Johnson v. D. H. Bibb Lumber Co.

73 P. 730, 140 Cal. 95, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 560
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1903
DocketS.F. No. 2614.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 73 P. 730 (Johnson v. D. H. Bibb Lumber Co.) 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
Johnson v. D. H. Bibb Lumber Co., 73 P. 730, 140 Cal. 95, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 560 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

The plaintiff—owner of the schooner, J. B. Leeds—and the defendant, a lumber corporation, entered into a written contract whereby the defendant engaged said vessel for three voyages from Portland, Oregon, to Redondo, California, for the purpose of transporting lumber for it, at a given rate per thousand feet, as stipulated in the agreement.

Upon the making of the contract, the plaintiff fully equipped the vessel for said voyages, and placed her at defendant’s disposal and direction, pursuant to its terms. Under defendant’s orders, the vessel made three voyages, the first and third to Redondo, the second to San Francisco, and it is concerning this second trip that the controversy arises—• the first and third voyages having been paid for. After the completion of the voyage to Redondo,—the third made by the *97 vessel,—defendant demanded that another voyage be made to Redondo under the contract, which plaintiff declined to permit, claiming that he had fully complied with the terms ■of his contract in making three voyages, and thereafter 'brought this action to recover compensation for the cargo 1 ■discharged at the port of San Francisco, at the rate specified in the contract for a voyage to Redondo, on the theory that ■defendant having, without his consent, contrary to the contract, and arbitrarily, dispatched the vessel to San Francisco instead of Redondo, he was entitled to recover the stipulated .rate for a voyage to the latter port under the contract. It may ■be said, in passing, that, from the record, it appears that since the commencement of this action defendant has paid to plaintiff, all but the difference between the stipulated rate for a voyage to Redondo and the usual rate for one to San Francisco.

While we have stated that the written contract was for the ■employment of the vessel in transporting lumber, this purpose is not set out in the contract. But, as it is conceded that this was the object of the agreement, and as the omission has jqo bearing on the particular dispute between the parties as to the other terms of the contract, its absence is unimportant.

It will be observed that the written contract between the parties did not provide for any voyage to San Francisco, but ■defendant pleaded in its answer that, at the same time the contract in writing for the Redondo voyages was made, a separate, oral, collateral agreement was entered into between the parties to the effect that, as the three voyages to Redondo might not be successive, and as defendant might, in the interim, •want a cargo to be sent to San Francisco, it might send one there instead of to Redondo, in which event the price for said cargo would be regular San Francisco rates, which were much less than the rate stipulated to be paid in the contract for freight to Redondo. The court permitted defendant, over the objection of the plaintiff, to introduce parol testimony to prove the making of this alleged contract with reference to the voyage to San Francisco, and from said evidence the court found the existence of such a contract, and as defendant had, prior to the commencement of this action, tendered plaintiff -the full amount due at asserted regular rates for a voyage to *98 San Francisco, awarded judgment to the defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial, and the principal point in the case is whether the court erred in admitting said parol evidence. It is insisted by the plaintiff that the written contract offered in evidence was complete in all its terms, and being so, parol evidence to vary those terms was inadmissible. While conceding this to be the general rule, the defendant contends,— 1. That the written contract is apparently a “mere memorandum,” which on its face shows that it was not intended to, and did not, embrace all the terms of the contract entered into between the parties, and, hence, parol evidence was. admissible to supply such terms as were omitted; and 2. That the proof of a parol agreement that the defendant might make a trip to San Francisco in place of a trip to Redondo, was proof of a separate collateral contract between the parties which did not vary the terms of the written agreement.

It is undoubtedly true that there are exceptions to the general rule, such as defendant contends for, and the conditions under which they may be invoked, are: 1. Where from an inspection of the writing it appears upon its face that it is not intended to be a complete contract between the parties, cr does not express the entire contract entered into between them, for, if it' does, it of course is conclusively presumed to have-embraced the entire contract; and 2. Where the parol evidence which is offered is entirely consistent with, and in no manner changes or contradicts, the written instrument. Now, as to the first of these exceptions: Whether a contract, is, or is not, complete upon its face, is a matter to be determined by an inspection of the instrument itself, and, governed by that rule, we are unable to see (except in as far as-the nature of the cargo was concerned and about which there-is no dispute) how there was any term omitted from the-contract, or, in what manner it could be deemed incomplete. The engagement between the parties was for the employment, of the plaintiff’s vessel to ply between specially designated, ports, for a compensation fixed for each voyage, together with a designation of the number of voyages to be made. We certainly cannot see that anything was left open in this, contract, as to the necessary terms to be embraced in it, which *99 would warrant the contention of respondent that it was simply “a mere memorandum.’’ There is certainly nothing on the face of the agreement from which it might be inferred that it was intended to be made more specific, or that it was intended to be anything else than the complete contract under which they were to act. There is no difficulty in understanding exactly what was meant; there is no ambiguity in it which necessitated an explanation; and there is no uncertainty to which parol evidence could be addressed. So, as the contract does not appear to have omitted any terms necessary to make it complete, but, on the contrary, appears to be definite in its terms, it did not come within the first exception to the general rule asserted by respondent, and parol evidence was not admissible upon that theory.

Neither do we think the evidence was admissible as coming within the second exception to the general rule, which permits proof of a parol contemporaneous agreement as to any matter upon which the writing is silent, and which is not inconsistent with its terms. The evidence admitted not only did not have that tendency in either particular, but was wholly outside the exception and within the general rule. It was addressed exclusively to matters upon which the writing spoke, and in every particular in which it purported to express the terms of the agreement and the intention of the parties, was inconsistent with them.

It varied the agreement as to all subjects upon which the contract appeared to be definite—voyages, freight, and ports. The contract called for but three voyages, no more or less. It is not pretended that the voyage to San Francisco was one of them. On the contrary, respondent’s claim is, that it was an additional one.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 P. 730, 140 Cal. 95, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-d-h-bibb-lumber-co-cal-1903.