Kurokawa v. Saroyan

273 P. 613, 95 Cal. App. 772, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 531
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6392.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 273 P. 613 (Kurokawa v. Saroyan) 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
Kurokawa v. Saroyan, 273 P. 613, 95 Cal. App. 772, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 531 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The above action arose out of certain farming operations carried on by the defendants in Fresno County in connection with which the plaintiffs were employed. The complaint by separate causes of action alleged claims for labor furnished and moneys advanced to the-defendants, with a further claim for money had and received to the use of the plaintiffs. Defendants alleged in their *774 answer among other defenses payments on account, together with several counterclaims against the plaintiffs. The trial court—a trial by jury having been waived—found that the balance of plaintiff’s claims unpaid amounted with interest to $7,862.90, from Avhich should be deducted the sum of $882.25 found to be due to the defendants on their counterclaims, and entered judgment against the latter for $7,040.65.

Defendants appeal from the judgment, and contend that the trial court erroneously admitted certain testimony over objection; that its conclusion with respect to plaintiffs’ first and second causes of action and to several items of the counterclaims are unsupported and that the findings are conflicting.

It was alleged in the first cause of action, and the court found, that plaintiffs were employed to plow, cultivate, and irrigate land owned by defendants aggregating 250 acres; to prune and hoe the trees and vines thereon and to sulphur the vines; that the work was to be done during the season of 1925, was to continue to the date when the picking of the crops thereon commenced, namely, to July 22, 1925, and that the defendants agreed to pay therefor the sum of $6,000; that plaintiffs further agreed to furnish all necessary labor for picking and harvesting the crops produced thereon during the season, and also to harvest other crops of grapes which the defendants purchased during that year; and that the latter agreed to pay forty cents per hour for labor furnished under the last-mentioned agreement, the total amount furnished thereunder by the plaintiffs, as found by the trial court, being 14,193% hours.

It was alleged as a second cause of action, and the court found, that during the time that the contract set forth in the first cause of action was being performed plaintiffs at the request of defendants furnished the labor for additional work, Avhich consisted of leveling, preparing, and planting eleven acres of land to Alieanti grapes, three acres to straAVberries, farming and earing for the same, and picking and delivering portions of the crops thereon, and also in hauling tools and performing work in and about the packing-house of defendants; and that plaintiffs completed the latter contract on July 22, 1925, and furnished pursuant thereto 5,277 hours of labor, for which the defendants agreed to pay thirty-five cents per hour.

*775 The defendants contended that all farming work on the land described in the first cause of action, including the harvesting and marketing of the strawberries mentioned in the second cause of action during the whole season of 1925, was under their agreement with plaintiffs to be done for $6,000, it being further agreed that the defendants should pay to the plaintiffs the reasonable value of all services rendered in harvesting such crops other than the strawberry crop as might be produced thereon.

The plaintiffs upon demand served and filed a bill of particulars purporting to state the items of their claims for labor furnished, from which it appears that a portion of the services for which recovery is sought under their first cause of action, namely 5,7341/2 hours, was not rendered in connection with the harvesting of the crops described therein, but was rendered between July 17, 1925, and about November 27, 1925, in irrigating and cultivating certain Mission and Thompson grapes, picking oranges, doing general ranch and packing-house labor and in the operation of two automobile trucks for defendants. Defendants therefore contend that neither the allegations of the first cause of action, nor the findings which, with respect to the character of the work done, follow these allegations, are supported by the evidence.

The complaint, however, as stated above, alleged a number of hours claimed under this cause of action, the same number being shown by the bill of particulars, which also showed the character of the work done. In addition, the plaintiffs testified without objection or contradiction in support of the facts shown by the bill of particulars, and that this labor was performed for the agreed price of forty cents per hour.

A bill of particulars is to be regarded as an amplification of the complaint, and for the purpose of determining the plaintiffs’ right .of recovery or the admissibility of evidence in support of the claim is to be considered as incorporated into the complaint as originally filed (Millet v. Bradbury, 109 Cal. 170 [41 Pac. 865]; Treadwell v. Nickel, 194 Cal. 243, 263 [228 Pac. 25]; Ames v. Bell, 5 Cal. App. 1 [89 Pac. 619] ; Gage v. Billing, 12 Cal. App. 688 [108 Pac. 664]) ; and where it appears from the record that the case was tried upon the theory that the pleadings were sufficient to raise certain issues, and no objection was made in the court below to the introduction of evidence upon those issues, *776 the point that the findings are not within the issues presented by the pleadings cannot be raised for the first time on appeal (Moore v. Campbell, 72 Cal. 251 [13 Pac. 689] ; Sprigg v. Barber, 122 Cal. 573 [55 Pac. 419]; Silvers v. Grossman, 183 Cal. 696, 702 [192 Pac. 534]).

The trial court having found, according to the allegations of the complaint and the bill of particulars, the number of hours of labor furnished, and this finding being supported by the evidence, which also showed without conflict that the character of the work done was as stated in the bill of particulars, it only remained for the court to make findings accordingly. While in the above respect there was a failure to do so, the appellate court is authorized to make findings contrary or in addition to those made by trial court (Const., art. VI, sec. 43/4; Code Civ. Proc., sec. 956a; Kirk v. Culley, 202 Cal. 501 [261 Pac; 994]), and the present is a case for the exercise of the power.

Appellants also claim that the items of work alleged under the second cause of action to have been done for the defendants were but duplications of the items shown by the bill of particulars for which compensation was claimed and allowed under the first cause of action.

While certain work was similar in character, according to the bill of particulars and the evidence, the services under the second cause of action were fully rendered before those alleged in the first cause of action commenced.

The evidence fully supports the conclusion of the trial court as to the number of hours of labor furnished by plaintiffs, as it does likewise the finding against the contention of the defendants that more labor was to be rendered for the $6,000 than that alleged and testified to by the plaintiffs.

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273 P. 613, 95 Cal. App. 772, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurokawa-v-saroyan-calctapp-1928.