Lane v. Feather River Lumber Co.

251 P. 838, 80 Cal. App. 402, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 48
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 1926
DocketDocket No. 3165.
StatusPublished

This text of 251 P. 838 (Lane v. Feather River Lumber 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
Lane v. Feather River Lumber Co., 251 P. 838, 80 Cal. App. 402, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 48 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The plaintiff recovered judgment in the trial court and the defendant has appealed.

About March 1, 1923, the parties entered into an oral contract “whereby plaintiff was to fall, limb, buck and deliver on board the cars . . . logs from an agreed logging area . . . for the price or sum of nine dollars per thousand feet.” The following allegations of the complaint are denied by the answer: It was agreed that “if as a result of the demand of the employees of plaintiff the working day was reduced from ten hours as theretofore in effect to eight hours that the price per thousand feet should be ten dollars instead of nine dollars. . . . After the commencement of logging operations under said contract the employees of plaintiff and the employees of defendant refused to continue their employment working ten hours a day and from and after April 25th, 1923, the employees of plaintiff did work only eight hours per day.” The demand is for compensation at the rate of $10 per thousand feet. As a see *404 ond cause of action it is alleged that it was agreed “that work under said contract was to be commenced as soon as weather conditions permitted in the spring of 1923, and was to continue so long as defendant operated its sawmill and thereafter and until the mill pond of said defendant was filled with logs; that pursuant to such contract . . . plaintiff commenced work thereon on or about the 10th day of March, 1923, and diligently and continuously prosecuted the same until on or about the 8th day of November, 1923, at which time defendant contrary to the agreement . . . stopped logging operations by this plaintiff and refused to permit plaintiff to continue operations under said contract although at this time weather' conditions permitted logging operations and said sawmill of defendant continued in operation and that such operation under said contract could have been carried on to and including the 3rd day of December, 1923', to the damage of this plaintiff in the sum of $6,600.” The court found in accordance with the allegations of the complaint and gave judgment on the first cause of action for the balance due the plaintiff for services performed, computed at the rate of $10 per thousand feet, and, on the second cause of action, damages in the sum of $3,821.15.

At the time the agreement was made George Laws was the manager of the defendant corporation. The terms of the agreement must be gathered from conversations between the plaintiff and Laws. Relative to the particular conversation upon which the plaintiff relies, he testified: “I says, ‘I want $9 a thousand for all of the logs delivered under the present conditions and if I am forced to go to an eight-hour day, I want a dollar a thousand more. ... I have learned during the winter, or heard a great deal of agitation for the eight-hour day among the workers and I am positive in my own mind that they are going to make a demand for the eight-hour day and I think they will win and I won’t take a contract to deliver logs without some protection, because if we have to go to the eight-hour day, as you know, it will cost me more money than it will under a ten-hour day,’ and he says he didn’t think there would be an eight-hour day, and I says, ‘Well, I am pretty close to the most of the men and I am satisfied there will be.’ He says, ‘ . . . I suppose if your wobbly camp . . . asks for eight hours you will expect that dollar a thousand extra, or you will want *405 that dollar a thousand extra.’ I says, ‘Yes, I will want it, Mr. Laws, but I know you well enough to know that I won’t get it, but if you go eight hours or any of the rest of them go eight hours, I want the dollar a thousand extra and will expect the dollar a thousand extra.’ He says, ‘That is all right, because I won’t go eight hours. ... You know well enough that I can’t afford to go eight hours under the conditions here. ’ I says, ‘I realize that very well, Mr. Laws, and I don’t want to go to it any more than you do, but I think we will be forced to and in that event I would go broke trying to log at a ten-hour price at an eight-hour day.’ . . ■. He says, ‘ That will be all right. . . . Don’t think there will be anything about the eight-hour day anyhow. ’ ” Those parts of the foregoing testimony which are herein italicized appear to constitute the agreement relative to the alleged extra compensation of one dollar a thousand feet. While Laws testified that he did not agree to pay the plaintiff such extra compensation under any conditions, it must be presumed, for the purposes of this appeal, that the plaintiff’s testimony is true and that the following statement in respondent’s brief is a correct inference from the evidence: “The offer of respondent for additional compensation was conditioned upon appellant or the other lumber mills going to the eight-hour day.”

Plaintiff commenced operations about March 10th. He testified: “I started camp, built lots of roads. The fallers started in falling timber on or about the 20th of March, I think, and done everything necessary to get going. Q. And when did you start the delivery of logs? A. On the 8th day of May, 1923. . . . On the 25th of April, the morning of the 25th of April, my employees refused to go to work—quit in a body, every man except my foreman and he stayed to take care of my horses. The rest of them all left camp, demanding an eight-hour day, among other things; an eight-hour day, sanitary conditions, etc., and did not return to work again until the 7th day of May. . . . They came back under the eight-hour day. Q. Was it possible thereafter, and during the season, for you to secure employees to work ten hours a day? A. It was not. Q. What happened, if you know, at the Feather River Lumber Company, at the same time, concern-' ing labor ? A. They went on a strike the same day and went back to work the same day—the 6 th of May. I heard that *406 the Feather River had settled with them, granting them the eight-hour day, so I went down to see Mr. Laws and he told me that he had settled, and that he was going to work Monday morning under the eight-hour day and for me to go back to work, which I did. . . . Q. Did you later have agitation in your camp about the length of day? A. I did. My men heard that- I was trying to go back to a ten-hour day and quit. . . . They stopped work one whole day over it. . . . Labor was very short. . . . Q. Did Mr. Laws ever notify you that he had gone back to a ten-hour day? A. He did not. Q. Did he ever make any demand on you that you go back or attempt to go back to the ten-hour day? A. He did not. . . . Q. Did you make any effort to secure other employees? A. Well, no particular effort, no, because Mr. Laws said to lay off until the thing was settled and I laid off until he told me to go back to work under the eight-hour day. Q. Do you know of any other logging camp, Mr. Lane, in Plumas County, that operated eight hours a day during the season of 1923 for any length of time? A. Yes, sir; the Feather River Lumber Company. ... I have heard that they worked ten hours on the eight-hour basis with the pay for overtime for the balance of the season. . . ✓ Their camp ran approximately ten hours, but it was my understanding that they worked on an eight-hour day and got pay for overtime. Q. . . . Were you compelled to reduce the hours and wages or did you do it voluntarily? A. I was compelled to. It would have been utterly impossible for me to get men to work ten hours a day and Mr. Laws, or the Feather River Mill, was working eight.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Berger v. Lane
213 P. 46 (California Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 P. 838, 80 Cal. App. 402, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-feather-river-lumber-co-calctapp-1926.