Nattini v. Dewey

216 P.2d 46, 96 Cal. App. 2d 545, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1407
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 20, 1950
DocketCiv. 17267
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 P.2d 46 (Nattini v. Dewey) 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
Nattini v. Dewey, 216 P.2d 46, 96 Cal. App. 2d 545, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1407 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

As owners of the Arrowhead Alpine Club, a mountain resort and hostelry, appellants employed respondents as managers and caretakers for one year commencing May 25, 1943. The contract of employment was in writing 1 which provided that it could be terminated upon two weeks’ notice to respondents “in the event continued operation of the club is found to be impractical by reason of the cancellation or nonrenewal of any of the liquor or wine, and beer licenses *547 granted by the State of California or by reason of other conditions beyond the control of the Arrowhead Alpine Club.” Respondents sued to recover (1) 25 per cent of the net earnings of the business for each calendar month of the term of employment totaling $3,310; (2) $8,000 loss of compensation. Appellants contended that they were compelled to close business operations on the 29th of October, 1943, and that even if the discharge was wrongful no profits or salary should be allowed for any time after that date.

The court found that respondents were discharged on October 5, 1943, without cause and without notice of more than two days and awarded them judgment in the sum of $4,997.46.

Appellants now demand a reversal on two grounds, to wit, (1) their liability terminated as of the date of closing the club since weather conditions rendered continued operations impractical; (2) error of the court in refusing to make findings that ingress and egress to and from the club after October, 1943, was over a secondary county road about 1% miles in length from a state highway; that such secondary road was maintained by the county of San Bernardino including the removal of snow; that in September, 1943, the county highway commissioner announced publicly that the county would not remove the snow from any county road during the approaching winter, and the snow that fell was not removed from the secondary road leading to the club; that the club ceased its operations after October 29 and did not resume operations until May 13,1944.

To the first contention the answer is that respondents testified and the court found that they were unceremoniously discharged on October 5, 1943, and were required at that time to leave the club within two days; that plaintiffs had fairly and reasonably complied with their agreement; that there was no just cause or reason under said agreement for the discharge of respondents at any time and they stood ready, able and willing to perform. Moreover, the court found that at no time during the term fixed by the agreement ‘' did continued operation of the club become impractical by reason of . . . other conditions beyond the control of defendants. ’ ’ There is substantial testimony to support such findings. It is true that appellants introduced proof of ice and snow on the secondary road; of the county’s announcement that it would not remove such snow; of the facts that it was not removed but was there from February until April and that snow fell in that region to a *548 depth, of 6 feet. But conceding arguendo that such conditions prevailed, appellants could not, after discharging respondents without cause on two days’ notice where the contract provided for a notice of two weeks, assert the county’s announcement and the presence of snow and ice at a later date as grounds for the discharge. The contract says nothing about the inability of appellants to operate the club because of snow on the roads. In the interpretation of contracts it is the rule that a word of general meaning used after words of a specific class shall be deemed to include only things that refer to and are akin to the specified class. (Pasadena University v. County of Los Angeles, 190 Cal. 786, 790 [214 P. 868].) Therefore it is a reasonable construction of the contract that the phrase “by reason of other conditions beyond the control of” refers to such class of occurrences as the “nonrenewal of any liquor or wine and beer licenses granted by the State” and not to snowfall on the road.

It is unreasonable to conceive that such a contract could have been made with the prospect of cancellation by reason of snow. One of the attractions of the rural roads and mountain retreats is the presence of snow in winter. Hence the parties must be deemed to have contracted with a knowledge of the frigid conditions that beset the San Bernardino mountains in winter. Since the coming of the snow season was a more probable event than the cancellation of liquor licenses, it is a reasonable interpretation of the writing that the phrase “other conditions beyond the control of the . . . Club,” contemplated something other than snow on the road. If appellants had intended to make proof of the snowfall they should have pleaded it as a defense. They did not do so. Respondents alleged that “no other conditions beyond the control of the defendants made it impractical to operate the said property.” To this appellants pleaded (1) a general denial and (2) “that plaintiffs were discharged for cause in that plaintiffs wilfully breached the terms of the agreement aforesaid and were guilty of misconduct in the performance of their services” and that the resort was closed from October 10,1943, to June 1, 1944. Ice and snow were not mentioned. Appellants’ act of discharging respondents on October 5 fixed their relation to their former managers. The repudiation of the contract by appellants created a new status which was not modified by the snowfall.

The contract provided that “the term hereof may be sooner terminated .(upon two weeks’ notice to the Nattinis) *549 in the event continued operation of the club is found to be impractical.” That language granted appellants an election to terminate. It did not mean that a termination would automatically result from the occurrence of the «anticipated condition. The language clearly implied that the notice was the sine qua non to the termination of the employment. Since the termination was dependent upon the choice of appellants, their privilege not having been exercised in the prescribed manner, there was no intention, choice or preference indicated in order to effect such termination and there was none.

Appellants conceive that they could discharge respondents, plead a negative pregnant and thereafter choose what conditions should effect a termination of the contract. While there was proof of the snowfall and evidence that the county did not remove the snow from the secondary road, appellants made no pretense of proving that they themselves could not at reasonable expense have removed the snow; in fact there was no evidence that the snow was not removed from the road.

Appellants contend that their proposed finding was material “because if the road was not accessible during the winter months” it would of necessity follow that it was not practical to operate the club. The proposed finding contains no statement that the club was inaccessible during the winter. It merely says that the road “was thereby made impassable by automobiles at various times” but does not modify the “times’ ’ with any phrase as to the number or duration thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
216 P.2d 46, 96 Cal. App. 2d 545, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nattini-v-dewey-calctapp-1950.