Northwestern Redwood Co. v. Dicken

110 P. 591, 13 Cal. App. 689, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 262
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 29, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 703.
StatusPublished

This text of 110 P. 591 (Northwestern Redwood Co. v. Dicken) 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
Northwestern Redwood Co. v. Dicken, 110 P. 591, 13 Cal. App. 689, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 262 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action by the plaintiff to recover from defendant the sum of $664.79, alleged to be a balance due on an account.

The case was tried by the court, without a jury, and the defendant given judgment.

A new trial was denied to the plaintiff, and this appeal is from the order disallowing the motion therefor.

Respondent makes a preliminary objection to the consideration of the record here, claiming that the record of the proceedings contained in the transcript is neither a statement of the case nor a bill of exceptions. The notice of motion for a new trial states that said motion “will be made upon affidavits and upon a statement of the case,” and counsel for respondent declares that, inasmuch as the document intended as a statement or a bill of exceptions is thereafter at all times referred to by counsel for the appellant and the judge in his certificate as a “ bill of exceptions, ’ ’ we must accept such characterization of the document as conclusive of its character, and treat it as a bill of exceptions and not a statement. But it is further insisted that, even if it may be said to be a statement, it must be disregarded, since it does not contain, as required by section 659 of the Code of Civil Procedure, specifications of the particular errors occurring at the trial and excepted to by the appellant referred to in the notice of motion.

While the record of the proceedings in the court below as set forth in the transcript was settled by the judge as a “bill of exceptions,” we think that it may be treated as either a statement or a bill of exceptions, and that in either case the principal, if not, in fact, the only, errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to for which a reversal of the order is asked, are sufficiently pointed out in the “specification of errors” to have enabled the trial court to properly consider them, and to enable this court to review them without difficulty or inconvenience. These errors are thus specified in the statement or bill: “1. The court erred in each and every time in which evidence was admitted over plaintiff’s objections of statements made by L. J. Roach not in the presence or *693 hearing of plaintiff or any of its officials or agents, to the admission of which evidence plaintiff duly excepted. ’ ’

Then follows a general or an omnibus specification assigning as error all the other rulings, of the court against the objections of appellant. The first specification, however, was, as stated, sufficiently direct and definite to indicate the errors upon which appellant relied for a new trial, and demands a reversal of the order denying it, and we shall therefore proceed to review the record as to the errors thus pointed out.

The plaintiff is a corporation, organized in pursuance of the laws of this state, and engaged, among other things, in the general merchandising business, at Willits, in Mendocino county. The defendant had, for a number of years prior to July 6, 1907, prosecuted the business of cutting and manufacturing lumber on a body of timber land, consisting of eighteen hundred acres, situated on Cave creek, in said county. During all said time the plaintiff furnished defendant with supplies necessary for his domestic use, and for the purposes of his lumber-mills, and the latter, it seems, was accustomed to shipping and delivering to plaintiff, from time to time, or as it was manufactured, the lumber from his mill. The plaintiff would, upon the receipt of the lumber, credit the defendant upon its books for the lumber so delivered and received at the current market prices.

On the sixth day of July, 1907, the defendant, having previously entered into negotiations with one L. J. Roach, for the sale of his lumber-mill and the timber growing on the land mentioned, executed the following agreement with said Roach, said agreement being, upon its face, as will be observed, unilateral :

“Willits, Cal., July 6, 1907.

“For and in consideration of the sum of Ten Dollars, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, I hereby agree to sell to L. J. Roach all my timber on 1800 acres, more or less, situated on Cave Creek in Mendocino County, for Seventy-five cents per M ft. as determined by a disinterested competent timber cruiser, or Two Thousand Dollars cash, at option of Roach, and to allow said Roach Fifteen years from date of final consummation of sale to remove said timber, said Roach to be allowed mill sites and all necessary rights of way on any portion said lands for twenty years from date of sale, same *694 to be incorporated in formal instrument of transfer to be drawn by parties hereto. I also agree to sell to L. J. Roach all my mill property and appurtenances of every description, including saw mill, machinery, logging tools, skid-ways, four horses, ten oxen, harnesses, yokes, four wagons, two trucks, rigging, cooking utensils, etc., all for $4,400 to be incorporated in inventory to be taken by parties hereto. I agree to furnish complete abstract of title to said land and to allow 30 days from date of delivery to said Roach to examine same, and to allow ten days from acceptance by said Roach to complete sale after all necessary legal requirements shall have been complied with.

“Said Roach to take immediate possession of said premises and conduct operations for me until final sale or rejection of title.

“J. D. DICKEN.”

The sum of ten dollars was paid to Dicken by Roach upon the execution of said instrument.

On the seventh day of July, 1907, in pursuance of the foregoing agreement, said Roach took possession and control of the mill and lumber manufacturing business referred to therein. The plaintiff continued to furnish supplies to the mill, but charged the same on its books to the defendant, and Roach delivered to the plaintiff, as defendant had always done, the lumber manufactured at the mill. The lumber so delivered was credited by plaintiff on the account of defendant.

Roach operated the business for a little over a month, when he abandoned it.

It may here be stated that “it was stipulated and agreed by the parties in open court that the account sued on and an itemized bill for which was then on file among the papers in the case was correct, so far as the particular items thereof were concerned; that the goods to the amount of $800 had been sold and delivered to someone at the ‘Dicken Mill’ mentioned in the evidence; but it was not admitted that defendant was liable therefor.”

It was further admitted that “the controversy was in part whether said goods were sold to defendant through one L. J. Roach, as his agent, or to said L. J. Roach on his own account.”

*695 The claim of the defendant against the complaint is that he agreed to sell, and Roach agreed to buy, the mill and the timber on his land on the sixth day of July, 1907, and that the instrument above quoted was intended as evidence of a contract of sale. The plaintiff and Roach insist that the quoted instrument was intended as evidencing an option only, and that Roach took possession of the property, not as a purchaser, but to manage the same for Dicken until he (Roach) should determine whether he would buy the property or not.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 P. 591, 13 Cal. App. 689, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-redwood-co-v-dicken-calctapp-1910.