Ewing v. Hayward

195 P. 970, 50 Cal. App. 708, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 170
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2971.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 195 P. 970 (Ewing v. Hayward) 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
Ewing v. Hayward, 195 P. 970, 50 Cal. App. 708, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 170 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

Neither party to this appeal has given us any statement of the case. We have, therefore, been put to the labor of going through the pleadings, findings, etc., to get as best we could an understanding as to what the controversy is about.

As near as we have been able to ascertain from the record before us, the action is brought by plaintiff to recover on a certain contract, alleged to have been entered into between plaintiff and a copartnership doing business in Imperial County, this state, under the firm name and style of Hayward, Rath Marshall, which copartnership, according to the allegations of the complaint, was and still is the local agent of appellant, the Newmark Grain Company. The contract referred to reads: "No. 54. Store and Field Confirmation and Purchase. May 11th, 1918. We, the undersigned, have this day entered into the following agreement, namely, to buy and sell the following named commodity: (Approximately) 800 sacks No. 1 feed barley, price $2.85 per cwt., 45# to bu., f. o. b. cars Rockwood, Calif. Terms, cash on delivery of grain. Certified public scale tag weights to govern. Seller agrees to furnish loader's affidavit as to the number of sacks loaded into car or cars. Settlement made through the buyer's and seller's banks only. Signed by the buyer, Hayward, Rath Marshall, per M. C. Hayward. Signed by the seller, J. F. Ewing, per. Witnessed by Mrs. J. F. Ewing. Note: Subject to our office confirmation." (Italics ours.) Nothing appears in the record, to which our attention has been called, to explain what or who is meant by the sentence above italicized. At the time the agreement was entered into not one word was said by anyone that the firm was acting as agent for anybody. Plaintiff testified that he supposed he was dealing with the firm there named only; nor was he depending upon evidence of any "holding out" or ostensible agency relationship on the part of that firm. *Page 710

After the agreement was entered into, plaintiff, upon threshing his barley, tendered the same to Hayward, Rath Marshall, the firm named in the contract, which tender was refused for reasons hereinafter shown. Thereupon plaintiff made an honest effort to sell at the same price elsewhere, but failed to do so, for the reason that the market had declined, the best offer received by him for his barley being $2.15 per hundredweight. The action was then brought to recover the difference between the amount actually received for the barley and that which the firm contracted to pay, as set forth in the contract above quoted.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff has performed all the terms and conditions of said contract on his part to be performed. The answer of the defendant copartnership and of the defendants Hayward, Rath and Marshall admits the making of the contract in question, but alleges that the same was made by them as brokers; while the answer of the Newmark Grain Company puts in issue every allegation of the complaint. On the issues thus formed the case went to trial, the court finding against all the defendants jointly for the sum of $495.52.

Before proceeding with a consideration of the questions raised on this appeal, attention is called to the fact that a finding that the defendants are jointly liable in this case could have been entered only in the event that they were shown to have been partners, and partnership between the firm signing the agreement and this appealing defendant was not an issue before the trial court.

The first point urged for reversal of the judgment is that no agency was proven. Plaintiff himself testified to the execution of the agreement in question; that at the time of its execution neither Mr. Hayward, of the firm of Hayward, Rath Marshall, nor anyone connected with that firm, informed plaintiff as to whom the copartnership was buying for, or whether or not they were in fact agents for anyone; that on June 1, 1918, when plaintiff attempted to deliver the barley referred to in said agreement, Mr. Hayward informed plaintiff that he, Mr. Hayward, had turned the matter over to Mr. Rath, and that the latter would take charge of the contracts, and that plaintiff then drove to El Centro, where he saw Mr. Rath. As to *Page 711 what transpired between Mr. Rath and plaintiff at El Centro, we are not informed. Plaintiff also testified that neither the Newmark Grain Company nor Hayward, Rath Marshall ever recognized the contract or agreement in any manner, and that he was told by a member of the copartnership that the reason that firm could not accept the barley on their part was that they were acting for Newmark; that they could not get him to take it off their hands; that they were unable to dispose of it at the price named in the agreement, and that they were quitting on orders from Newmark.

On June 15, 1918, according to plaintiff's testimony, Hayward gave plaintiff a note, sending him "over to Newmark Grain Company with it," at which place he delivered the same to a Mr. Shank. Omitting the heading, this note is as follows:

"Brawley, California, June 15th, 1918.

"Newmark Grain Co., Brawley, Calif.

"Dear Sir: Mr. J. F. Ewing has just come in with 100 sax barley, which was part of your contract with us. I can't take it in here, so am sending it to you, as I have no shipping instructions covering same. You may have.

"HAYWARD, RATH MARSHALL, H."

On the presentation of this note to Mr. Shank — presumably in charge of the Newmark Grain Company's place of business at Brawley — a Mr. Wolz wrote the following answer:

"Hayward, Rath Marshall:

"We have no barley bought from Mr. Ewing, nor do I know anything about this being any part of any contract between Hayward, Rath Marshall and the Newmark Grain Co., cannot store this barley for you.

"Yours truly,

"F. A. WOLZ."

As to the connection of Mr. Shank and Mr. Wolz with the defendant corporation, however, we are given no light, except as we may conjecture.

The witness Hayward, testifying for plaintiff, said that he was buying for the Newmark Grain Company, and that he had previously bought grain at Brawley and shipped it *Page 712 to that company, which grain was received, accepted, and paid for by the latter. In regard to a conversation had with Mr. M. N. Newmark, of the Newmark Grain Company, on the night of May 10, 1918, wherein the latter talked about buying a considerable amount of barley, Hayward testified as follows: "I told them I had bought that day through the instruction of Mr. Rath to start to buy at $2.85. I had purchased whatever the amount was, I don't recollect just now what the amount was; I turned that over to Mr. Newmark and told him I would get 6,000 more sacks Saturday, and he told me to go ahead and buy it, and the conversation was general what we should do if the price went up, and what we should do if it went down, and any further instructions I was to get from Mr. Rath. If there was any change in the order to stop buying, I was to get that from Mr. Rath." This witness also testified that Newmark gave him orders to purchase 6,000 sacks of barley at $2.85 per hundredweight, and as to the grain the orders for which he claims were turned over to Mr. Newmark on Friday evening, May 10, 1918, at the Barbara Worth Hotel, in El Centro, that it was bought on the orders of and for Mr. Newmark.

The witness Rath, also testifying for plaintiff, said that Mr. Newmark notified him to inform Mr. Hayward that "the deal was off"; that in their conversation with Mr. Newmark about buying grain, plaintiff's name was not mentioned; that the witness had stated to Hayward, in the presence of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
195 P. 970, 50 Cal. App. 708, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ewing-v-hayward-calctapp-1920.