Dessert Seed Co. v. Garbus

153 P.2d 184, 66 Cal. App. 2d 838, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 779
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1944
DocketCiv. 3302
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 184 (Dessert Seed Co. v. Garbus) 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
Dessert Seed Co. v. Garbus, 153 P.2d 184, 66 Cal. App. 2d 838, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 779 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

Plaintiffs brought this action to specifically enforce an oral contract involving the sale of onion seed by *841 defendants to plaintiffs or for damages for failure of defendants to perform.

Plaintiff Dessert Seed Company was doing business as such in Imperial County. Defendant company was operating a produce business in Los Angeles and did business in Imperial County and elsewhere. Defendants purchased a growing crop of onions on a 50-acre tract in Imperial County for $4,500 about April 23, 1942. They harvested about 10 acres of the crop and due to a fall of the market decided to raise and sell the rest for seed. According to plaintiff Dessert’s testimony, about May 8, 1942, he visited the property, met defendant Garbus, asked him if the crop was for sale, and inquired about the price. Garbus fixed it at $3,400, payable $500 down and the balance later. Dessert left his card and told him if he would take less, to notify him. On May 14, 1942, Garbus came to plaintiffs’ place of business, again offered the crop for $3,400, but plaintiff stated he would only pay $2,000. Thereafter plaintiffs found an outlet for onion seed through government agencies, and on May 19, 1942, Dessert called Garbus at Los Angeles by phone and asked him if he still wanted to sell the patch for $3,400, accept $500 down, and the balance on July 6th. Garbus replied that he did want to sell and would accept the amount suggested.

Plaintiff testified that after a second telephone call that same evening he asked Garbus if that was a “firm sale"; that he told Garbus he had sold some of the seed and asked if it was all right to go ahead and “sell on" it; that Garbus stated it was and to get the papers out to him in the morning. Gar-bus denied this.

That same day plaintiff Dessert wrote Garbus a letter, setting forth the terms of the telephone conversation, and asked him to sign an enclosed copy for confirmation. On the following day, May 20th, Dessert confirmed the sale to the government agency. He then made a check for $500, executed a note for $2,900, payable to defendant company on July 6, 1942, and sent them to defendants with a letter reading “. . . We herewith «confirm purchase from you . . . Purchase Price . . . $3400.00 . . . inclosing our cheek for $500.00 along with our note for $2900.00 due July 6th. Kindly initial and return the extra copy of this letter for our files."

Dessert, without the knowledge of Garbus, then went to the property to look it over and found employees of defendants working there. (These men were working under a written *842 agreement with Garbus for a 25 per cent interest in the net proceeds from the sale of the crop.) He told them he had bought the onions and directed them to cease weeding them. He paid one of the employees $20 to irrigate one of the fields, paid a Mr. Cosulas, owner of the land under lease, $75 for an extension of the lease, paid Cosulas’s agent $25 for some purpose, and secured a water card for the premises. Garbus contends that these expenditures were unnecessary because he had previously made proper arrangements for all of these items, under his purchase agreement. On May 23d defendant Garbus came to plaintiffs’ office, laid the note, check and papers on the counter and told Dessert “that isn’t a deal, my partner wouldn’t go through with it ... I didn’t sign anything.” Plaintiff Dessert told Garbus that he was “in a pretty bad spot” because he had sold the seed to the government and had to put up a bond guaranteeing delivery. After some further conversation, Garbus walked out. Dessert retained the note, check and letter and subsequently tore his signature off of the instruments. In a letter dated May 19th, but mailed seven days later, Dessert attempted to negotiate another and different contract for the purchase and sale of the onion seed, instead of the onion crop. The letter contained a new cheek for $3,400 and a carbon copy of the original letter in which a new offer of $3,400 for the onion seed was made and providing that onions left after harvesting would belong to defendants. Then follows this quotation: “If this letter states your understanding of our agreement, as it now stands (italics ours), please confirm by signing on the left below and return to us.” “Confirmed by P. & G. Produce Company, By -.” On May 27th Garbus wired: “. . . Not interested your deal, let’s call whole thing off.” Garbus wrote Dessert and returned his check and confirmation letter, forwarded under the counteroffer, unsigned. In reply Dessert wired: “I have kept the terms of the contract you entered into with me and I am standing on it.” There is evidence of several oral proposals made in reference to the sale of the onion seed between May 19th and June 4th. Garbus wired Dessert that his partner agreed on $5,000 and would accept $1,000 and a note due July 6th for $4,000. On the same day Dessert wired him “. . . We bought this from you on May 19 for $3400 . . . Will send you $1,000 and note for balance of $2400.” On June 4th Dessert wired Garbus: “. . . As a matter of compromise only ...” will pay $5,000, *843 $1,000 now and balance of $4,000 July 6th, “otherwise will stand on our contract.” Defendants expended considerable money and employed many men to finish harvesting the seed crop. This action followed.

On application of plaintiffs, under their attachment, a receiver was appointed by the court to take charge of the onion seed. When judgment was entered for defendants the seed was disposed of pursuant to an order of the trial court and no longer remained a subject of the contract which plaintiffs seek to have specifically performed.

The trial court found that the defendants, during all the times mentioned in the complaint, were the owners of the onion crop described and of all the seed produced therefrom; that defendants, on May 19, 1942, entered into an oral agreement with plaintiffs for the sale of the onion crop for $3,400, $500 of which was, under the terms of the oral agreement, to have been paid forthwith, and the remaining balance of $2,900 was to have been paid on July 6, 1942, by executing and delivering a promissory note in that amount; that the oral agreement was subsequently reduced to writing and submitted to defendants for acceptance but that they repudiated the oral agreement and refused to make or sign any written contract for the sale of the onion crop or seed; that on May 23, 1942, defendants returned the check and note and notified plaintiffs that they were unwilling to comply with the terms of the oral agreement which they had made over the telephone; that in reliance upon the oral agreement, plaintiffs accepted certain orders from the government for the purchase of onion seed and made definite commitments to it to sell part of the onion seed, which defendants orally agreed to sell to plaintiffs ; that since May 19th, plaintiffs were able and willing to comply with the terms of the oral agreement and that defendants were unwilling and refused to comply therewith.

The court found that there never was at any time any written agreement for the sale of the onion crop as required in section 1624a of the Civil Code; that defendants were the owners of the crop and seed and entitled to recover the same and that plaintiffs never did have any right, title or interest therein; that plaintiffs take nothing by their complaint and defendants recover from plaintiffs their costs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P.2d 184, 66 Cal. App. 2d 838, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dessert-seed-co-v-garbus-calctapp-1944.