Ideal Packing Co. v. Brice

282 P.2d 957, 132 Cal. App. 2d 582
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1955
DocketCiv. 20503
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 282 P.2d 957 (Ideal Packing Co. v. Brice) 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
Ideal Packing Co. v. Brice, 282 P.2d 957, 132 Cal. App. 2d 582 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

Appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment in an action for accounting wherein defendants prevailed on their cross-complaint. Reversal is demanded on (1) inadequacy of the findings; (2) error in dividing the accounting period; (3) court’s failure to employ the profit determining method required by the contract; (4) insufficiency of the evidence; (5) failure to find upon substantial credits and to award same to plaintiff.

On June 19, 1950, respondents were owners of the J Bar L Ranch (140 acres), and its equipment. On that day they effected a transaction with plaintiff as follows: (1) respondents leased the ranch to appellants for the period to terminate September 13, 1951, to be used for feeding cattle and growing crops; (2) respondents were employed to operate the ranch for which they should receive $200 per month, have their home on the ranch and receive a bonus of 40 per cent of the net profits gained from the operations, payable 30 days after the completion of a statement of the accounting, but in no event later than 75 days after September 13, 1951; (3) an accounting was to be taken for the purpose of computing the bonus as soon as practicable after the September date; (4) Belinky (officer of and assignor to Ideal Packing Co.) loaned to respondents $24,000 evidenced by their note and secured by a trust deed on the J Bar L Ranch; (5) they orally agreed to commence operations under the contract June 19, 1950. At the expiration of the specified year, the parties orally agreed to extend the lease for an additional year, terminating September 12, 1952, on its identical terms and conditions. * But prior to the arrival of the day designated for the expiration of the extended period, they agreed further *584 not to extend the term. By November 24, 1952, appellants had removed their bovine herd from the leased land.

At the end of the first year of operations, respondents demanded a computation of the profits and payment of their bonus. But neither calculation was done nor payment made. On the contrary, appellants attempted to prevent respondents from refinancing the loan when the note matured in order that appellants might acquire the J Bar L Ranch at a foreclosure sale. Such efforts on the part of appellants consisted of (1) their failure to keep correct accounts and to render an accounting to respondents of the profits earned by their operations; (2) their instituting this unfounded suit and their levy of a writ of attachment on the J Bar L Ranch, thereby encumbering its title and rendering a refinancing difficult.

Appellants contend that the findings are inadequate in that they do not clearly show the basis of the court’s judgment; that there is no means of telling how the court derived the amount found to be due respondents; that the report of a referee or a master is required to enable the reviewing court properly to adjudicate this appeal. However, no authority is cited to support such contention. The court found specifically “that an accounting of the operations of J-L Ranch was had in open Court; that said accounting showed a net profit for the first year period, June 19, 1950 to September 12,1951, in the sum of $5,330.50.” An accounting made in open court fulfills any requirement for a referee’s report. Respondents’ Exhibit 0 gives in detail the figures of the accounting as made to the court. It shows the total net income for the first year to have been $5,263.64. The court computed that it was $5,330.50, $66.86 more than reported *585 by respondents’ accountant. The latter included an inventory of the cattle but not of the supplies for the first year. The court added $2100, the value of grain or hay, to the inventoried value of the cattle, making the total $7,363.64. Deducting therefrom the items of overpayment, taxes, salary and a harrow, totaling $2,033.14, leaves the sum of $5,330.50, the total net profit for the first year. Forty per cent of that total is $2,132.20—which is the sum due respondents for the first year. The testimony of respondents and their accountant is substantial evidence to support such findings. There is no halo about the head of the accountant of appellants that shines all the way to this court. To us he was just a witness of the human variety whom the trial court was especially authorized to evaluate. That court having studied and appraised all evidence introduced, its findings are the ultimate of the truth of the issues investigated. Where a trial court accepts the proof adduced by one expert and rejects that presented by another with reference to the issues of the same controversy, its consideration of the contention involves an inquiry into the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be accorded their testimony which no appellate court will indulge. (Hurley v. Behnke, 212 Cal. 761, 762 [300 P. 820]; Berkowitz v. Kiener Co., 37 Cal.App.2d 419, 425 [99 P.2d 978].) In the Berkowitz case, the appellant made claims similar to those presented here: (1) The evidence is insufficient to support the accounting made by the court; (2) the court arbitrarily divided the accounting period; (3) the court did not refer the issue to a qualified accountant. The appellate court adhered to the fundamental law that it should not be burdened with the task of reviewing the evidence where there is a substantial conflict, but must accept as true all evidence tending to establish the correctness of the reasonable inference. Under the doctrine announced by the cited authorities, it is vain for an appellant to contend that the trial court “did not give consideration” to his evidence, or that the testimony of Kahn, respondents’ accountant, “is not entitled to any substantial evidentiary effect” or that in taking the accounting in open court, the trial judge gave no “special credence or weight to the net profit statement of Schwartz, the certified public accountant of the employer.” That Kahn’s statement was “exaggerated and distorted” was an argument to be addressed to the trial court. (Kruckow v. Lesser, 111 Cal.App.2d 198, 200 [244 P.2d 19] ; Hoffman v. Gurnsey, 44 Cal.App. 98 [185 P. 993].)

*586 Appellants contend that they were prejudiced by the court’s dividing the accounting period; that if the full term from June 19, 1950, to September 13, 1952, had been used, the accounting would have disclosed a loss; that as respondents did not seek a separate accounting for the first three months following June 19, 1950, or for the two distinct years that followed, by such behavior they fixed the term into one period. The court evidently followed the suggestion of appellants’ Exhibit 5 which divided the lease-contract term into separate periods. Nevertheless, they now contend that there was one continuous lease for a three-year period and therefore there should be but one accounting period. But on the testimony of Mrs. Brice and the admissions of appellants that they had agreed to furnish an accounting for each separate period, the court adopted respondents’ contention. Indeed, appellants’ own Exhibit 5 entitled “Tentative Funds Advanced to Brice” is divided into separate periods.

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Bluebook (online)
282 P.2d 957, 132 Cal. App. 2d 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ideal-packing-co-v-brice-calctapp-1955.