Elsom v. Moore

105 P. 271, 11 Cal. App. 377, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 139
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 642.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 105 P. 271 (Elsom v. Moore) 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
Elsom v. Moore, 105 P. 271, 11 Cal. App. 377, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 139 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an action against a constable and his bondsmen to recover the value of certain personal property taken by said officer under and by virtue of a writ of attachment. The verdict of the jury was for the defendants, and this is an appeal from the judgment entered thereon and from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

The facts are as follows: During the latter part of November, 1906, E. R. "Whitman was in Watsonville, attending for the plaintiff to the purchase and shipment of produce which had theretofore been contracted for by W. M.- Elsom, the plaintiff. This produce, on being loaded into ears engaged by plaintiff, left one of them only partially filled. On November 26th Whitman, on his own account, obtained from one J. F. Kane, one hundred and thirty sacks of potatoes, and loaded them into the partially filled ear, and billed the whole ear to plaintiff. The ear left Watsonville, arriving at Santa Cruz the next day, at which time plaintiff claimed to be the owner of the potatoes through purchase from Whitman. On November 28th Kane, having been refused payment by Whitman for the potatoes, commenced an action against him in the justice’s court, and caused a writ of attachment to be issued therein, which was immediately levied by the constable, defendant in this case, upon the lot of potatoes in question. Plaintiff duly claimed the potatoes as his property, but the constable ignored his claim, sold them, and now retains the proceeds of the sale. The present action is against him and his bondsmen for conversion of the potatoes.

At the trial the defendants introduced evidence to show that there was an understanding between Kane and Whitman that *379 the title to the potatoes was not to pass to Whitman until they were paid for. Under these circumstances Kane was at liberty to treat the transaction as a sale absolute or conditional (Van Allen v. Francis, 123 Cal. 477, [56 Pac. 339]; Vermont Marble Co. v. Brow, 109 Cal. 236, [50 Am. St. Rep. 37, 41 Pac. 1031]); but, inasmuch as Kane brought an action against Whitman for goods sold and delivered, and caused the goods to be attached as the property of Whitman, Kane must be deemed to have- elected to consider the sale as absolute and unconditional. (Parke etc. Co. v. White River L. Co., 101 Cal. 37, 40, [35 Pac. 442]; Ward Land and Stock Co. v. Maples, 147 Cal. 747, [82 Pac. 426].)

At the request of the defendants the court, by an instruction, submitted to the jury the question whether or not, under section 3440 of the Civil Code, there was such a delivery and continued change of possession from Whitman to Elsom as to make the transfer between them valid as to Kane. Plaintiff contends (if we understand him correctly) that there was no evidence in the case to warrant the giving of this instruction.

We will state in some detail the facts touching this phase of the case, as shown by the testimony.

Kane testified that a firm of produce dealers, by name Jacobs & Malcolm, telephoned to him from San Francisco “that Whitman wanted one hundred and thirty sacks of potatoes, that he was willing to pay $1.50 a hundred for them, that they did not care to sell them to Whitman, and if I wanted the deal they would give them to me for $1.45. . . . Subsequently I sold Whitman one hundred and thirty sacks of potatoes from the Jacobs & Malcolm lot. November 26th or 27th, I said to Whitman, ‘When are you going to ship them, and when are you going out of town? ’ He replied, ‘I don’t know.’ . . . In reference to payment he said, ‘I will be right down to the office. ... I suppose I can get the potatoes if I pay' for them?’ I said, ‘Under those conditions you can have them, but they must be paid for before they leave town. ’ When I next saw Whitman he gave me the weights, and said he would be right down to the bank to get me a draft for them.” He further testified that shortly after that Whitman got possession of the potatoes, and shipped them without paying therefor, and upon demand refused to do so, saying in *380 substance that he had never intended to pay for them. This witness and also the constable testified—and in fact plaintiff admitted—that at the time the writ of attachment was levied Whitman was in full charge of the potatoes; that he had the key to the car containing them, and that he was there superintending their unloading. Elsom testified that the arrangement between him and Whitman was that the profits, if any, realized from the sales of other lots of produce purchased at Watsonville were to be divided equally between them, but no division of profits at all was to be made concerning the potatoes in controversy; that he purchased these potatoes about noon November 27th from Whitman; that while he did business with the banks in Santa Cruz, on this occasion he was at his home, and had on hand in cash five or six hundred dollars, or perhaps a thousand dollars, and having no checkbook there he paid Whitman $240.75 in cash for them; that all other purchases of produce at Watsonville were made by Whitman for him excepting these one hundred and thirty sacks, and that the persons who sold such produce knew that he was the purchaser, and they looked to him for- payment. The witness also said that at the time of the purchase of this lot of potatoes Whitman no doubt owed him a balance on some money advanced to pay expenses; nevertheless nothing was said about this balance, nor was any attempt made to deduct it in making this payment. Whitman testified that he did not buy the potatoes from Kane, but from Jacobs & Malcolm, but he admits that Mr. Jacobs, of that firm, told him that if they sold him the potatoes he would have to pay for them before taking them out of the warehouse. Jacobs testified that, judging from past transactions, Whitman was a man not to be trusted.

Whitman obtained these potatoes on the afternoon of November 26th without paying therefor; and as a result of his efforts they went out of Watsonville that night on the 11 o’clock freight train. He himself went to Santa Cruz early the next morning, and the potatoes reached there that same afternoon. Thereafter on the same day, without any claimed change in the market price of the commodity, without any attempt to dispose of them to anyone else, and without any general examination of them by the purchaser, Whitman as *381 serts that he sold the potatoes to the plaintiff Elsom for the same price that he himself agreed to pay for them.

Kane, who was absent from Watsonville during the day of November 27th, returned in the evening, and on learning that Whitman had taken the potatoes without paying for them, boarded a train that night and went to Santa Cruz. The next morning he saw Whitman about 7 o’clock, and demanded payment of him. Whitman refused to pay, and in effect, according to Kane’s testimony, said that it had been his intention throughout the negotiations to evade payment for them— and we may add that his conduct in the matter is quite consistent with such declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
105 P. 271, 11 Cal. App. 377, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elsom-v-moore-calctapp-1909.