Lane v. Spurgeon

223 P.2d 889, 100 Cal. App. 2d 460, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1237
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1950
DocketCiv. 7799
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 223 P.2d 889 (Lane v. Spurgeon) 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. Spurgeon, 223 P.2d 889, 100 Cal. App. 2d 460, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1237 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

Plaintiffs and respondents brought this action to recover damages for alleged breach by defendants of contractual obligations contained in a certain lease and supplemental agreements. Respondents were the owners of property known as Buck’s Lake Lodge in Plumas County and leased the property, together with the improvements and personal property used in the operation thereof, to the appellants. By the terms of the lease appellants were required to keep the improvements and personal property in good order, condition and repair, and to replace all that might be lost, stolen, destroyed or otherwise rendered not appropriately usable during their tenancy, all to the end that the same might be at all times available for use in running the resort in the same manner as it had been theretofore conducted. A supplemental agreement was thereafter executed in connection with the proposed surrender of the property whereunder the respondents agreed to make adjustment for any shortage of property leased to them. Claiming these covenants had been breached when the property was turned back, respondents filed this action. By the first count in the complaint they sought to recover expenditures they had been put to for labor and material to repair the main water line serving the lodge and the plumbing and fixtures in the various buildings. By the second count they sought to recover a sum alleged to be the value of furniture and equipment leased and not redelivered or redelivered in such condition as not to be appropriately usable. By the third count they sought to recover the value of four boats leased and not redelivered, stock in trade not made good and for wood consumed and not replaced. By the fourth count they sought to recover for shortage in inventories.

Appellants answered, denying generally that they had breached their said obligations. Upon demand a bill of particulars was furnished by respondents wherein the recoveries sought were broken down as follows: Cost of repairing main water supply, cost of repairing plumbing in buildings, labor and material for repairing and replacing electrical equipment damaged beyond use, equipment delivered to defendants and *463 either not returned or returned in unusable condition, a shortage in equipment and shortage in stock in trade.

The case was tried and the court adopted findings in respondents’ favor, granting a total judgment of $4,341.17, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

It is appellants’ contention that the proper measure of damages was not applied and we think in some respects this contention must be sustained. After evidence had been given by respondents that certain articles of personal property had not been delivered or delivered in such condition that they were useless, proof was introduced as to the expenditures made by respondents in buying other articles in replacement and without any additional evidence as to the value of the articles not redelivered or redelivered in unusable condition, the cost of the replacement articles was assessed against appellants. This was not the proper measure of damages.

As a general rule the measure of damage for the loss or destruction of personal property is the value of the property at the time of such loss or destruction. In Smith v. Calley, 103 Cal.App. 735, 737 [284 P. 974], quoting from 8 California Jurisprudence, page 814, the court said:

“ ‘Under section 3333 of the Civil Code, the measure of damages for the destruction of personal property is the value of the property destroyed. Its cost is not the standard, nor is money expended in replacing it. The detriment caused by the injury or partial destruction of personal property is the difference in value immediately before and after the injury, provided that if repairs can be effected for a smaller sum, that sum becomes the limit of recovery. ’ ”

There appears to be no different measure applied where a lessee breaches a covenant to return the premises at the end of the term in substantially the same condition as when received. Independently of express covenant a lessee is under an obligation imposed by law to return leased property in good condition, normal wear and tear excepted. (51 C.J.S. 1156.) In Kaye v. M’Divani, 6 Cal.App.2d 132 [44 P.2d 371], where the lease provided that the lessee would “deliver up the entire possession of said House, Furniture, Goods and Chattels, unto the said party of the first part, . . . in as good state and condition as the same are now in, ordinary wear and tear and damage by fire alone excepted,” the court compared the liability of the lessee to that of a bailee and while the measure of damages was not a direct issue in the case the court allowed market value for loss of a valuable rug. *464 In Williams v. Faria, 112 Cal.App. 455 [297 P. 78], where a harn and silo were destroyed by fire during the lessee’s term this court held proof of the cost of reconstructing the destroyed buildings was not adequate to sustain a finding as to the amount of damages. The only testimony given was as to the cost of replacing the barn and silo, and while the whole amount thus testified to was not given the court held that there was nothing to support the lower figure fixed by the court as the amount of damages suffered. The court said, at page 460:

“The facts are, however, that the barn was erected fifteen years preceding its destruction, and also that the silo had been standing for about eleven years, and there is not a single scintilla of testimony in the record relative to the depreciation of the silo and barn during that period of time. ’ ’

So in this case the testimony was that the articles under discussion had all been subjected to years of use. It certainly cannot be said that used rowboats, water heaters, outboard motors, electric motors, towels, sheets, pillows and pillow cases which were in used condition when taken by the lessees would not have suffered substantial depreciation even though the articles had been kept in good repair.

The only evidence given on the question of damage suffered on account of the breach by appellants of their obligations with respect to these articles was that of one of the respondents who merely testified as to what it cost to replace them with new articles. This evidence does not sustain the court’s findings that by the breach of their obligations the appellants damaged respondents in the sums allowed.

The difficulty of making proof is argued by respondents as justifying the application of the measure of damages used by the court, but we fail to see wherein the case presented any unusual difficulties in that regard. All of these articles were articles commonly used in the running of mountain resorts. Respondents were owners of the articles and could testify as to their value as such and furthermore must have been acquainted with the rate of depreciation of articles so commonly used in their business. Other owners of mountain resorts where these articles are used under like conditions of use and weather could also have testified to these matters, and so the difficulty of proof does not aid in the sustaining of the .findings on the items of damages we are discussing.

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Bluebook (online)
223 P.2d 889, 100 Cal. App. 2d 460, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-spurgeon-calctapp-1950.