Langenberg v. Guy

247 P. 621, 77 Cal. App. 664, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 433
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1926
DocketDocket No. 4463.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 247 P. 621 (Langenberg v. Guy) 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
Langenberg v. Guy, 247 P. 621, 77 Cal. App. 664, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 433 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

This is an action to recover damages for the alleged breach of a contract. Judgment passed for plaintiff. Defendant, appealing from that judgment, claims, among other things, that his conduct did not amount to a breach of his agreement. If this contention be well taken *Page 666 it is determinative of the case, and in that event it will not be necessary to consider any of the other points presented by the appeal.

Defendant offered in writing to employ plaintiff's truck and driver for the hauling of lumber for one year if plaintiff would purchase a certain Indiana truck outfit then owned by defendant's son-in-law, one Arthur L. Knudson. When he made the proposal, August 6, 1920, defendant was the sole owner of a lumber business carried on by him in the city of Los Angeles under the name of Pico Heights Lumber Company. The instrument which evidences the proposal, the italics being ours, is as follows:

"August 6, 1920.

"Mr. G.O. Langenberg, "Los Angeles, Calif.

"Dear Sir:

"In consideration of the purchase of the Indiana truck outfit from our Mr. Knudson we will employ your truck and driver for lumber hauling for a period of one year from date of delivery of new truck, as our business warrants. This is based on city hauls, excluding the shoestring strip and San Fernando district, at $2.00 per M. board feet and the prevailing rate to outside points, and on loads of from 3000 to 6000 feet.

"[Signed] PICO HEIGHTS LUMBER COMPANY, "BY GEO. F. GUY."

Plaintiff claims that some time prior to September 25, 1920, he purchased the truck of Knudson in accordance with defendant's offer; that such purchase became and was a sufficient executed consideration for defendant's promise; and that thereupon defendant immediately became legally obligated to perform his promise to employ plaintiff's truck and driver in the hauling of lumber for the one-year period mentioned in the written offer. Plaintiff commenced hauling lumber for defendant on September 25, 1920, under the terms of the written offer, and continued to do so until November 12, 1920, on which day defendant sold his business to a third party and thereupon notified plaintiff that, as he did not have any more business, he would have no more hauling for him to do. There is no suggestion that the sale of the business was not bona fide in every particular. *Page 667

Respondent claims that appellant, by selling his business, voluntarily put it out of his power to perform his part of the contract, thus preventing performance by respondent, and that such prevention of performance constituted a breach of the contract by appellant, entitling respondent immediately to sue for damages. Appellant, on the other hand, claims that his contract contains neither an express nor an implied undertaking on his part not to sell his business; that, therefore, he could sell as he did without thereby violating his agreement; and that his sale of the business and his consequent inability to continue hiring respondent's truck and driver did not subject him to damages as for a breach of contract.

The case turns upon the proper interpretation to be put upon the contract as evidenced by appellant's written offer. As in most cases of the kind, but slight if any assistance can be derived from judicial decisions on other contracts, save in so far as the reasoning of the courts in other cases may prove helpful as guides to a correct interpretation of the particular contract under consideration. In the main each case must rest upon it own bottom.

The words of the contract which are of vital significance — the ones which we think are determinative of appellant's right to sell his business prior to the expiration of one year — are the words, "as our business warrants." With this language in the contract appellant's only undertaking was to employ the truck and its driver during the year as warranted by his business. Bearing in mind this provision, we now proceed to consider the nature of appellant's obligation in so far as his right to sell his business is concerned.

There is no basis for a contention that appellant has violated any express term of his contract. In no part of the instrument signed by him does he expressly covenant not to sell his business. Therefore, whether he could rightfully sell it during the year without breaching his contract with respondent depends entirely upon whether the contract imports an implied obligation on appellant's part not to sell the business prior to the year's expiration. That, in the last analysis, is the ultimate question presented for solution. If the contract does import such an implied undertaking on appellant's part, then upon selling the business before the end of the year he would become liable as for a breach *Page 668 of his agreement. [1] For of course it must be conceded that where a party to a contract of employment obligates himself by either an express or an implied agreement not to disable himself from continuing the employment for a stipulated time, he will make himself liable in damages for breach of contract if, by a sale of his business before the expiration of the stipulated period, he voluntarily puts it out of his power to continue the employment to the end of its term in the manner agreed to by him. (White v. Lumiere North American Co., 79 Vt. 206 [64 A. 1121], and notes to that case in 6 L.R.A. (N.S.), p. 807 et seq.)[2] It may also be conceded that, in the absence of some provision in a contract of employment which tends to negative the implication that the employment will continue uninterruptedly during a specified term, one who has bound himself to employ another during a definite time for a compensation, the amount whereof can be earned and determined only by an actual performance of the services over the whole of the stipulated period, will render himself liable for damages for breach of contract if he makes a disposition of his affairs which renders it impossible for him to receive the services in the manner contemplated by the contract. (Note to Turner v. Sawdon Co., 2 B.R.C. 774.) In every such case the question in the last analysis is simply this: Do the terms of the contract — and, if the contract is ambiguous, do the circumstances under which it was made — necessitate the implication that the employer has undertaken not to dispose of his business during a fixed period of time?

[3] As we have pointed out, any claim that appellant breached his contract necessarily must be grounded upon the theory of an implied undertaking on his part not to sell his business before the expiration of the year, there being no express agreement on his part not to do so. The question then is this: Does an agreement to hire a truck and its driver to haul lumber for a year, as the business of the hirer warrants, carry an implied obligation on the hirer's part that he will not during the year put it out of his power to continue furnishing lumber for hauling?

The words "as our business warrants" give to the hirer of the truck a latitude and a freedom of action and often found in contracts of employment for a definite period. *Page 669 Their presence here makes this contract of employment somewhat analogous to those contracts of purchase and sale where the buyer agrees to take such an amount of goods as he may "require" in the course of his business.

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Bluebook (online)
247 P. 621, 77 Cal. App. 664, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langenberg-v-guy-calctapp-1926.