Garibaldi v. Garibaldi

264 Cal. App. 2d 9, 70 Cal. Rptr. 92, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2042
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 12, 1968
DocketCiv. 948
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 264 Cal. App. 2d 9 (Garibaldi v. Garibaldi) 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
Garibaldi v. Garibaldi, 264 Cal. App. 2d 9, 70 Cal. Rptr. 92, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2042 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

CONLEY, P. J.

Two brothers, Henry Garibaldi and Clarence Garibaldi, and their sister, Elvira Levaggi, each owned an undivided one-third interest in common in approximately 1,500 acres of contiguous mountain land containing trees suitable for lumbering. Clarence Garibaldi wished to avail himself of the value of his share of the products from the property, and, without notifying his brother and sister, he made two contracts with Rowland Morris by which he purported to sell his timber rights in El Dorado County on sections 1 and 12, township 8 north, range 12 east, M.D.B.&M. These contracts, one dated in January 1961, and the other in July 1961, contained an agreement on the part of Clarence Garibaldi, in each instance, to sell to Rowland Morris 500,000 board feet of standing merchantable douglas fir and 500,000 board feet of standing merchantable ponderosa pine. Henry Garibaldi and Elvira Levaggi did not join in executing any of the contracts; these agreements unquestionably were made without the consent or approval of the two latter persons and over their opposition.

Commencing about October 1, 1963, defendant Rowland Morris, acting through an agent or employee named Roy Collier, began cutting trees and removing logs from the property; later Morris, through the defendants Neilson Logging Co., Inc. and Alvin H. Neilson, cut additional trees on the described land, pursuant to whatever rights the defendant Morris had acquired by virtue of the two written contracts with Clarence Garibaldi.

The plaintiffs, Henry Garibaldi and Elvira Levaggi, brought this action against Clarence Garibaldi, Rowland Morris, Roy Collier and the Neilsons for the value of their share of the trees cut, multiplied in legally applicable instances by the penalties prescribed by law, and also asked for damages by reason of species of trees cut which were not specified in the contracts, and for waste, including the repair of the roads *11 and the clearing of a water course of obstacles placed therein by the defendants; the alleged general damages for waste were fixed at $25,000. The court after an extensive presentation of evidence and citation of applicable authorities ordered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs covering all of the items of claimed detriment.

The defendants, after the entry of the judgment, made motions for a new trial, and, after argument and submission of authorities, the court granted the motions on a single specified ground:

“It Is Ordered that the respective motions be and each of them is hereby Granted on the ground of prejudicial error in law occurring at the trial by the ruling which sustained the plaintiffs’ objection to the admissibility and introduction of certain evidence tending to show the extent of the co-tenancy timber holdings adjacent to but outside of the parcels of land delineated by the subject timber contracts. ’ ’

Thus, the sole ground for the granting of a new trial is the alleged failure on the part of the trial court to permit the defendants to prove that the three owners in common were also owners of lands adjoining the two sections on which the cutting took place, defendants’ theory being that, when there is a common ownership, each of the owners is entitled to realize the value of his own interest, and that in considering such a situation the court is entitled to view all of the contiguous lands owned by the persons involved so that if one of them takes no more than his legitimate fractional interest of the total the other owners in common may not complain.

It should be noted at this point that, although the rule just stated is a sound and correct one, it would not follow mathematically that the one owner in common who thus becomes an activist and attempts to realize the value of his property would be entitled to take one-third of whatever trees are growing on a specific portion of the total contiguous lands involved. The rule above outlined is qualified by another rule of equal authority that one owner in common cannot take more than his fractional share in value of the products of the common property involved. When the value of trees as commercial products on a large area of land is considered, the mere stump age value of single trees and their multiples doesx not give the final answer to the problem involved for the reason that many factors necessarily enter into such a calculation. The rule for the division of values does not depend wholly upon a counting of individual trees but rather by a *12 comparison of all of the trees in the area and a weighing of all of the commercial factors. Trees themselves differ with respect to their value as lumber, that is to say, whether or not the species and age and the conditions of growth have made the particular tree that is being considered suitable for lumber. The record shows that certain species and older trees, generally speaking, are more valuable than the younger trees and that there is great disparity in value as among different species of trees; whether custom and the rules of the forest service forbid the cutting of certain trees and permit the logging of others, the location of the trees to be cut with respect to the transportation of logs, the existence of roads or potential roads for the purpose of removal, whether or not the land where the trees are being grown is suitable for removal of logs and many other items of difference are all to be considered. The aliquot share of each of the owners in common depends rather on the value of the trees cut in their present location, than any mere counting of the trees. A forest differs greatly in its product from land devoted to the raising of fungible crops.

It should be noted in passing that the present requirements with respect to the form of the order for a new trial have been observed by the trial judge. In the late Supreme Court case, Mercer v. Perez, 68 Cal.2d 104, 112-113 [65 Cal.Rptr. 315, 436 P.2d 315], an important change in the statute relative to motions for a new trial is discussed; the opinion points out the addition of a requirement that the court must specify not only the ground or grounds upon which the new trial is granted, but also its reasons for doing so. If it does not do so, the court must file a separate written specification of reasons within ten days, and the court continues: “As orders granting motions for new trial are infrequently reversed, it is essential that they be the product of a mature and careful reflection on the part of the judge. Society has a manifest interest in avoiding needless retrials: they cause hardship to the litigants, delay the administration of justice, and result in social and economic waste. (Jehl v. Southern Pac. Co. (1967) 66 Cal.2d 821, 828-829, fn. 9 [59 Cal.Rptr. 276, 427 P.2d 988].) Accordingly, one of the functions of the requirement of specification of reasons is to promote judicial deliberation before judicial action, and thereby ‘ discourage hasty or ill-considered orders for new trial. ’ (Review of Selected 1965 Code Legislation (Cont.Ed. Bar) p. 81.) This objective is furthered, it bears emphasizing, by the change in the law which now forbids the judge from shifting to the attorney for the *13

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 Cal. App. 2d 9, 70 Cal. Rptr. 92, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garibaldi-v-garibaldi-calctapp-1968.