El Ranco, Inc. v. NEW YORK MEAT AND PROVISION CO.

493 P.2d 1318, 88 Nev. 111, 1972 Nev. LEXIS 408
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1972
Docket6588
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 493 P.2d 1318 (El Ranco, Inc. v. NEW YORK MEAT AND PROVISION CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
El Ranco, Inc. v. NEW YORK MEAT AND PROVISION CO., 493 P.2d 1318, 88 Nev. 111, 1972 Nev. LEXIS 408 (Neb. 1972).

Opinions

[112]*112OPINION

By the Court,

Zenoff, C. J.:

This suit was brought by New York Meat and Provision Co. to recover the sale price of meat and meat products sold to El Rancho Hotel. Judgment was rendered in favor of New York Meat and Provision Co. in the sum of $5,000, plus interest. We affirm.

Between June 3, 1960 and June 16, 1960 New York Meat and Provision Co. sold meat items to appellant in twenty-six separate transactions. The purchasing agent or the chef would check prices of various meat companies and telephone the orders. New York Meat used three-copy sale receipts designating the goods ordered and the prices thereof. These receipts bore at the heading the words “Sold to.....................................” The products were checked and weighed upon delivery by either the purchasing agent, his assistant, or their secretary who signed or receipted the sale slip, retaining one copy for the hotel accounting department. New York Meat retained two copies, sending one to the El Rancho with its monthly billing and retaining one in its permanent records. These transactions had been going on for a rather extended period of time.

The hotel burned in the summer of 1960. On December 15, 1960 the hotel made a partial payment on its account, leaving a balance due of $5,000, covering the twenty-six purchases made between June 3, 1960 and June 16, 1960.

Suit was filed August 25, 1965. The question on appeal is whether it was barred by the statute of limitations, NRS 11.190, those sections applicable being as follows:

[113]*113“1. Within 6 years:
“(a) An action upon a judgment or decree of any court of the United States, or of any state or territory within the United States.
“(b) An action upon a contract, obligation or liability founded upon an instrument in writing, except those mentioned in the preceding sections of this chapter.
“2. Within 4 years:
“(a) An action on an open account for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered.
“(b) An action for any article charged in a store account.
“(c) An action upon a contract, obligation or liability not founded upon an instrument in writing.”

1. The peculiar language of NRS 11.190(1) (b) is derived from a California statute adopted in 1850, allowing four years for: “An action upon any contract, obligation, or liability, founded upon an instrument of writing.” 1850 Calif. Stats., Ch. 127 (Ch. Ill § 17). It should be noted that the statute is not limited to actions upon “contracts in writing,” but relates to any obligation or liability founded upon an instrument of writing. In 1855, before the statute was adopted in Nevada, the California Supreme Court placed a broad interpretation on the words “founded upon an instrument in writing.” In Sannickson v. Brown, 5 Cal. 57 (1855), the California court held accounts the defendant had marked “audited and approved” and “certified to be correct” were sufficient to constitute “instruments in writing” within the meaning of the statute, so that an action “founded” or based upon them was entitled to a longer statute of limitations than an action brought upon a mere account not evidenced in such a way.

In 1861, Nevada adopted the California statute with its judicial gloss. Laws of the Territory of Nevada, First Regular Session, ch. XII, § 16 (1861). In adopting the practice act of California, it must be presumed to have been adopted as interpreted by the highest court of judicature of that state. Williams v. Glasgow, 1 Nev. 533, 538 (1865); Harris v. Harris, 65 Nev. 342, 346, 196 P.2d 402 (1948); Astorga v. Ishimatsu, 77 Nev. 30, 32, 359 P.2d 83 (1961). The statute has been carried forward with the only substantial change being that the limitation period was extended to six years. (1867 Nev. Stats., ch. XLIX § 5; 1869 Nev. Stats., ch. 196, tit. I; 1911 Civil Practice Act § 25; Revised Laws of Nevada § 4967 (1912); NCL § 8524 (1929).)

[114]*114In Stephens v. McCormack, 50 Nev. 383, 263 P. 774 (1928), this court interpreted Revised Laws of Nevada § 4967 (NRS 11.190) as barring a suit by the representative of a cosurety against the other cosurety. The statute was held to run against the claim for contribution when the common debt was discharged. The action was based upon a contract which the law implies from the equitable obligation imposed upon cosureties to proportionately share a common loss and not upon any written instrument. Here the situation is different and is a case provided for where the court in Stephens, supra, at 390, quoting a California case with approval, stated that “ ‘In order to be founded upon an instrument in writing, the instrument must itself contain a contract [obligation or liability] to do the thing for the nonperformance of which the action is brought.’ ” Whatever dicta there is to the contrary in Stephens, supra, should be ignored.

Subsequent California authorities interpreting the statute are consistent with our result, e.g., Tagus Ranch Co. v. Hughes, 148 P.2d 79 (Cal.App. 1944); Ashley v. Vischer, 24 Cal. 322, 85 Am.Dec. 65 (1864); Lawrence Barker, Inc. v. Briggs, 248 P.2d 897 (Cal. 1952); Nomellini Construction Co. v. Harris, 77 Cal.Rptr. 361 (Cal.App. 1969). It may be noted that Ashley, supra, retreated somewhat from Sannickson, supra, but under all of the pertinent California authorities it would appear that an instrument like that here concerned would be deemed sufficient.

In construing what is meant by “An action upon a contract, obligation or liability founded upon an instrument in writing,” the Supreme Court of Utah in Bracklein v. Realty Ins. Co., 80 P.2d 471, 476 (Utah 1938), considering their statute which was also derived from the California Code of Civil Procedure §§ 336, 337, stated:

“Chipman v. Morrill, 20 Cal. 130, 131, 7 Pac.St.Rep. 130— that ‘a cause of action is ‘founded upon an instrument of writing’ when the contract, obligation, or liability grows out of written instruments, not remotely or ultimately, but immediately.’ O’Brien v. King, 174 Cal. 769, 164 P. 631, 632; Chipman v. Morrill, supra; Ashley v. Vischer; 24 Cal. 322, 85 Am.Dec. 65, 8 Pac.St.Rep. 322; Louvall v. Gridley, 70 Cal. 507, 11 P. 777; Scrivner v. Woodward, 139 Cal. 314, 73 P. 863; that if the fact of liability arises or is assumed or imposed from the instrument itself, or its recitals, the liability is founded upon an instrument in writing. If the instrument acknowledges or states a fact from which the law implies an obligation to pay, such obligation is founded upon a written instrument [115]*115within the statute.

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El Ranco, Inc. v. NEW YORK MEAT AND PROVISION CO.
493 P.2d 1318 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
493 P.2d 1318, 88 Nev. 111, 1972 Nev. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-ranco-inc-v-new-york-meat-and-provision-co-nev-1972.