Dinning v. Zellerbach Paper Co.

59 P.2d 880, 15 Cal. App. 2d 623, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 25, 1936
DocketCiv. No. 9670
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 P.2d 880 (Dinning v. Zellerbach Paper 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
Dinning v. Zellerbach Paper Co., 59 P.2d 880, 15 Cal. App. 2d 623, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 111 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The plaintiff brought an action to recover from the defendants damages in the amount of $4,500 for the breach of an alleged oral contract to employ him as broker in effecting insurance on a number of automobiles and auto-trucks owned by one or other of the defendants or by their employees.

The contract alleged was that on or about March 23, 1928, plaintiff promised and agreed with defendants to secure for them “prior consideration or preference” in the purchase of paper by a group of corporations including, among others, the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, in consideration of a promise on the part of the defendants that, as long as such prior consideration and preference was accorded them, they would place with the Pacific Indemnity Company, through plaintiff as broker, all insurance which they might carry, on said automobiles and auto-trucks. The plaintiff alleged performance of the agreement on his part, and that up to the time of bringing suit the plaintiff had secured for the defendants said preference in the purchase of paper, but that since May 1, 1931, the defendants have placed said insurance through another broker, resulting in the loss to plaintiff of commissions.

The cause was tried by the court, which made findings to the effect that the defendants had not made the promise alleged, and also that the plaintiff had not performed the promise upon which he bases his right of recovery.

The plaintiff moved for a new trial upon the ground, among others, of newly discovered evidence which he could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the trial. The motion was denied, and the plaintiff has appealed from the judgment entered against him upon the findings. As grounds for the appeal he contends that the evidence sustains neither the finding that there was no contract between the parties nor that the plaintiff failed of performance, [625]*625and also assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to grant a new trial.

1. The record discloses that in and prior to the year 1928 defendant Zellerbach Paper Company and Zellerbach Corporation (predecessor of defendant Crown Zellerbach Corporation) were the owners of a number of automobiles and auto-trucks upon which they were carrying insurance in the Zurich Insurance Company, which had been effected through Marsh and McLennan (a corporation) as broker. The policies of insurance were to expire on May 1st of that year; and the plaintiff, who was in business relations with Swett and Crawford, the Pacific Coast agent of the Pacific Indemnity Company, conceived the idea that he would endeavor to have said insurance transferred to that company upon the expiration of the existing policies, with himself as broker in the transaction. He accordingly some time during the month of February visited the offices of defendants. At the trial the plaintiff as a witness in his own behalf testified concerning this visit. He stated that at that time he saw Mr. E. M. Mills, Mr. M. R. Higgins and Mr. I. Zellerbach, all officers of one or other or of both the defendant corporations; that “I asked them if they were prepared to turn over the automobile insurance to me as broker for placing it in the Pacific Indemnity Company in return for my securing for them, for the Zellerbach interests, a preference in the purchase of paper by a group of companies known as the Lee Phillips group . . . , and I asked that the placement of the insurance be given to the Pacific Indemnity Com - pany, and it would justify them in taking the business away from the then insurance carrier. I said that I would like to have them turn that business over to me as broker as of May 1, 1928. They discussed the proposition among them ■ selves. I believe Mr. Higgins asked Mr. Mills if he thought well of the idea, and Mr. Mills said he did; and he then asked Mr. Zellerbach what he thought of it, and Mr. Zellerbach thought it was a chance to sell more paper, and he said he was agreeable to it. I then said ‘I need no further information other than the assurance that the thing will be carried out’ ... I advised them I would get in touch with Mr. Swett, who was a director of the Pacific Indemnity Company and who assured me he could get this preference paper busi[626]*626ness from these companies . . . and I excused myself. This is substantially all that took place at that meeting.

It is upon this conversation, and this only, that the plaintiff predicates the contract or agreement set forth in the complaint.

We can see nothing in this testimony which would compel, or even justify, a finding that the defendants entered into an agreement with the plaintiff in the terms of the proposal made to them. The intimations by Mr. Mills and Mr. Zellerbach that they regarded with favor the proposal were made to Mr. Higgins (who was the particular official of the defendants charged with insuring the defendants’ property), and, while of assistance to him in reaching a decision, were not made to the plaintiff—as he himself readily testified on cross-examination. It would indeed be most unusual for an official of a corporation entrusted with the care of large interests to enter into a binding agreement of indefinite duration, with an individual who up to that moment was a stranger to him, in this casual manner and without any investigation. Mr. Higgins, it is seen, said nothing to the plaintiff to cause him to believe that he had secured, as the result of a few moments’ conversation an agreement ■which, if made, would have yielded him large sums of money; and, as a witness for the defendants, Mr. Higgins denied that he then or at any time promised or agreed with the plaintiff that he should be appointed defendants’ broker for the placing of their automobile insurance.

Much light is shed upon the question by what subsequently occurred. Following this meeting plaintiff called on Mr. Swett (who, in addition to being a member of Swett and Crawford, was a director of the Pacific Indemnity Company) and told him of his conversation with the officials of the defendants, whereupon Mr. Swett stated he would immediately set the machinery in motion for transferring some paper business to the Zellerbach interests, and about a week later plaintiff called at the office of Mr. Mills and informed him of what he had done. A short time later, at the end of February or early in March, accompanied by Mr. Swett, he made a third visit to Mr. Mills’ office in furtherance of their common effort, and the latter suggested that they see Mr. Higgins. They accordingly went to that gentleman’s office. [627]*627To him Mr. Swett stated that he was prepared to take over the automobile insurance on May 1st and asked to see the present policies. They were produced; Mr. Swett examined them and stated he would duplicate them on their expiration at no greater cost. He also stated that he was arranging to divert paper business to the Zellerbaeh Paper Company. In his testimony concerning this interview Mr. Swett stated: “I told Mr. Higgins who I was and the companies I represented ; and I stated I was very anxious to get the automobile insurance of the Crown Zellerbaeh Corporation; and he said ‘Well, who is the head of your company?, and I said ‘Mr. Lee Phillips’ . . . and Mr. Higgins stated ‘Why, I know Mr. Phillips very well, and I would like very much to have Mr. Phillips have our insurance business, all things being equal.' He said he was associated with Mr. Phillips in the old days—as he put it—of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company. . . . And with that, as I remember it, Mr. Higgins asked his secretary or someone to bring in the automobile insurance policies . . .

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Related

Hanley v. Marsh & McLennan-J. B. F. Davis & Son, Ltd.
117 P.2d 69 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P.2d 880, 15 Cal. App. 2d 623, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinning-v-zellerbach-paper-co-calctapp-1936.