Newhall Land & Farming Co. v. Hogue-Kellogg Co.

204 P. 562, 56 Cal. App. 90, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 416
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 10, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 4162.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 204 P. 562 (Newhall Land & Farming Co. v. Hogue-Kellogg 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
Newhall Land & Farming Co. v. Hogue-Kellogg Co., 204 P. 562, 56 Cal. App. 90, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 416 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $9,171.18, awarded to it as assignee of Steve Costamagna and B. Aragno for damages for the breach of a warranty as to type or variety of two lots of lima bean seed, aggregating 5,600 pounds, purchased by said Aragno and Costamagna from the defendant and planted upon their lands.

The facts of the case pertinent to the questions to be considered are summed up in the respondent’s brief and are substantially as follows: Early in April, 1919, Arthur S. Chesebrough, plaintiff’s ranch manager at the New'hall ranch, which is situated in Ventura and Los Angeles Counties, between Saugus and Camulos, called upon Mr. Kellogg, vice-president of the defendant company, at defendant’s warehouse in Ventura, and on behalf of two tenants of the plaintiff company—the above-mentioned Aragno and Costamagna —discussed with Mr. Kellogg the price of seed beans, particularly of two varieties, Henderson bush limas and Wilson’s improved bush limas. Prices were given to Mr. Chesebrough and he saw some of the seed. He asked Mr. Kellogg to visit the ranch, and shortly thereafter Mr. Kellogg did so, bringing with him samples of each of the two varieties of beans, and exhibited them to one of said tenants. At that time Mr; Chesebrough, on behalf of both tenants, ordered specific quantities of Wilson’s improved seed and Henderson bush seed. The seed was thereafter delivered by freight to the nearest station, Piru, and was planted. A perfect “stand” of plants resulted. About the 1st of July it was observed by the tenants that the vines were beginning to throw out runners, and, as the Wilson improved beans are of the bush habit as distinguished from ordinary lima beans, which are vining beans, the matter was at once brought to the attention of Mr. Chesebrough and of the de *92 fendant company. Mr. Hogue, president of the defendant, visited the fields and inspected them and came to the conclusion that the plants were ordinary lima bean plants. By agreement of both parties the future cultivation and harvesting of the crop were given over to the management of Mr. Wallace Cummings, an experienced bean-grower, and the cultivation and harvesting were carried on thereafter properly and to his satisfaction. The resulting crop of lima beans was very scanty except in a few spots where, the ground being comparatively flat, irrigation water had stood and the vines produced a considerable number of beans, whereas elsewhere there were few pods on the vines. Such beans as were produced were moldy, split, and broken, and, according to uncontradicted testimony, were on that account defective, off-grade beans.

The trial court found, in accordance with the allegations of the amended complaint, that ordinary lima beans cannot be successfully grown in the territory of which the lands farmed by said tenants form a part, but that Wilson’s improved bush lima, requiring less summer atmospheric moisture than ordinary lima beans, can be profitably grown in said territory, which facts were known to the defendant, as also the purpose for which the seed in question was purchased, and that the defendant warranted the seed to be of the variety designated “Wilson’s Improved Bush lima bean.” It also by its findings negatived defendant’s contention that the lands were not properly farmed, or that after the discovery of the error in the description of seed furnished the plaintiff’s assignors could have reduced their damages by removing the then growing plants and planting and bringing to maturity a more suitable and successful crop.

In support of its appeal the defendant makes three contentions, the first of which is that the court erred in fixing the measure of damages. Much of the argument of the appellant under this head is devoted to an analysis of the evidence as to the amount and value of the crop that would have been had if the seed supplied had been as ordered, in an effort to demonstrate that the court’s findings, both as to quantity of such crop and its market value, were too high. We find, however, that there is ample testimony in the record to sustain the court’s conclusion in this regard.

*93 It is also argued by the appellant in this connection that the measure of damages applicable to the case is furnished by section 3313 of the Civil Code; and that under the terms of this section the market value of Wilson’s improved bean on the 1st of July, 1919—the date of the discovery of the breach of warranty—should have been used in order to determine the value of the crop which would have been produced had the warranty been complied with, instead of the market value of this variety of bean at or shortly after the time of harvest.

This section reads as follows: “The detriment caused by the breach of a warranty of the quality of personal property is deemed to be the excess, if any, of the value which the property would have had at the time to which the warranty referred, if it had been complied with, over its actual value at that time. ’ ’

It will be observed that this section refers to the warranty of the quality of personal property; so that if a warranty of type or variety is not a warranty of quality it would not be governed by said section. o

The difficulty of applying the terms of this section to a warranty of type or variety was recognized in Burge v. Albany Nurseries, Inc., 176 Cal. 313 [168 Pac. 343], and in Germain Fruit Co. v. Armsby Co., 153 Cal. 590 [96 Pac. 319], which were eases of warranty of variety of nursery stock, either as to the fruit to be produced or the root upon which the trees were grafted. Obviously, the time to which a warranty refers—nothing appearing to the contrary—is the time of the sale; but since the purchaser in the cases cited had no means of knowing whether the warranty had in fact been complied with until two years had elapsed, during which time expense had been incurred in planting and cultivating the orchard, to have held that the warranty referred to the time of sale, and that the measure of damages was the difference in value at that time between nursery stock of the variety agreed to be furnished and that actually delivered would have led to an unreasonable, if not absurd, result, for the nursery stock delivered might at that time, considered as a commodity, have been of equal, if not superior value to that ordered. The appellate court, therefore, construed this section so as to hold that the time to which a warranty of variety of nursery stock refers is the time *94 when the breach of warranty is or should be discovered. Applying the warranty as of that time it was found that the orchard produced from the nursery stock, i. e., the land together with the trees planted and growing therein, would, if the warranty had been complied with, have been of a certain value; that with the variety furnished the orchard was of a certain lesser value; and the difference was held to measure the damage suffered as the result of the breach.

But if we attempt to apply this construction to a warranty of the type or variety of seeds the difficulty of fixing the time to which the warranty refers is not escaped unless the discovery of the breach is made before the seed is sown, or, if not then made, remains undiscovered until the harvest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 P. 562, 56 Cal. App. 90, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newhall-land-farming-co-v-hogue-kellogg-co-calctapp-1922.