Marot v. Capital Brush Co.

280 P.2d 238, 131 Cal. App. Supp. 2d 847, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2137
CourtAppellate Division of the Superior Court of California
DecidedFebruary 7, 1955
DocketCiv. A. No. 8591
StatusPublished

This text of 280 P.2d 238 (Marot v. Capital Brush Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Superior Court of California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marot v. Capital Brush Co., 280 P.2d 238, 131 Cal. App. Supp. 2d 847, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2137 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

PATROSSO, J.

Defendant, a wholesale dealer or jobber of paint brushes, on September 26, 1952, placed an order with plaintiff’s assignor, a manufacturer of paint brushes, with its [849]*849place of business in Brooklyn, New York, for 200 “assortments” of brushes, in accordance with samples previously submitted by plaintiff to defendant, the brushes to bear defendant’s label. An “assortment” is a box containing six dozen brushes of three different widths. The order was shipped in three installments: the first, for 57 assortments, being received by defendant November 14; the second, for 95 assortments, received November 21; and the third, for 73 assortments plus three odd lots, was received December 12. As the goods were received by defendant, they were placed upon its shelves, but no examination was made of the boxes to determine whether they conformed to sample, and in ordinary course some were shipped out on orders received from its customers. However, on or about December 17, after some customers to whom the brushes had been shipped had returned the same as unsatisfactory, the defendant first discovered, as it claims, that the brushes did not conform to sample. Thereupon, defendant addressed a communication to plaintiff, advising it of the fact that the brushes did not conform to sample. What further correspondence occurred between the parties does not appear, but in January, 1953, defendant shipped the goods back to plaintiff, which refused to accept the same, as a result of which they were returned to Los Angeles, and defendant advised plaintiff that it was not accepting the same but that they were being held subject to plaintiff’s order.

Defendant refused to pay for the brushes returned, and plaintiff thereupon instituted this action, and in defense thereof defendant pleaded their nonconformity to the samples, and accord and satisfaction. From an adverse judgment, defendant appeals.

The evidence as to whether the brushes conform to samples was conflicting in this: defendant produced two brushes as being the samples submitted, and introduced testimony to the effect that the brushes received did not conform to such samples in various particulars. While plaintiff did not undertake to contradict this testimony, it adduced proof to the effect that the alleged samples produced by defendant were not the ones submitted by plaintiff. In view of this, we would be constrained to accept the trial court’s implied finding adverse to the defendant upon this issue were it not for the errors in rulings upon evidence now to be mentioned.

Defendant’s president in the course of his testimony, wherein he pointed out the various differences between the al[850]*850leged samples and the brushes delivered, made mention of the difference in their appearance, stating that this was a matter of considerable importance because the brushes were of a type that was not used or purchased by professional painters but by laymen and principally housewives who were influenced in purchasing the same by the appearance of the brush. This testimony was stricken out by the trial judge upon the ground that it was hearsay for the asserted reason that, inasmuch as the defendant was a wholesaler and the witness (its president) did not personally sell to the ultimate consumer, he could not have any personal knowledge of the fact. The witness, however, had testified that he had been connected with the defendant for some seven years and had purchased some three or four million dollars of paint brushes; that through his sales force and surveys he was kept informed and was familiar with the demands of purchasers of the various types of paint brushes. In these circumstances, he was certainly competent to testify with respect to trade demands, and it was not necessary, as the trial judge assumed, that he personally have sold brushes to housewives and other ultimate users. And the testimony stricken was relevant and material to the principal issue in the case, namely, whether the brushes delivered conformed to samples.

As previously noted, the main controversy upon the trial was whether the brushes produced by defendent and stated to be the samples submitted by plaintiff were in fact such. In identifying the same as such samples, the witness for defendant stated that he had kept them in a cabinet in his office. Upon cross-examination, he was asked by counsel for plaintiff whether it was not a fact that after he had notified plaintiff that the brushes did not conform to samples he had stated to Mr. Glazer, plaintiff’s Los Angeles representative, that he could not locate the samples in question, and in reply denied making such a statement. Counsel for plaintiff thereupon offered and, over objection of defendant, the trial court admitted in evidence a letter written by Mr. Glazer to the plaintiff wherein he stated that Mr. Lerner, the witness, had stated that he would prove to him (Glazer) that the brushes did not conform to samples when he located the samples. The letter was plainly hearsay as to the single fact of interest that it was offered to prove, that is, that the witness (Lerner) had made a statement indicating that he did not know where the samples could be located. We might not be inclined to regard the error [851]*851as prejudicial were it not for the fact that the trial judge, in announcing her decision, made it unmistakably clear that the alleged "inconsistent statement" appearing in Mr. Glazer's letter weighed heavily in her announced conclusion that the brushes produced by defendant and represented as being the samples were not in fact such.

Defendant also complains of the trial court's ruling in admitting evidence, over its objection, as to an alleged custom that where brushes are manufactured for a distributor under his label, the buyer is required to accept any "over-run," i. e., a quantity in excess of that ordered. We do not undertake to consider the question because there is no evidence in the record that defendant rejected the goods because the quantity delivered was in excess of that ordered.

Other rulings upon evidence are assigned as error, and while some of them appear questionable, they are not likely to recur upon a new trial, and those already mentioned are such as to require a reversal.

There remains for consideration the question of the defense of accord and satisfaction. Subsequent to the delivery of the brushes previously discussed and on about February 13, 1953, defendant, presumably pursuant to another order placed by it with plaintiff, the date of which however does not appear, received and accepted a shipment of a different type of brushes from plaintiff. The shipment consisted of 100 assortments and one dozen 1-inch brushes, for which plaintiff issued its invoice No. 7189, in the sum of $1052.80, and in payment of which defendant issued to plaintiff its check in the sum of $868.60, which plaintiff received and cashed. This check bore the following notation: "Capital Brush Co. tenders you the attached check in full payment of invoices enumerated below:

"#7189 1052.80
less: 2 doz 1" not ordered- 2.80 1050.00
less: Frt Oo chges on mdse retd to you, refused & now at our premises awaiting your disposition 181.40 868.60."

It is contended by defendant that upon these facts the trial court was compelled to conclude, as a matter of law, that this constituted an accord and satisfaction iiot only as to the charges on invoice No. 7189 but of all demands of the [852]

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Bluebook (online)
280 P.2d 238, 131 Cal. App. Supp. 2d 847, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 2137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marot-v-capital-brush-co-calappdeptsuper-1955.