Ketchum v. Albertson Bulb Gardens, Inc.

252 P. 523, 142 Wash. 134, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1225
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1927
DocketNo. 20111. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 252 P. 523 (Ketchum v. Albertson Bulb Gardens, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ketchum v. Albertson Bulb Gardens, Inc., 252 P. 523, 142 Wash. 134, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1225 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

The respondent, Ketchum, brought this action against the Albertson Bulb Gardens, Inc., to recover as for a breach of a contract. There was a trial by jury, in which a verdict was returned in favor of the respondent for the sum of two thousand dollars. From the judgment entered on the verdict, the appeal is prosecuted.

The appellant is a grower of, and a dealer in tulip and narcissus bulbs. Its gardens comprise about four acres of ground, situated in the city of Seattle. In the fall of the year 1924, the appellant employed the respondent as a laborer to work in its gardens. After the respondent had been so engaged for a few days, he conceived the idea that he would like to enter into the business of flower and bulb growing on his own behalf, and negotiated to that end with the appellant, through its president and manager. The result of the negotiation was that the appellant leased to the respondent a tract containing some three-quarters of an acre of ground, situated in the northeast part of its gardens, for a term of one year at a rental of fifty dollars, and furnished from its stock a sufficient supply of bulbs to plant the larger part of the leased ground.

The contract between the parties was in part in writing and in part oral. The written part related to- the sale of the bulbs, and was in form a conditional sale. It recited that the appellant had delivered to the respondent a specified number of bulbs of each of several *136 named varieties, the total aggregate being 90,850, of Wbicb 84,700 were tulip bulbs and 6,150 Were narcissus bulbs, and further recited the conditions upon which they should become the property of the respondent.. The contract price for the bulbs agreed upon was $2,104.19, of which, sum eighteen dollars was paid at the time the contract was entered into. The contract further provided that one-half of the gross sales realized from the sale of cut flowers from the bulbs should be turned over to the appellant and credited on the purchase price, and provided for monthly payments in fixed sums during the life of the contract, and provided for a forfeiture of the contract of sale in the case of a breach of any of its conditions. It is conceded that the respondent made additional payments on the contract, bringing the total to the amount of $165.50.

In his complaint, the respondent charged that the bulbs were not true to name, but were, on the contrary, a worthless mixture, unfit for the purpose for which they were purchased and worthless for sale as bulbs, making the further allegation that he was dam-, aged by reason thereof in the sum of four thousand dollars.

For answer, the appellant denied the allegations of the complaint, and pleaded affirmatively a breach of the contract on the part of the respondent; the alleged breach being to the effect that the respondent did not make the monthly payments; did not account for the cut flowers harvested and sold by him; did not cultivate the growing bulbs properly, and committed other breaches of the contract, entitling the appellant to declare a forfeiture of the contract, and that it had so declared such a forfeiture. The reply was a denial of the affirmative allegations of the complaint.

On the trial, the respondent introduced evidence *137 thought to substantiate the allegations of the complaint, and rested. The appellant, thereupon, through its counsel, made its opening statement to the jury, and called a witness on its own behalf. Before the witness was sworn, the respondent moved the court to strike the affirmative answer of the appellant, on the ground that the appellant had not pleaded that it had complied with the statutes relative to dealers in nursery stock. (Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 2858, 2859) [P. C. §§ 2726, 2727]. This motion the court granted, and thereafter refused to permit the appellant to show that the respondent had himself breached the contract.

It is first assigned that the court erred in striking from the pleadings the appellant’s affirmative defense, and in refusing to allow the appellant to show the facts therein pleaded as a defense to the respondent’s cause of action. The claim of error, we think, is well founded. The respondent’s cause of action sounded in damages. He based his claim upon a breach of the very contract the appellant set up to defeat his claim. Plainly, we think that, since he relies on a breach of the contract to recover, the appellant may show a breach on his part to defeat or mitigate the amount of his recovery. The contract, if void at all, is void as to both parties, and the respondent cannot be heard to assert that it is so far valid as to furnish him with a cause of action, and so far invalid as to deprive the appellant of the right to rely upon it to defeat his cause of action.

Among the bulbs the appellant agreed to deliver to the respondent was a variety of tulips known as “Flamingo”. These the appellant concedes that it did not deliver, but delivered in their place a variety known as “Clara Butt”. On the trial, after the respondent had testified to the substitution as one of the elements of damage suffered by him, the appellant of *138 fered to show that the “Clara Butt” variety was as valuable in the markets as the variety for which they were substituted. The trial court refused to admit the testimony. The reason for the refusal is not very clearly shown in the record, but it seems to have been on the theory that the respondent was entitled to receive the variety he contracted to purchase, and that the delivery of a different variety was the equivalent of an entire failure to deliver. But such is not the rule. The respondent was suing in damages for a breach of a contract. The measure of his recovery is the damages he suffered by reason of the breach. Manifestly, if the bulbs delivered in place of the bulbs contracted for were of a value equal to the contracted bulbs, the respondent suffered no damage by the substitution. It was, therefore, error to reject the proffered testimony.

The court gave to the jury .the following instructions :

“You are instructed under the evidence in this ease that the defendant corporation contracted to deliver to the plaintiff, among other things, under contract, 15,930 flamingo bulbs. It is further admitted by the evidence in this case that the defendant did not deliver such bulbs, but did deliver a different variety. You are instructed under this set of facts the plaintiff is entitled to your verdict in this case and shall award plaintiff damages under the instructions herein given you.
“You are instructed that if you find, for the plaintiff the measure of his damages is the difference between the value of thq crop of bulbs produced and the value of the crop of bulbs that would have been produced had the bulbs delivered been according to the contract, plus the amount plaintiff paid defendant on the contract, and less the expense of producing the crop that would have been produced if the bulbs had been according to contract.”

*139 These instructions are erroneous. Since the action was for damages suffered, mere proof that there was a breach of the contract, without more, did not warrant a verdict in favor of the respondent, even for nominal. damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P. 523, 142 Wash. 134, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ketchum-v-albertson-bulb-gardens-inc-wash-1927.