the former 36 dairy cows and other personal property and the buyers thereupon executed two promissory notes secured by chattel mortgages on the entire dairy herd owned by them. The agreement then recites that the prior contract had been canceled and that the Orrs would move their dairy herd and equipment to the Goodsen ranch and would there maintain the herd consisting of approximately 78 milk cows on the terms and conditions specified in the present contract. Certain mutual promises of the parties to the agreement are then set out. By them the Orrs agreed that they would maintain their dairy herd on the Goodsen ranch and would deliver the milk produced by said herd to any creamery in Imperial county designated by respondent for the latter’s credit and account and that payment for the milk thus delivered should be made directly to respondent. Respondent on his part agreed that he would furnish the Goodsen ranch to the Orrs for their use in maintaining thereon the dairy herd until July 15', 1929, unless he should sooner be prevented therefrom through no fault of his own and that he would disburse the proceeds received by him monthly from the sale of milk in the pay *501 ment of certain designated charges. The first of these charges is a monthly payment of $200 and interest on the first chattel mortgage note executed by the Orrs. The second charge specified is the payment to respondent himself of the sum of $166.67, which is expressly stated to be the monthly rental of the Goodsen ranch which respondent as lessee of said ranch is obliged to pay to the owner thereof. The third item is the sum of $175 to be paid to the Orrs. It is then provided that any amount remaining after payment of the above-mentioned items shall be applied on the interest due and payable on the second chattel mortgage note.

The uncontradicted evidence further disclosed that on March 16, 1928, the Orrs revoked the order which they had given to the creamery to pay over to respondent the proceeds of milk sales, and on April 12, 1928, the dairy herd which was being maintained on the Goodsen ranch was taken in a claim and delivery action by the mortgagee in the first chattel mortgage and sold. It was also shown that after the cattle were removed the Orrs did.no work on the ranch either by way of cultivating the alfalfa crop which was then growing thereon or in irrigating the crop or in cleaning the irrigating ditches although they continued to reside in the dwelling house located on the ranch. It also appeared that on April 20, 1928, respondent made written demand on the Orrs to surrender possession of the Goodsen ranch to him and to quit the premises within three days and on May 4, 1928, he instituted an action in unlawful detainer against them wherein he alleged that the reasonable rental value of the ranch was $166.67 per month and demanded restitution of the premises together with judgment for two months’ rent at the above-mentioned rate and that such rental be trebled. It further appeared that after trial of the action thus brought respondent was permitted to amend his original complaint to conform to the evidence and that it was alleged in the amended pleading that after April 20, 1928, respondent had secured possession of all the premises except the farm buildings which the Orrs continued to occupy. It was further alleged that the reasonable rental value of that part of the premises which the Orrs continued to occupy was $25 per month and the prayer of the pleading was for judgment in the amount, of $50 for two months’ rental and that such sum be trebled.

*502 A study of the record on appeal impels the conclusion that the trial court interpreted the written agreement which was entered into between respondent and the Orrs on July 30, 1927, as not constituting an agreement of lease. In thus interpreting the agreement we are constrained to declare that the court did not err. It is apparent that the principal object of the agreement was the maintenance by the Orrs of a specified herd of dairy cattle to the end that the proceeds derived from the sale of milk produced by the herd should be delivered to respondent to be disbursed by him in the payment of designated charges.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P.2d 168, 17 Cal. App. 2d 498, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culley-v-cochran-calctapp-1936.