Dodd v. Cantwell

179 Cal. App. 2d 727, 179 Cal. App. 727, 4 Cal. Rptr. 113, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2286
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 1960
DocketCiv. 18632; Civ. 18633
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 179 Cal. App. 2d 727 (Dodd v. Cantwell) 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
Dodd v. Cantwell, 179 Cal. App. 2d 727, 179 Cal. App. 727, 4 Cal. Rptr. 113, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2286 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

TOBEINER, J.

The services of two ranch hands, extending in one case for a period of over 45 years and in the other for a period of over 32 years, rendered to the ranch owners in reliance upon their promise that full payment for such services would be forthcoming when the ranch was sold, entitled the two men, according to the trial court, to the protection of an equitable lien upon the ranch for the value of such services. We agree with this holding. We do not believe that the decrees in the consolidated eases succumb to the blunderbuss attack of appellants Kitchen and Cantwell, who urge as *729 alleged error: (1) the erroneous admission (a) of declarations against interest of appellant Kitchen’s deceased wife, Harriett, and (b) of the unsigned and unsworn depositions of two witnesses; (2) the prejudicial misconduct of respondents’ counsel in his attempt to introduce a letter of appellant Cantwell allegedly seeking to compromise the claim of one of the two ranch hands; (3) the erroneous imposition of an equitable lien on the ranch and rendition of a personal judgment against appellant Cantwell; (4) the insufficiency of evidence to support the findings (a) that the cause of action was not barred by the statute of limitations or laches, and (b) that a confidential relationship existed between respondents and the Kitchens.

The issues emanate from a factual situation which is reminiscent of a social order of another day. In substance the two ranch hands, one hired in 1910 and another in 1923, contended, and proved to the trial court, that they had worked for the Kitchens in the belief that their unpaid compensation would be discharged when their employers were able to do so by the sale of the ranch. The relationship of the proprietor of agricultural lands with a farm employee who works as a servient “retainer,” almost a vestigial remnant of feudalism itself, may possibly occur in older California ranches or in dairies which preserve a European tradition, but it is rare. And yet it apparently evolved here.

In 1910, John Kitchen, who was engaged in the printing business, purchased this Reliez Station Road Ranch, and he gave it to his wife. Mrs. Kitchen managed the ranch, and in June, 1910, she hired respondent Alviso. Originally Alviso took care of the horses, and later he did the cooking and housework; he received in compensation $10 per week plus room and board. Then, in 1923, the Kitchens employed respondent Dodd to work on the ranch on a similar basis.

When, in 1931, the Depression struck California farmers, Mrs. Kitchen told the two workers that she and her husband were "in very hard circumstances ’ ’; that, although she could not pay them wages currently, she would, if they wished to stay and work for room and board, pay all the back wages when the ranch was sold. The two men agreed. Indeed, several days later, when Mr. Kitchen asked Dodd if Mrs. Kitchen had told him they could not pay wages at the time but would do so later when the ranch was sold, Dodd again signified his concurrence.

*730 In 1936, the Kitchens sold the lower 40-acre part of the 60-acre ranch, but they did not at that time discharge their past indebtedness to the two workers. Although neither Kitchen broached the subject of back wages to the men, Alviso testified that he “had confidence” in the Kitchens and believed that “whenever they got the money . . . they would pay me.” In March, 1947, Mrs. Kitchen died, and Mr. Kitchen inherited the ranch. It was then, after the long lapse from 1931, that Mr. Kitchen resumed paying respondents their wages. Despite their many years of past service, the farm hands did not ask for, or receive, an increase in the $10 weekly compensation with which they had started.

In 1955 Kitchen conveyed the ranch to appellant Cantwell, his niece by marriage. She paid a gift tax on the transfer. Although, as Mr. Shanly’s deposition reveals, John Kitchen at one time had “the place up for sale for $90,000,” Cantwell paid Kitchen $20 for the conveyance “to make it legal.” Then, and subsequently on May 7, 1956, when he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage, Kitchen transferred “[ejvery bit” of his property to Mrs. Cantwell. Upon the latter occasion, Mr. Kitchen gave Mrs. Cantwell a power of attorney.

Mrs. Cantwell exercised the power of attorney. She discharged the two men. In May, 1956, Mrs. Cantwell handed Alviso two checks, one in the amount of $50, carrying the notation, “In full to date,” and the other, in the amount of $200, labeled “Bonus Cheek.” In this manner the long labors of Alviso ended. On November 19, 1956, Dodd suffered a similar fate; Mrs. Cantwell’s attorney wrote him a letter terminating his services.

The events themselves tell the story of this unique relationship, but many witnesses supplied a mass of detail, and we briefly set out the most significant.

One Mr. Palmer, who, since 1908, had known Mr. Kitchen and, since 1915, Mrs. Kitchen, and had long been acquainted with Alviso and Dodd, testified that several years before her death Mrs. Kitchen said, “I’m not going to leave this property so some floozy will get it away from Jack.” “I’m going to take care of the boys.” And after Mrs. Kitchen’s death, her husband had said that he owed “the boys” money but was not able to pay.

Mr. Reid, who knew the Kitchens since 1940, testified that in 1945, during discussions of the possible sale of part of the ranch property, he asked Kitchen about moving the house from *731 the front portion of the property. According to Reid, Kitchen answered he wanted to keep the house, that it “would belong to the boys . . . working for him.” Reid said, “ [T]he boys were trusted by the Kitchens and the boys trusted the Kitchens. There was a trusting relationship. ...”

In his deposition, Mr. Shanly, a close friend of Kitchen’s since 1885, stated that Kitchen, in response to Shanly’s attempt to pay a debt he owed to Kitchen, said, “. . . I owe King some money. Give it to him.” Shanly testified that the relationship between Kitchen and Alviso had been a pleasant one, except for the last few years when Alviso’s drinking annoyed Kitchen. On one occasion Kitchen had said, “I don’t know what in the dickens I am going to do with that fellow. He has been with me so long I can’t do anything with him. I promised Harriett [Kitchen] I would keep him.” “He promised Harriett to stay with me.” Mrs. Shanly gave similar testimony to that of Mr. Shanly except that she knew nothing of the conversation as to Shanly’s debt to Kitchen.

Mrs. Parker, who ran the rest home where Kitchen resided after his stroke, testified that Kitchen talked continuously about Dodd; that he knew Dodd hadn’t been taken care of; that he intended to see that Dodd was cared for; that Dodd’s wages had not been paid. In response to Mrs. Palmer’s question as to whether Kitchen had been delinquent as to the wages he replied, ‘ ‘ [N] o, that it had been his wife had always taken care of it and he just had never gotten straightened out with the boys” and that “he hadn’t paid them anything after she died.”

The decree impressed in favor of each claimant an equitable lien upon the property in the amount of $8,320, the “agreed value” of each respondent’s services for the 832 weeks he had worked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 Cal. App. 2d 727, 179 Cal. App. 727, 4 Cal. Rptr. 113, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodd-v-cantwell-calctapp-1960.