Leavens v. Pinkham & McKevitt

128 P. 399, 164 Cal. 242, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 334
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 2989.
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 128 P. 399 (Leavens v. Pinkham & McKevitt) 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
Leavens v. Pinkham & McKevitt, 128 P. 399, 164 Cal. 242, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 334 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This action was brought to recover money claimed to be due plaintiff upon: 1. An alleged contract of sale by plaintiff to defendant of a crop of oranges belonging to plaintiff; 2. A similar alleged contract between one B. Maes and defendant for Maes’s oranges; and 3. Similar alleged contracts between plaintiff’s father, J. M. Leavens, and defendant, with respect to oranges, lemons, and grape fruit, the claims of Maes and J. M. Leavens having been *244 assigned to plaintiff. Defendant denied that it ever entered into any of the alleged contracts, claiming that it received all fruit asserted to have been delivered under the same, on consignment to be packed, shipped, marketed, and sold for the benefit of the consignors, and the net proceeds thereof only to be paid to plaintiff and his assignors. These net proceeds did not exceed $775, for which sums defendant offered to allow plaintiff to take judgment. The case was tried with a jury, which, in addition to answering certain special issues submitted, found a general verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,072.22 on plaintiff’s own contract, for $1,039.36 on the Maes contract, and for $16.26 on the J. M. Leavens contract, an aggregate of $2,127.84. Judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff on such verdict. This is an appeal by defendant from such judgment. There are also attempted appeals from an order denying defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, and two rulings made in the course of the trial refusing to strike out certain testimony, but none of these orders or rulings was an appealable order. If the trial court erred in any of these matters, its action may be reviewed on the appeal from the judgment, if properly presented by the record.

The only point made by the briefs cn this appeal is as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury, and it is only in one respect, a matter essential to any recovery on the theory of a sale, that this claim is made. It is not questioned that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the conclusion that one H. G-. Hand, an agent of defendant for certain purposes at least, entered into the alleged contracts with plaintiff and his assignors, purporting to do so on behalf of defendant corporation, that he received the oranges, lemons, and grape fruit for which compensation is here sought, under said contracts, and that the amount awarded plaintiff by the verdict is correct if such contracts are legally binding on defendant. It may be conceded, too, that the evidence shows without conflict that Hand did not have actual authority from defendant to purchase any of the oranges or lemons, and that his authority to purchase grape fruit limited him to a price not exceeding three dollars per hundred pounds, while by his contract with J. M. Leavens he agreed to pay $3.50 per hundred pounds. Plaintiff’s theory is that Hand had the ostensible authority to make these contracts of purchase on behalf *245 of defendant, the authority defined by section 2317 of the Civil Code as being “such as a principal, intentionally or by want of ordinary care, causes or allows a third person to believe the agent to possess,” and that defendant is therefore bound by such contracts. Section 2334 of the Civil Code provides that “a principal is bound by acts of his agent, under a merely ostensible authority, to those persons only who have in good faith, and without want of ordinary care, incurred a liability or parted with value, upon the faith thereof,” and it is claimed that the evidence was such as to sustain a conclusion that plaintiff and each of his assignors entered into said contracts with Hand, as the agent of defendant, and delivered their property to him as such agent thereunder, in good faith and without want of ordinary care. The answers of the jury to special issues submitted to them on this branch of the case were all in favor of plaintiff’s theory, being substantially that either intentionally or by want of ordinary care an appearance was allowed by defendant to exist and be known to plaintiff and each of his assignors that Hand was authorized to enter into and execute such contracts, and that each of them in dealing with Hand as defendant’s agent acted in good faith and without want of ordinary care.

It would serve no useful purpose to discuss in this opinion at great length the evidence given on the trial. Bearing in mind the well settled rules that all conflicts in the evidence were for the jury to determine, and that the verdict must be sustained by an appellate court if there is sufficient evidence, considered in connection with such inferences as may reasonably be drawn therefrom, to sustain it, regardless of the evidence tending to a contrary conclusion, we shall briefly state such of the evidence as, in our judgment, sufficiently supports the verdict.

Defendant corporation, with its principal place of business in southern California at Los Angeles, has for several years operated packing houses in various portions of the state, at which it received citrus fruits for packing and shipping to market. The evidence warrants the conclusion that while very frequently it did this as agent of the persons from whom it received the fruit, accounting to them only for the net proceeds, it also very frequently bought the fruit outright from the growers. One of its packing houses was at Patton, near *246 the city of San Bernardino, in and about which plaintiff and his assignors resided. In the spring of 1908 Hand was installed as manager of this packing house, and continued in that capacity throughout the transactions involved in this action. He was the sole representative of defendant in that locality, and although Mr. Pinkham, the president of defendant corporation, at times visited Patton and in company with him inspected growing crops in that vicinity, he personally transacted all the business done by defendant at that place. He had an automobile, on which was printed in large letters “H. G-. Hand, Manager for Pinkham & McKevitt,” and the evidence was sufficient to warrant the conclusion that Mr. Pinkham, who rode with Hand therein, had full knowledge of this. He had in his possession printed forms of contract for the purchase by defendant of citrus fruits, defendant’s name being printed thereon, which forms were furnished him by defendant, and which he used in making his contracts of purchase. During the spring of the year 1908 Hand purchased oranges for and in the name of defendant from plaintiff and from each of his two assignors, Maes and J. M. Leavens, and his contracts in this behalf were recognized as binding by defendant and the vendors were subsequently paid therefor with checks signed by defendant. During the same time, he purchased in the same way for defendant the oranges of numerous other growers in that vicinity. In fact, the great bulk of the very considerable business done by him for defendant in that locality consisted of the absolute purchase of the fruit, as distinguished from the taking of it on consignment for sale. No question was ever raised by defendant as to his authority to buy as he did during that season. In fact, it is admitted that he did not exee.ed the authority given him in a single case during the season, and that he had been expressly directed to buy oranges to the extent to which he did purchase and authorized to pay the prices he had agreed to pay. By such directions he was expressly authorized to purchase from such persons as he saw fit to purchase from, being limited only as to the amount and price.

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Bluebook (online)
128 P. 399, 164 Cal. 242, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leavens-v-pinkham-mckevitt-cal-1912.