Davis v. Basalt Rock Co.

237 P.2d 338, 107 Cal. App. 2d 436, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1923
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1951
DocketCiv. 7912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 237 P.2d 338 (Davis v. Basalt Rock 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
Davis v. Basalt Rock Co., 237 P.2d 338, 107 Cal. App. 2d 436, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1923 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

*438 VAN DYKE, J.

This is an action whereby plaintiffs and appellants sought to have declared the respective rights and obligations of the parties to a written contract. By additional counts contained in the complaint, and based upon their construction of the contract, they further sought to recover damages for past breaches by defendant and respondent. Throughout the trial plaintiffs and appellants claimed that the contract was uncertain and ambiguous. They sought to introduce, and were by the trial court permitted to introduce, evidence of the facts and circumstances attending the execution of the contract as an aid to its interpretation. We think the contract was sufficiently ambiguous to justify the introduction of such evidence. The result is that this court upon appeal is bound by the interpretation of the trial court where it is reasonable and is supported by the evidence introduced. (Woodbine v. Van Horn, 29 Cal.2d 95, 104 [173 P.2d 17]; Orillo v. Curtola, 91 Cal.App.2d 263, 272 [204 P.2d 941] ; Nuland v. Pruyn, 99 Cal.App.2d 603, 609 [222 P.2d 261].)

The contract was executed on May 6, 1938, between Soule Steel Company, J. E. Davis and Alice Maud Davis, his wife, as first parties, and defendant and respondent Basalt Rock Company, Incorporated, as second party. We shall refer to the parties as Soule, Davis and Basalt. It recited that Soule and Davis were the owners of an option to purchase certain real property in Napa County which would expire unless exercised before noon of the following day, May 7, 1938; that Soule and Davis would assign their option rights to Basalt which would in time exercise the option and purchase the real property at the option price of $7,500. Basalt agreed that over a period of 50 years it would selleto Soule and Davis or either of them ‘1 as they or either of them may require, such amounts of Pumicite and Vesicular Basalt of any size for plastering purposes and Pumicite and Vesicular Basalt for any other purposes of a size up to a maximum of three-sixteenths inch (3/16) mesh.” The agreed price for the material to be sold was $2.50 per ton in bulk or in sacks or in other containers furnished by the purchasers, the price being declared to be “based on a blend of Pumicite and Vesicular Basalt in accordance with the formula attached.” The buyers were permitted variations in the formula both as to sizes and as to the percentages of materials in the blend. The buyers could also require still greater variation and could change the materials in the mixture provided they paid the additional cost of pro *439 duction. The contract declared that ‘1 all references to Pumicite are intended to refer to the Pumicite contained on the real property hereinabove mentioned, but Pumicite of equal quality may be substituted therefor”; that references to vesicular basalt were intended to refer to the vesicular basalt contained on Basalt’s real property located near Napa, permission being given to substitute other vesicular basalt of equal quality. It is not necessary at this point to further detail the contractual provisions.

It appeared from the evidence and the court found that the real property to be purchased by Basalt, commonly known as the King deposit, was composed in greater part of fragmentary pumice. Specifically the court found that ‘ ‘ contained in said real property is a deposit of an agglomerate of frag-mental volcanic debris and pyroclastic material, consisting in large part of fragments of pumice, subordinate portion of fragments of nonpumieeous lavas varying in size from fine sand up to fragments several feet in diameter, and a mineral cementing the aforesaid fragments together containing silica, ferric oxide, alumina, lime, magnesia and moisture” and “that the pumice in said material has been referred to by all persons involved herein as pumicite and is herein referred to as pumicite” and “that said deposit contains approximately four million tons of said material above the present floor level of the quarry and extends to unknown depths. ’ ’ Basalt had for years prior to the date of the contract been engaged in the extensive production of aggregates, including materials for concrete mix. It had a number of properties from which such material was taken and owned land from which it procured a vesicular basalt referred to in the contract. It had conducted many experiments through the years concerning the materials it was producing and had use for the material contained in the King Deposit. Soule and Davis on the other hand had likewise been experimenting for some time, endeavoring to fix upon a method of producing from the vesicular pumice and basalt found in the Napa region a lightweight plaster mix. Basalt was not particularly interested in plaster such as Soule and Davis were endeavoring to produce and they in turn were not interested especially in concrete mix or building block material produced and sold by Basalt. They had. not completed their determinations as to a proper formula for plaster mix, but believed themselves close to that result. The formula referred to in the contract was not even ready when *440 the contract was signed, but was completed and attached to the contract about a week thereafter. It read as follows:

“By Volume
40% pumicite—Minus 10 mesh and Plus 20 mesh
20% Vesicular Basalt—same mesh as above
20% Antigorite
20% River Sand”

Geologists testified that pumice might be called a volcanic glass froth so permeated by vesicles of various sizes down to microscopic sizes as to render the mass in many instances light enough to float in water, and that vesicular basalt possessed the same sort of vesicles but was generally heavier than pumice; that the chief use of pumice was as an abrasive. Antigorite was defined as a laminated stone.

Appellants contended that under the contract they were entitled to purchase pumice from the subject land which had been selectively mined so as to be free from any other substance such as the nonpumiceous lavas and the cementing material above referred to; that Basalt was obligated to so purify and process the material in the deposit as to produce a first quality pure pumice with like requirements as to the vesicular basalt from Basalt’s own land and that it was further obligated to furnish to them at the contract price the materials referred to in the formula “selectively mined, mixed and dried all at its cost and expense. ’ ’ The issue as to drying arose because it appeared that in the natural state the material in the deposits contained a great deal of water which appellants contended must be eliminated.

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Related

Davis v. Basalt Rock Co.
250 P.2d 254 (California Court of Appeal, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P.2d 338, 107 Cal. App. 2d 436, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-basalt-rock-co-calctapp-1951.