Dutra v. Cabral

181 P.2d 26, 80 Cal. App. 2d 114, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 925
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1947
DocketCiv. 7310
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 P.2d 26 (Dutra v. Cabral) 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
Dutra v. Cabral, 181 P.2d 26, 80 Cal. App. 2d 114, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 925 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Acting P. J.

The defendant has appealed from a judgment which was rendered against him in a suit for damages for breach of an oral lease of 40 acres of farm *116 land, by the terms of which the respective parties were to receive specified shares of the proceeds of crops of spinach and beans to be produced. The beans were planted on the same land after the spinach crop was removed. The defendant failed to supply a well and to pump water for necessary irrigation of the crops. The crops therefore failed.

The defendant owns 40 acres of farm land in Solano County. The complaint alleges that, on December 1, 1944, the respective parties entered into an oral lease of the property for the ensuing crop season, by the terms of which plaintiff agreed to plant, cultivate and harvest successive crops of spinach and beans, and the defendant agreed to furnish and supply a well and pump the water therefrom necessary to irrigate the crops; that the defendant failed and refused to provide the well or to pump water for irrigating the crops. There was no other adequate supply of water for irrigation and the spinach and beans which plaintiff planted and cultivated therefore failed, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of 80 per cent of the value of the crops lost. It was alleged plaintiff agreed to pay the defendant as rental for the property 20 per cent of the crops produced, and that the defendant agreed to furnish necessary water for irrigation of the crops.

The defendant answered the complaint, denying the material allegations thereof, except that he admitted the execution of the oral lease and the alleged agreed division of the crops. The defendant also filed a cross-complaint, alleging plaintiff’s breach of the contract by failure to properly plant, cultivate or harvest the crops, as a result of which the crops were a total failure, to defendant’s damage in the sum of $1,400. It was affirmatively alleged that the plaintiff agreed to procure and supply necessary water for irrigating the crops from adjoining property owners, but failed and neglected to do so. The plaintiff answered the cross-complaint, denying the essential affirmative allegations thereof.

The court adopted findings favorable to the plaintiffs in every essential respect. It was determined that the oral lease was executed as alleged in the complaint; that the defendant agreed thereby to provide a well and to pump water sufficient to irrigate the crops, but, upon subsequent demand, he failed and refused to do so; that it is not true that plaintiff agreed to procure water for irrigating the crops from adjoining landowners, or at all, and that it is not true that said water from adjacent landowners was available; that plaintiff entered the property pursuant to the lease and properly *117 planted, cultivated and cared for the spinach crop, which failed for the lack of water, with the exception of 40 crates of spinach which were harvested and sold for the sum of $50; that the reasonable value of plaintiff’s share of the spinach crop which would have been produced except for the breach of contract and failure of defendant to furnish necessary water for irrigating the crop, was the sum of $1,433.20. The court further found that, after the loss of the spinach crop, the defendant renewed his promise to furnish the well and pump the water therefrom necessary to irrigate the bean crop, and in reliance thereon plaintiff properly planted, cultivated and cared for the crop, but that the defendant, upon subsequent demand, failed and refused to provide the well or supply water for irrigation purpose, which resulted in a total loss of the bean crop, to plaintiff’s damage in the further sum of $1,682.40. The court further found that water for irrigating the crops from adjacent land, as alleged in the cross-complaint, was not available. The court found that all allegations of the answer and cross-complaint, inconsistent with the foregoing, are untrue. Judgment for damages for breach of contract was accordingly rendered against the defendant in the total sum of $3,115.60. From that judgment the defendant has appealed.

On appeal it is contended that neither the findings nor judgment is supported by the evidence; that the award of damages is excessive, and that plaintiff failed to exercise care to prevent loss of the crops or to minimize damages.

We are of the opinion the findings and judgment are adequately supported by the evidence.

The appellant contends that the award of damages is excessive because the evidence shows that not more than 28 acres could be irrigated from the well on the premises. The evidence indicates that the parties contemplated the raising of successive crops of spinach and beans on nearly the entire property. The leased farm consists of 40 acres of land. The plaintiff testified that he planted and cultivated 38 acres of spinach. The defendant knew that fact. He testified that plaintiff planted “the whole place . . ., except a little corner by the house. ’ ’ His agreement to supply water for irrigation was not limited to 28 acres or to any other specified acreage. The defendant admitted there was a well on the property, but said that it had “caved in before he got the place.” When the lease was agreed upon, the plaintiff suggested that there would not be sufficient water for the spinach and bean crops. *118 The defendant testified that he then replied that he would clean the well; that he had talked with a well driller by the name of Percy Stohler who promised him he would fix the well for him for $300. He said he then told the plaintiff “I would fix the well.” It must be inferred, in support of the findings, that the defendant agreed to repair the well and furnish all the water necessary to irrigate the crops which were planted, and that the agreed supply of water was not limited to any specified acreage.

The evidence supports an amount of damages to which plaintiff was entitled in excess of the sum for which judgment was rendered in his favor. The court found that the defendant was to furnish water sufficient to irrigate the crops, and that he was to receive, as his share of the crops, 20 per cent of the “gross receipts from said crops.” The court then found that the gross market value of the spinach crop which was planted, except for defendant’s failure to furnish the agreed water, was the sum of $2,054. Twenty per cent of that sum, to which the defendant was entitled to credit, is about $411. That would leave a balance of plaintiff’s damages on account of loss of spinach in the sum of $1,643. But the court awarded plaintiff only the sum of $1,433.20, from which the cost of harvesting and marketing the crops should be deducted. Those figures are amply supported by the evidence. The plaintiff testified that he planted 38 acres of spinach; that with proper irrigation the farm would have produced three and a half to four tons per acre, and that its market value was $25 net per ton. The plaintiff testified that the value of $25 per ton for the spinach was exclusive of the cost of harvesting and marketing the crop. The foregoing figure, estimating the crop at the minimum figure of three and a half tons per acre, amounts to $3,325. That sum is greatly in excess of the net value of the crop, as determined by the court. The defendant profited by the court’s conservative figure, and may not complain of an inadequate allowance of damages to plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 P.2d 26, 80 Cal. App. 2d 114, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutra-v-cabral-calctapp-1947.