Miller v. Hunt, Hatch & Co.

191 P. 75, 47 Cal. App. 768, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 490
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2958.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 191 P. 75 (Miller v. Hunt, Hatch & Co.) 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
Miller v. Hunt, Hatch & Co., 191 P. 75, 47 Cal. App. 768, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 490 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

CONREY, P. J.

Action to recover an unpaid balance alleged to be due on the sale by plaintiff to the defendant of a crop of oranges. Judgment in favor of the plaintiff, from which the defendant appeals.

[1] In á written agreement, of date April 20, 1916, it was stated that the plaintiff “has this day sold” to the defendant his entire crop of oranges, now on the trees growing on his ranch at Lindsay, California, at a stated price per hundredweight. “All fruit is to be weighed at the Hunt, Hatch & Company’s packing house and paid for upon the delivery of duplicate weight receipts at their office at the said packing house at Lindsay. Hunt, Hatch & Company are to furnish all boxes to put the said fruit in and agree to pick and haul the said fruit free of all costs to the said S. T. Miller. Fruit is to be of merchantable quality and picked at the option of the said Hunt, Hatch & Company, provided same is removed on or before December 25, 1916.” The court found that on the thirteenth day of December, 1916, there remained in plaintiff’s orchard 380 trees which were unpicked; the amount of unpicked oranges thereon being 85,000 pounds. Finding V reads as' follows: “That on November 16, 1916, some of said oranges were injured by frost but at least 80 per cent of said oranges were from November 16, 1916, to December 13, 1916, uninjured and were ripe, in good condition, ready for harvest, and merchantable ; that between said November 16, 1916, and December 13, 1916, defendant had sufficient time to pick and *770 haul said ripe and merchantable oranges and could and should have done so; but defendant failed and neglected to pick or haul or pay plaintiff for said merchantable portion of said fruit within said time or at all; that said merchantable oranges were readily and easily separable from the injured oranges; that on the night of December 13, 1916, said merchantable oranges were injured by frost and later about January 6, 1917, were totally destroyed by frost and the amount of merchantable fruit which the defendant so left on said trees unpicked and unharvested in a ripened and merchantable condition and quality which defendant should and could have picked in such merchantable condition was 68,400 pounds.” Finding YII is as follows: “That from Nov. 16 to the 13th day of December, 1916, all of said 68,400 pounds of fruit above mentioned cáme up to the test of an ordinance of the Board of Supervisors of the County of Tulare, mentioned in the Answer of defendant, and none of said 68,400 pounds had been frozen prior to December 13, 1916, to such an extent as to render the same wholly unfit or unfit at all for consumption or merchantable.”

Appellant contends that there was only an agreement for sale and not an actual sale of the crop; and that under the contract the purchaser had the right, at Ms own option, to defer the time of picking the fruit until the twenty-fifth day of December, 1916, provided only that it was all picked not later than that date. The effect of this contention, if allowed as appellant insists upon it, would be that, even if the fruit was mature and ready for the market on and after November 16th, the loss caused by its destruction by frost at any time prior to December 25th would have to be suffered by the plaintiff. With this contention and its claimed effect we do not agree. In Bill v. Fuller, 146 Cal. 50, [79 Pac. 592], the contract was for the sale of a crop of oranges not yet matured, and it was provided therein that the vendee “has this day bought” a described crop of oranges. It was provided that all of the oranges were to be taken by the purchaser on or before a stated date, and the vendor was to deliver at a certain station when wanted by the purchaser. Of this contract the supreme court said: “Nor.do we wish to be understood as holding that the title to the crop did not pass as soon as the contract was executed. The - *771 agreement in form imports a present sale, the thing sold was in existence and was identified and separate ■ from other things.” The contract in that case limited the time of delivery in a similar manner as in the ease at bar; the language used being, “all oranges to be taken by II- Fuller on or before April 1, 1901.” The court founá that the oranges became ripe and ready for market in January, 1901, but the defendant refused to receive them until March, at which time, without fault of the vendor, some of the fruit had become unmerchantable by becoming too ripe and puffy for the market. Under these circumstances it was held by the supreme court that the contract should not be construed to give Fuller the absolute right to defer the delivery of the «ranges to the injury of the plaintiff; that it must be construed to mean that the.oranges were to be taken by Fuller on or before April 1, 1901, and at such reasonable time as should be necessary to insure their good condition with respect to maturity and fitness for the market. “The merchantability which was warranted by the contract, if there was any such warranty, was nothing more than a warranty that the fruit should be merchantable on the tree, and that when gathered in due season it should be handled and delivered with proper care. This being the case, under the findings we think the defendant was not justified in refusing to accept the oranges which he culled from the crop because of his claim that they were too ripe and puffy for the market.” So here, assuming the facts to be as found by the court, the appellant was obligated to take the oranges on or before the twenty-fifth day of December, 1916, and at such reasonable time as should be necessary to insure their good condition.

[2] Appellant contends that the evidence is not sufficient to support the finding that the portion of the fruit which was marketable on November 16th was easily and readily separable from that which had been frozen; and that the evidence is not sufficient to support the finding that the fruit for which compensation has been allowed was merchantable from November 16th to December 13, 1916. From the testimony of defendant’s manager, Mr. Sparks, it appears that in November or December, 1916, the defendant procured for use in its packing-house a machine called a separator, which was used for the purpose of separating *772 frozen fruit from the better fruit. This machine was first put in operation by the defendant on the thirteenth day of December. It does not clearly appear from his testimony that the orabges which were run through the' separator at that time were from the Miller orchard, nor was the time stated at which such fruit had been picked. He states that the result of the operation was that the fruit was so badly frozen that it was hard to separate the best from the worst of it; it was so badly frozen that they could not separate the fruit properly. Mr. Sparks states that the first frost occurred on November 16th, and the second, which was the disastrous frost, occurred on December 13th. There is no evidence that fruit picked from the Miller orchard prior to December 13th could not have been successfully graded by means of this separator so as to pick out the frosted fruit from that which was not frosted.

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Bluebook (online)
191 P. 75, 47 Cal. App. 768, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-hunt-hatch-co-calctapp-1920.