F. P. Cutting Co. v. Peterson

127 P. 163, 164 Cal. 44, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 309
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1912
DocketS.F. No. 5762.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 127 P. 163 (F. P. Cutting Co. v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. P. Cutting Co. v. Peterson, 127 P. 163, 164 Cal. 44, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 309 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This action was to recover for the unpaid part of the purchase price of some thousands of cases of *46 canned tomatoes sold and delivered by plaintiff to defendant. The court instructed the jury to render its verdict for the plaintiff in the amount sued for. This the jury did and from the order denying his motion for a new trial defendant appeals.

Plaintiff is a company engaged in the business of canning fruits and vegetables. Defendant is a wholesale grocer. Plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract for the sale and delivery of canned tomatoes. These canned tomatoes were “futures,” that is to say, they were yet to be packed. The contract fixed the price per dozen for the different qualities sold, and contained the following provision: “The above prices guaranteed against the California Fruit Canneries Association opening printed prices for the season of 1908.” It was executed on August 12, 1908, which was a short time before the beginning of what was called the season of 1908. It is over this provision of the contract that the whole controversy is waged. The plaintiff sued for a recovery under the prices named in the contract, averring that the association “did not print any opening printed prices for the season of 1908 on said goods.” The defendant for answer alleged that it ¡was mutually understood and mutually agreed between the parties to the contract that the prices fixed in the contract were subject to reduction if it became necessary to meet any prices that might be fixed for the goods mentioned in the contract by the association, and that the language “the above prices guaranteed against the California Fruit Canneries Association opening printed prices for the season of 1908,” was inserted with the mutual intention of the parties that the “guarantee should protect this defendant against any prices which might be made on said goods by said California Fruit Canneries Association for said season of 1908.”

Upon the trial, after a prolonged effort on the part of the defendant to introduce evidence of mutual mistake under the allegations of the answer, the court stated that the answer was not sufficient as an application for the correction of a mistake and to enforce the contract as revised and corrected, but that, as the defect could be supplied by an amendment, evidence would be taken to ascertain whether or not there had been such mistake in drawing the contract, with a view *47 to allowing such amendment if the mistake appeared. No objection was made to this course, and the court proceeded to hear the evidence offered on that subject.

At the close of this evidence the plaintiff moved the court to deny the application to amend the answer and for a reformation of the contract, on the ground that no mistake which could be corrected under the principles of equity was shown by the evidence. The court sustained this motion and refused to allow the defendant to amend the answer or to proceed further with the proposed defense.

The contention of the defendant was that the phrase ‘ ‘ opening printed prices,” in the clause above quoted, did not correctly state the meaning which the parties mutually desired to express; that the idea sought by both parties to be expressed was that the Cutting Company would reduce the prices named in the contract, so as to make the selling prices equal to the opening market prices which the California Fruit Canneries Association should fix and declare for the season of 1908, whether the prices so fixed were printed or announced by other methods.

The contention of the plaintiff was that there was no mistake between the parties with respect to the words which were to be inserted in the contract and that they, in effect, selected the very words used as the best expression of their intention, according to their understanding of the conditions at that time. The evidence showed that there was no mistake in the selection of the words and it appears that the court below directed the verdict upon the theory that if the mistake was not with respect to the selection of the words to be used there was no mistake shown within the rule by which courts of equity will reform contracts.

The fact that the parties used the very words which they intended to use is not always sufficient cause for refusing relief of this character. There may be no mistake as to the words used or to be used, and at the same time there may have been a mutual mistake as to some other matter of fact affecting the meaning or application of the words, and by reason thereof the contract may not truly express the real intention of both parties, and in that case it may be revised and reformed at the instance of the aggrieved party and enforced accordingly, although the words were carefully chosen. (Civ. *48 Code, secs. 3399, 3401, 3402.) We now state- the facts shown by the evidence on this subject.

At the time the contract was made and for many years prior thereto the California Fruit Canneries Association had packed so large a part of the canned goods of the state that when it declared its opening prices for such goods all other producers and dealers at once conformed thereto. In other words, that association fixed and controlled the market prices of those goods. It had regularly and habitually in preceding years announced its prices at the opening of the season by printing and distributing generally to the trade a circular containing its established price list for “futures” for that season. The parties to this contract did not personally meet. The contract was negotiated by Mr. Oliphant, a broker, who acted as go-between or mutual agent of the parties, representing the Cutting Company when talking with Peterson and Peterson when talking with the officers of the Cutting Company. The association had not at that time .announced or declared its prices for the coming season, but both parties believed and expected that it would do so in a short time and that the announcement would be made in the usual manner, that is, by a printed circular distributed to the trade. When the prices named by the Cutting Company were discussed between Oliphant and Peterson, the latter said he would not agree thereto unless the contract contained a clause guaranteeing him against the opening prices for the season to be thereafter fixed by said association. By this it was meant and understood by both parties that if the association’s prices were lower than the prices named in the agreement, then the association’s prices should be those upon which the sales under the contract should be made. This requirement of Peterson was communicated to the Cutting Company by Oliphant and that company thereupon agreed that the contract should contain a provision to that effect. The association sometimes made lower prices to particular customers and the Cutting-Company insisted that the guaranty should not extend to such special prices, but only to the general prices fixed. This was agreed to by Peterson. Having thus brought the parties to an agreement, Oliphant drew the contract for the purpose of expressing the agreement so made, and to provide for the guaranty required he inserted the clause above quoted and *49 submitted the contract to both parties. It was satisfactory to both as a correct expression of their intention and each thereupon signed it.

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Bluebook (online)
127 P. 163, 164 Cal. 44, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-p-cutting-co-v-peterson-cal-1912.