Law v. San Francisco Gas & Electric Co.

142 P. 52, 168 Cal. 112, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 297
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1914
DocketS.F. No. 6223.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 142 P. 52 (Law v. San Francisco Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Law v. San Francisco Gas & Electric Co., 142 P. 52, 168 Cal. 112, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 297 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment entered in accordance with the award of arbitrators and from an order of the superior court refusing to vacate said award.

On or about the twentieth day of July, 1905, the plaintiffs entered into a contract with the defendant corporation by which the latter agreed to furnish steam for heating the “Monadnock,” “Rialto” and “Crossley” buildings situated in the city and county of San Francisco. At that time plaintiffs owned all three of these buildings. The steam was generated at the manufactory of defendant known as " Station C, ’ ’ and under the terms of the contract was to be delivered at a designated point to the pipes of plaintiffs running to said buildings. The corporation agreed to furnish steam for twenty-four hours a day at an approximate pressure of one hundred pounds and payment was to he made at the rate of one cent per cubic foot of distilled water returned through meters from the heating systems. The life of the agreement was to be ten years. Under this contract steam was delivered and paid for. On the sixteenth day of March, 1906, plaintiffs conveyed the Rialto and Crossley buildings to Mrs. Theresa A. Oelrichs. On that date the president of the San Francisco Gas and Electric Company, Mr. John A. Britton, wrote to Messrs. Tobin & Tobin, attorneys for Mrs. Oelrichs, eonsent *114 ing that the contract for the supply of steam might be assigned to her in so far as it related to the two buildings which she had purchased. The letter also contained the following paragraph :

“Should it be your client’s desire to have a separate contract made upon the same terms, ending at the same period of time as the contract with Mr. Law, I shall be pleased, on behalf of the San Francisco Gas and Electric Company, to enter into such a contract at your pleasure. ’ ’

On the seventeenth day of March, 1906, plaintiffs assigned the contract of July 20, 1905, in so far as it affected and applied to the Crossley and Rialto buildings to Mrs. Oelrichs, and the assignment was delivered to her. Said assignment has never been canceled or rescinded. Mrs. Oelrichs never accepted defendant’s offer to enter into a separate contract regarding the two buildings which she had purchased from the Law brothers.

On the eighteenth day of April, 1906, in the great conflagration in San Francisco the Crossley and Rialto buildings were practically destroyed and the Monadnock building together with defendant’s “Station C” were partly demolished. At the time of the arbitration the two buildings belonging to Mrs. Oelrichs had not been rebuilt but the plaintiffs had reconstructed the Monadnock building; had demanded steam from defendant and had been refused. “Station C,” the only plant which defendant had owned prior to April 18, 1906, from which it could supply steam under its contract, had not been rebuilt with a view to continuing steam service. These and other facts were submitted to a board of arbitrators and the three following questions were, by said submission, propounded to them:

“(a)' Was said contract of July 20, 1905, extinguished by reason of all or any of the facts herein recited and agreed upon? and
“(b) Was the further performance by the defendant of the said contract of July 20, 1905, excused by reason of all or any of the facts hereinbefore recited and agreed upon ? and
“(c) If it shall be determined by said arbitrators that the said contract of July 20, 1905, was not extinguished, and that the further performance thereof by the defendant after the 18th day of April, 1906, was not excused by reason of all or any of the facts hereinbefore recited and agreed upon, then, *115 and in that event only, what is the amount of the loss and damage which the plaintiffs have suffered by reason of the defendant’s failure and refusal to further perform said contract of July 20, 1905, and to furnish steam under and pursuant to the provisions thereof for the heating of said Monadnock building subsequent to the 18th day of April, 1906 ? ’ ’

The arbitrators took testimony; considered the matters involved and made a report in which the first two interrogatories were answered in the negative and the damages were fixed in the sum of $14,595.

Passing, without deciding, the contention that defendant’s attack on the award and judgment entered thereon is not in accord with the provisions of section 1287 of the Code of Civil Procedure, we will consider the arguments of counsel for appellant upon the mistakes of law by which he insists the arbitrators failed properly to analyze the contract and to give the award which a proper analysis would have made inevitable. He relies upon the following propositions:

1. The contract of July 20, 1905, was in its nature entire and indivisible.

2. The obligations arising under said contract were contingent upon the continued existence of the three buildings, further performance being excused by the destruction of two of them.

3. The contract was rescinded by defendant’s action in that regard because of partial failure of consideration resulting from destruction of two of the buildings.

4. The assignment to Mrs. Oelrichs did not modify the obligation of plaintiffs to take and pay for all of the steam necessary for the heating of the three buildings.

5. The obligations of the parties to continue performance of the contract were contingent upon the existence of defendant’s steam plant and defendant was excused by the destruction thereof from further performance.

It is doubtless true, as appellant’s counsel contends, that ordinarily when a contract is made with reference to several parcels of property belonging to one person, the obligations of the agreement will not be met by performance with reference to one of them. Thus in Sterling v. Gregory, 149 Cal. 118, [85 Pac. 305], where the defendant had agreed to purchase all of the oranges from three groves, all belonging to plaintiff, the sale by the latter of the fruit from two of the *116 orchards was held to be a breach of the agreement sufficient to support a rescission. In McConnell v. Corona City Water Co., 149 Cal. 61, [8 L. R A. (N. S.) 1171, 85 Pac. 929], this court held that the contract for driving a tunnel a certain distance was indivisible, but held, nevertheless, that where part of the tunnel caved in, by reason of the failure of defendant to furnish proper timbers, plaintiff might sue for the value of the work done and might obtain damages for loss of estimated profits. So in Loudenback Fertilizer Co. v. Tennessee Phosphate Co., 121 Fed. 298, [61 L. R A. 402, 58 C. C. A. 220], it was held that a contract for the sale of “all phosphate rock which should be needed for the ordinary requirements of plaintiff’s factory,” was a single contract and not a number of agreements for the sale of definite quantities of rock as ordered from time to time.

Norrington v. Wright, 115 U. S. 188, [29 L. Ed. 366, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
142 P. 52, 168 Cal. 112, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/law-v-san-francisco-gas-electric-co-cal-1914.