Dusis v. Karnezis

244 P. 632, 76 Cal. App. 326, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 389
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1926
DocketDocket No. 2897.
StatusPublished

This text of 244 P. 632 (Dusis v. Karnezis) 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
Dusis v. Karnezis, 244 P. 632, 76 Cal. App. 326, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 389 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HART, J.

The action is for the recovery of the total sum of $1,489.85, alleged to be the balance due plaintiff for personal services, alleged to have been performed, and moneys advanced and expended by plaintiff for defendants “at their special instance and request.”

The facts, taken in part from plaintiff’s testimony, generally stated, are: That the three defendants and one Eron, in the year 1920, jointly owned a band of some 1500 head of sheep which they were keeping and pasturing on a track of leased grazing land in Yolo County. In June, 1920, they employed plaintiff to herd and take care of said sheep, at a monthly wage or salary of $100 per month. Plaintiff worked for the four defendants from the twenty-sixth day of June, 1920, until about the twenty-sixth day of October, 1920, at which time or thereabouts defendants divided the sheep between themselves. Immediately after such division was made and the defendants were no longer jointly interested in the sheep business, appellant, who was then residing in the city of Marysville and consequently not stopping at the sheep ranch, engaged plaintiff to continue to take care of his (appellant’s) sheep and to take charge of the sheep camp, agreeing to pay plaintiff the sum of $125 per month for his services and to reimburse him for any moneys he (plaintiff) might advance in purchasing groceries, provisions, etc., necessary for living purposes at the camp, and for any expense he might incur in procuring pasturage for the sheep. The plaintiff worked for appellant, upon the terms stated, from the twenty-sixth day of October, 1920, until June 13, 1921. The total number of months during which the plaintiff was so employed by and for the defendants and for the appellant was eleven months and eighteen days.

The complaint, which is in two counts and unverified, alleges, in the first count, that defendants are indebted to plaintiff as for labor performed in the aggregate sum of $1,346.06, of which the sum of $750 had been paid, leaving a balance unpaid, on account of labor performed, of $596.06. In the second count it is alleged that plaintiff advanced and expended the sum of $893.79 for the defendants in the *328 purchase of provisions, supplies, pasture, feed, etc., and incurred and paid “other expenses in connection with the care of a band of sheep” belonging to defendants.

The answer interposed a general denial of the allegations of both counts of the complaint.

The court found that defendant Karnezis was indebted to plaintiff on the first count in the sum of $406.66, being the balance due and owing for labor after the payment to plaintiff on that account of the sum of $750, and that on the second count the same defendant was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $608.17. It was further found that neither the defendant Fundulakis nor the defendant Koralis was indebted to plaintiff on either count. Bron, it will be observed, was not made a party defendant.

Judgment was awarded plaintiff as against Karnezis in the aggregate sum of $1,014.83, and, a motion for a new trial by him having been denied, he appeals from said judgment.

The appealing defendant, among several points upon which he relies for a reversal, contends that the findings are not supported by the evidence. This contention must be sustained upon the plaintiff’s own testimony, which, in part, is as follows:

“Mr. Bron paid me first time, $100.00, and Mr. Thero Karnezis paid $200.00, and Mr. Fundulakis paid $50 on February 15th, 1921. ' On December 24th, 1920, I received a check from Mr. Allan for $68.40. The check was made to the order of Pete Dusis and signed by M. G. Allan; on February 3d, 1921, I received a check payable to myself for $300.00 from M. G. Allan, and I endorsed it with my mark and cash it for Nick Koralis, but I did not get the money. The money was for sheep that Mr. Karnezis sold to Mr. Allan, the butcher. I took the check and went to Sacramento, and got the money and gave it to Mr. Koralis. On April 6th, 1921, a check signed by T. H. Karnezis payable to Harry J. Demis for $100.00 was not given to me, or cashed by me, and Mr. Demis did not give me the money. I received $240.00 by check dated Jan. 31st, 1921, signed by T. H. Karnezis, and made payable to myself, and on December 24th, 1920, I received the money from a check for $100.00, signed by T. H. Karnezis, and payable to Pete Dudasher. On March 5th, 1921, I received a check from *329 T. H. Karnezis for $100.00; on February 26th, 1920, or 1921, I received another check from T. H. Karnezis for $100.00 and cashed the same and received the money. I also received $150.00 from T. H. Karnezis on March 7th, 1921, by check. I did not receive any other money from these defendants other than the checks which you have shown me. Mr. Karnezis did not pay me $100.00 in cash on or about May 23d, 1921, at Marysville. He gave me a cheek for $100.00 in his saloon. The time Mr. Karnezis went to Marysville he said he would pay me $125.00 per month. ’ ’

On redirect examination, the witness testified as follows: “Mr. Eron did not give me $200, he just gave me a cheek for $100.”

On. recross-examination the witness testified as follows: “This man Eron paid me $200.00; he gave me two checks; the check for $68.40, I spent for myself. I am not sure whether Mr. Eron gave me $200 or whether there was another check for $30, I am not sure.”

Leaving out of the computation the check referred to by plaintiff in his testimony as above given herein as having been issued by appellant to and in the name of one Harry J. Demis for the sum of $100, which check, or the money thereon, plaintiff stated he did not receive, also excluding the $300, which he said he received in the form of a check from one Allan, but which, he further said, he cashed and delivered the money to Koralis, and assuming that Eron paid him the sum of $100 only and including the $100 in the computation of the amounts paid plaintiff, as shown by his own testimony, the defendants were entitled to be credited with the total payment of $1,208.40, in the place of the sum of the $750 found by the court to be the total amount paid by defendants to plaintiff. But it will be noted that the plaintiff stated that he was not sure whether Eron paid him $100 or $200. As is to be seen, once he unequivocally stated that “this man Eron paid me $200; he gave me two checks,” but subsequently declared that he was not certain that Eron paid him $200 “or whether there was another check for $30.00.” In any event, it is clear that plaintiff could not deny, and apparently did not attempt to deny, that he could not positively say whether Eron did or did not pay him more than the sum of $100. *330 Thus the testimony of Eron as to the payment made by him to plaintiff becomes important. He positively testified that he paid plaintiff over $200, being uncertain, however, as to the amount in excess of $200. It, therefore, stands undisputed in the record that Eron paid at least $200 to plaintiff, and hence the further sum of $100 must be added to the total sum which should be allowed or credited defendants on account of payments made to plaintiff by them. Thus the total amount which appellant is entitled to be credited with as payments to plaintiff, as found by the court, is the sum of $1,308.40, instead of $750, as likewise found.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 632, 76 Cal. App. 326, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dusis-v-karnezis-calctapp-1926.