Davis v. Stanislaus County Farmers Union

238 P. 95, 72 Cal. App. 698
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2850.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 238 P. 95 (Davis v. Stanislaus County Farmers Union) 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. Stanislaus County Farmers Union, 238 P. 95, 72 Cal. App. 698 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

Appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment of nonsuit. The complaint alleges that between the seventeenth day .of August and the seventeenth day of Septem *699 ber, 1923, plaintiffs delivered to defendant, at its special instance and request, at the city of Modesto, county of Stanislaus, state of California, twenty-six tons of Thompson seedless grapes owned by plaintiffs, to be sold by said defendant for said plaintiffs in accordance with an express understanding and agreement entered into between the plaintiffs and defendant that said grapes should be sold.by the defendant f. o. b. at the city of Modesto, and not otherwise, and at a price specified by the plaintiffs, and that the proceeds from the sale of said grapes would be promptly paid to the plaintiffs; that the defendant sold said grapes contrary thereto and the plaintiffs thereby suffered the damages alleged.

In support of this contention the plaintiffs offered in evidence a certain marketing contract, in the words and figures following, to wit:

“Marketing Contract.
“Modesto, California, 8/17, 1923.
“This agreement, made by Ed. Eoe, First Party, and Stanislaus County Farmers Union, Inc., Second Party:
“Witnesseth: That first party does hereby agree to market through second party all of the first party’s crop of grapes grown on the ranch of first party located in the County of Stanislaus, State of California, and described as follows: 1 1/2 miles on Califomie Ave. and Panama, for the season of 1923.
“First party agrees to pick and deliver all said crops to the packing house of second party, or to such packing house as second party directs, and second party shall pack all merchantable fruit in such commercial packages as second party believes to be most salable. First party shall pay second party for packing the regular commercial rate therefor, and second party shall be paid the current market price for all shook, loading, bracing or other material so used. If first party desires he may pack said fruit and deliver same to second party on board cars, and second party will, if desired, furnish shook and other packing and loading material therefor. But second party shall not be under obligation to furnish any shook, bracing, loading or other material unless there is obtainable at said time at the packing house of second party sufficient shook and material to take care of the crops of first party. Second party shall be *700 relieved from its obligation to handle said crop in case of car shortage, strikes, embargoes, or any other condition reasonably beyond the control of second party which prevents second party in due course from handling and marketing said crop.
“First party authorizes second party to sell said crop in its own name, collect the proceeds therefor, and deposit the same to its account, and make remittances by check as rapidly as returns are received from sales. Second party shall use due diligence in receiving, packing and marketing all fruit of merchantable quality.
“First party agrees that second party shall deduct from proceeds of sale all packing and loading charges, freight and refrigeration charges, and all other expenses reasonably incurred in the marketing of said fruit, and second party shall also deduct any sums from said proceeds which first party may then be owing to second party.
Variety Tonnage Acres
Thompsons 60 1-
“ Signed in triplicate this 17 day of Aug. 1923.
“Ed Roe, First Party, “Stanislaus County Farmers Union, Inc.,
“By Allen Talbot, Second Party.”

And, in addition, the plaintiffs sought to introduce in evidence testimony of a previous or contemporaneous oral agreement that the grapes referred to in said contract should be sold only f. o. b. at the city of Modesto, and that said grapes should not be shipped on consignment. This testimony, upon objection of counsel for the defendant, was excluded and judgment for nonsuit followed, and this appeal rests simply upon the alleged error of the court in excluding such oral testimony.

On the part of the appellants several sections of the Civil Code are referred to relating to the authority of factors, the duties of factors, and, under what circumstances, directions to factors might be given as to the place of sale, and how instructions given might be subsequently changed. These sections of the code and also the eases cited set forth the law as we understand it in relation to factors,, but, for the reasons hereinafter stated, seem inapplicable to this case. Oral testimony, as hereafter shown, is admissible to supply *701 a missing item in a written instrument only when the written agreement, in and of itself, is not complete, and such testimony does not contravene any part of the writing.

The contract in question provides, first, that the first party agrees to market through the second party the grapes in question, to pick and deliver the same and that the second party shall pack all merchantable fruit in commercial packages. The second paragraph then sets forth that the first party shall pay the second party for packing the regular commercial rate therefor, and the said second party shall be paid the current market price for all shook, etc. Provision is then made for packing by the first party, the second party furnishing the shook. This paragraph then sets forth that the second party shall be relieved from its obligation to handle said crop in ease of car shortages, strikes, embargoes, and other conditions reasonably beyond the control of the second party which prevent the second party in due course from handling and marketing said crop. This paragraph providing for the second party marketing said crop and also specifying that it shall be relieved, under certain conditions, plainly imports that the grapes are to be shipped for the purpose of marketing, else there would have been no reason for the introduction of a clause relieving the defendant from liability in the event of a car shortage. The third paragraph authorizes the second party to sell the grapes in its own name, collect the proceeds therefrom, and deposit the same to defendant’s account, and make remittances by check as rapidly as returns are received from sales, the said party of the second part to use due diligence in receiving, packing and marketing all fruit of merchantable quality, and then, lastly, it is agreed that the second party shall deduct from the proceeds of sales packing and loading charges, freight and refrigeration charges and all other expenses reasonably incurred in the marketing of said fruit, and said second party shall also deduct any sums from said proceeds which first party may then be owing second party, This paragraph is certainly in direct conflict with the idea that the grapes were to be sold for cash f. o. b., in the city of Modesto. Under such circumstances, there would be no freight and refrigeration charges, nor would there be any marketing charges or expenses, as evidently contemplated by the agreement, which we have set forth. As we read the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 95, 72 Cal. App. 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-stanislaus-county-farmers-union-calctapp-1925.