Mitchell Camera Corp. v. Fox Film Corp.

64 P.2d 946, 8 Cal. 2d 192, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 266
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1937
DocketL. A. 15681
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 64 P.2d 946 (Mitchell Camera Corp. v. Fox Film Corp.) 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
Mitchell Camera Corp. v. Fox Film Corp., 64 P.2d 946, 8 Cal. 2d 192, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 266 (Cal. 1937).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

By this action appellant seeks to recover for fifty motion picture cameras which it alleges were specially manufactured by it for the respondent. The appeal is from a judgment of nonsuit.

Appellant is an established manufacturer of motion picture cameras, having been in business since July 1, 1929, as Mitchell Camera Corporation, a Delaware corporation, and prior thereto as a California corporation of the same name. According to the testimony of its president, the company then supplied ninety per cent of the motion picture cameras used in southern California. Its business with the respondent commenced in January, 1928, and was transacted almost, if not entirely, through Fox Case Corporation, a subsidiary corporation. The case went to trial upon a complaint of ten counts which alleged a series of transactions between the parties. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, the court granted respondent’s motion for a nonsuit upon all except two of the causes of action. A subsequent judgment for plaintiff has disposed of the issues upon all of the causes of action except the fourth, fifth, sixth, ninth, and tenth. This appeal, consequently, is directed only to the order made upon the motion for a nonsuit on those counts and the judgment entered thereon.

*194 In the fourth cause of action appellant alleges that in January, 1928, the respondent made arrangements with appellant for it to design and manufacture, according to certain specifications submitted by the respondent, one Grandeur motion picture camera to hold a film 70 mm in width and with special performations, for which it received payment of $13,000. It is further alleged that in December, 1928, respondent gave appellant an order in writing to manufacture two Grandeur cameras at a price of $8,500 each, which cameras were accepted and paid for by respondent. A further allegation is that in January, 1929, the respondent ordered another Grandeur camera which was accepted and paid for by it.

These allegations are repeated in each of the other causes of action. As appellant admits that it was paid in full for the four cameras ordered, these transactions are apparently included in the complaint to show the course of dealing between the parties. Respondent makes no denial in its answer that it ordered the first camera. It specifically admits that it gave the appellant an order for two cameras, which were manufactured pursuant to plans and specifications furnished by it and that upon completion these cameras were accepted and paid for by it. It also admits that in June, 1929, it received another Grandeur camera from respondent and paid $8,500 therefor, but it denies that this camera was manufactured or produced by the appellant pursuant to any agreement or understanding between appellant and respondent. It alleges that this last camera was delivered to it by the appellant after its manufacture or production in the usual course of business and that the price paid was the regular price charged by appellant for cameras of a like character and quality and pursuant to its ordinary and customary mode of carrying on and transacting business.

It thus appears that appellant and respondent do not disagree in any matters concerning the first three cameras manufactured by appellant and sold to respondent, but that respondent insists that the fourth one was produced as a stock article and not by special order and that it was purchased by respondent as such.

The complaint then continues with a recital of the transaction which is in controversy here. It alleges that in October, 1929, respondent gave appellant an oral order and direc *195 tion for it to manufacture specially for the respondent and according to certain specifications submitted by the respondent, 50 Grandeur motion picture cameras at $8,500 each, to be paidofor as completed; that on December 24, 1929, respondent gave appellant its written confirmation of this order; that in January, 1931, appellant had substantially completed 16 cameras and had, with the knowledge of respondent, brought an additional 34 to various stages of completion; that respondent did not call for or pay for any of the cameras as they were completed, but that appellant, "with the permission of respondent, sold two of them to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation for $5,335, and another to Feature Productions for $5,760. Appellant alleges the sum of $67,471.67 to be the cost of bringing the 34 cameras to completion; that they are not suitable for the general trade or for sale to others; that there is no market or other value for them; and that accordingly appellant has been damaged in the sum of $346,433.33.

‘ An important allegation from the standpoint of appellant’s theory of its right to recover is, “that said cameras were to be manufactured specially for defendant and according to specifications furnished by defendant from materials furnished by said plaintiff and not for the general market and the total price of $425,000 agreed to be paid by the defendant was to be in payment of the labor, services and materials in so manufacturing said cameras”.

The fifth cause of action is identical with the fourth except that where the fourth cause of action alleges that the parties agreed upon the price of $425,000, payable $8,500 as each camera was completed, the fifth cause of action alleges that the cameras were to be manufactured for a reasonable price, which the plaintiff alleges to be $425,000, payable $8,500 as each camera^ was completed.

The sixth cause of action is one upon the common count for labor and services performed and materials furnished by the appellant for the respondent at the special instance and request of respondent for $346,433.33.

The ninth cause of action includes the allegation concerning the first four cameras and then alleges that appellant and respondent entered into a contract which said contract or an order or memorandum thereof was and is in writing executed by the defendant, by the terms of which plaintiff *196 agreed to sell and defendant agreed to buy 50 additional Grandeur cameras to be manufactured in the factory of appellant according to certain specifications theretofore furnished by the respondent for the sum of $425,000.

It is further alleged that in January, 1931, 11 cameras had been completed and that the reasonable cost of completing the others was $57,831.48; that respondent refused to accept any of these cameras and that appellant has been damaged in the sum of $367,148.16, the cameras having no market or other value.

The tenth cause of action is the same as the ninth with' the exception that as to the 50 cameras it is alleged that the respondent agreed to pay a reasonable price for them, which reasonable price is asserted to be the sum of $8,500 each.

All of the allegations of each of the causes of action concerning the 50 cameras are denied. In addition, respondent set up as a separate defense to each of the counts except that upon the quantum meruit, (1) the statute of limitations fixed by section 339 of the Code of Civil Procedure; (2) the statute of frauds (sec. 1624a, Code Civ. Proc.); (3) a breach of the contract by appellant in that the cameras were not completed within the time or delivered at the place required thereby; and (4) an abandonment of the contract in January, 1930, by agreement of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
64 P.2d 946, 8 Cal. 2d 192, 1937 Cal. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-camera-corp-v-fox-film-corp-cal-1937.