Hammond v. San Mateo Planing Mill Co.

187 P. 144, 44 Cal. App. 750, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2971.
StatusPublished

This text of 187 P. 144 (Hammond v. San Mateo Planing Mill Co.) 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
Hammond v. San Mateo Planing Mill Co., 187 P. 144, 44 Cal. App. 750, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 552 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of defendant rendered and entered upon the verdict of a jury. The action was instituted by the plaintiffs to recover from the defendant the sum of $4,296.38 as the purchase price of a cargo of lumber claimed to have been sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the defendant on or about the twenty-fifth day of May, 1914. The contract under which said lumber was sold was in the form of a written memorandum of such sale, specifying the amount, quality, price, and place of delivery of said lumber, which was to be shipped from San Francisco and delivered on the levee at San Mateo. The contract contained this clause: ‘1 San Francisco tally & inspection by Pacific Coast Lumber Surveyors to govern & be final.” The complaint was in the form of the common counts for goods, wares, and merchandise *752 sold and delivered. The answer of the defendant, after denying the allegations of the complaint, set up the contract in writing between the parties and included the same in its answer in the form of an exhibit. The answer then proceeded to state that an alleged tally and inspection of the lumber attempted to be delivered to the defendant under the terms of said contract was made and had at San Francisco, but that the same was conducted by persons unknown to the defendant, and was, in fact, no tally or inspection at all because so unskillfully, carelessly, negligently, and speedily conducted as to render it impossible for the same to be a true or sufficient tally and inspection of said lumber, and that as a matter of fact the lumber so purporting to be inspected did not comply either in the amount of feet or amount of pieces or in its quality with the requirements of said contract, and that the attempted delivery of such lumber did not constitute a performance on the part of the plaintiffs of their said contract, but, on the contrary, constituted a breach thereof, from the effect of which the defendant suffered damage in the sum of three thousand dollars, for which it prayed judgment in its favor. The defendant subsequently filed an amendment to its said answer wherein it was alleged as a separate defense, and also by way of cross-complaint, that the written contract between the parties did not set forth the true agreement between them in the particular respect that at the time said contract was prepared it was understood and agreed that the persons to be selected as the tallymen and inspectors of said lumber by virtue of the concluding clause in said writing were to be appointed by one Walter Anderson, the authorized representative of the defendant. At the trial of the cause a second amendment to the defendant’s answer and cross-complaint was presented and permitted by the court to be filed, wherein it was averred that the understanding and agreement between the parties by which the tallymen and inspectors of said lumber were to be appointed by said Walter Anderson was omitted from said written contract by the mutual mistake of the parties.

Upon the trial and submission of the cause the jury rendered its verdict in the defendant’s favor, awarding it damages in the sum of $350, and upon the coming in of such verdict the court adopted the same, and thereupon *753 proceeded to make findings to the effect that the written instrument embracing the contract between the parties did not contain the true agreement between them in the respect that it was agreed between the said parties that the defendant should have the privilege of appointing tally-men from the Pacific Coast Lumber Surveyors to tally and inspect said lumber, and that this provision of their said agreement was omitted by the mutual mistake.of the parties from said writing. Having made these findings the court entered its judgment reforming said written contract in the above respect and awarding the defendant judgment for the amount of damages fixed by the verdict of the jury. The plaintiffs appeal from such judgment.

Cl] The first contention which the appellants make upon such appeal is that the trial court erred in the admission of oral evidence offered on behalf of the defendant for the purpose of showing that there was an oral understanding and agreement between the parties, contemporaneous with the making of the written agreement between them, to the effect that the tallymen and the inspectors from the Pacific Coast Lumber Surveyors, who were, by the terms of said writing, to inspect said lumber, and whose tally and inspection thereof was to be final, were to be selected by Walter Anderson, the authorized representative of the defendant in the matter of the purchase of said lumber. The appellant’s claim in support of their contention is that such oral evidence was inadmissible for the reason that it varied the terms of the written agreement between the parties. We are unable to sustain this claim. The clause in the said written agreement providing that the tally and inspection of the lumber to be furnished by the plaintiffs to the defendant under the terms of said writing was to be made by the Pacific Coast Lumber Surveyors is silent as to which of the parties to said writing should select the persons from said Pacific Coast Lumber Surveyors who were actually to make such tally and inspection. The evidence in the case showed that the Pacific Coast Lumber Surveyors, referred to in said writing, had no separate entity as a corporation or partnership, but were merely a voluntary association of inspectors calling themselves by such name. This being so, it is evident that the individuals to be selected from among their number to make the tally and inspection required by the *754 terms of this written, agreement must have been chosen by one or other of the parties to this contract; and the contract being entirely silent as to who should make such choice and selection oral evidence offered for the purpose of showing that such choice and selection was to be made by one or other of the parties to said agreement would in nowise vary or contradict its terms; and this being so, the admission of such evidence on the part of the trial court could not constitute a violation of the well-known rule of law forbidding the introduction of oral evidence the effect of which would be to vary or contradict the terms of a written instrument. The testimony which was thus offered and admitted fully sustained the defendant’s claim as to the existence of such oral understanding at the time of the execution of the written contract between the parties, and also was quite sufficient to support the findings of the trial court, later made in that respect, to the effect that such oral understanding as to the party by whom the tallymen and inspectors of said lumber were to be chosen was omitted from said writing by mutual mistake.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 144, 44 Cal. App. 750, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-san-mateo-planing-mill-co-calctapp-1919.