Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc. v. Seeber

272 P. 579, 205 Cal. 690, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 591
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1928
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9538.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 272 P. 579 (Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc. v. Seeber) 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
Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc. v. Seeber, 272 P. 579, 205 Cal. 690, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 591 (Cal. 1928).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., brought five actions to foreclose mechanics’ liens for lumber and materials furnished by it to the defendants C. W. Seeber, Williston & Meyfarth, Cora Zumwalt, Alice M. Brown, and C. W. Brown as owners, respectively, in said actions. H. O. *692 Ehlen, a plumbing contractor, was plaintiff in six actions brought to foreclose mechanics’ liens for plumbing labor and materials, one against each of the persons named as defendant in the foregoing five actions and the sixth against Hattie J. Crane, all as owners. In each of the six actions brought by H. O. Ehlen, the Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., and C. 0. Neese were also joined as defendants as the parties to whom and at whose request the plumbing labor and materials were furnished. C. O. Neese was also made a defendant in the five actions brought by Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., as the contractor and agent of the owners to whom the lumber and materials were furnished by it. It is undisputed that the materials furnished by appellant and the labor and materials furnished by H. O. Ehlen were so furnished and at the request and order of C. O. Neese and that C. O. Neese received from the respective owner defendants the full contract price therefor. C. O. Neese disappeared and absconded with the money paid to him by the respective parties..

• The eleven actions were tried together on the issues raised by the various complaints, answers, and cross-complaints and answers thereto. In the five cases brought by the Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., the trial court found that C. O. Neese was the ostensible agent of the plaintiff in the transactions involved and that he contracted with the various 'owner defendants as the ostensible agent of his principal; that the plaintiff therein was paid in full for the materials furnished, and rendered judgments for the defendant owners. In the six actions brought by H. O. Ehlen the trial court made a similar finding of the ostensible agency of C. O. Neese and further found that the Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., as principal, had received payment through its agent, C. O. Neese, on account of the contract price for plumbing labor and materials alleged to be due to H. O. Ehlen. The court denied the foreclosure of liens asserted on behalf of H. 0. Ehlen, but rendered judgments in his favor against Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., for the amounts found to be due. The Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., has appealed from the judgments against it in each of the eleven eases. The appeals are consolidated and submitted on one set of briefs. The sole question presented for our consideration is whether the evidence sustains the find *693 ing that C. O. Neese was the ostensible agent of the Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., with ostensible authority to bind it on the contracts made by him with the various owner defendants and with H. O. Ehlen.

The plaintiff, Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., is a corporation, which has its principal office in the city of Los Angeles. It has for its declared purpose the reduction of labor costs to builders. It cuts and machines lumber materials for an entire building at its factory in accordance with plans and specifications selected by the prospective builder and delivers them at the building site ready to be placed into the structure. For the extension of its business the officers of the corporation arranged with numerous individuals, for a specified commission on all orders sent in, to advertise its business and prevail upon prospective builders, within assigned territory, to engage the services of the corporation in supplying complete ready-cut lumber and materials. The corporation also advertised a service which included arrangements for financing the construction of buildings in its home territory of Los Angeles. It insists, however, that the individuals who undertook to extend the business of the corporation into other assigned territories were independent contractors and were engaged only to sell its product and to be responsible on their own account as contractors to the prospective builders. Mr. Baumgarten, an officer of the corporation who concluded the arrangements with C. O. Neese for the Orange County territory, testified that there was no written contract with him but that pursuant to an oral understanding Neese undertook to become what Mr. Baumgarten and the corporation insist was a “distributor” or purchaser of ready-cut building materials for Pacific Ready-Cut Homes to be erected in his exclusive territory, as distinguished from an agent who could bind Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., as a principal, on the contracts made by Neese as building contractor with the prospective builders. The contract made with each of the defendant owners in the five actions brought by Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc., was in writing, and was signed by C. O. Neese, contractor, and by the owner as buyer. The contracts for plumbing work and materials to be installed in each of the structures involved in the six cases brought by H. O. Ehlen were orally made between H. O. Ehlen and C. O. Neese.

*694 All parties to this controversy concede that it is settled law that ostensible agency cannot be created alone by the representations of the purported agent himself but that there must be some act or conduct on the part of the principal by which he either intentionally or by want of ordinary care causes or allows a third person to believe that the agent possesses the authority to bind him as principal (Civ. Code, secs. 2300, 2317, 2334), and that if there is in the record evidence of either intentional or negligent conduct on the part of the appellant which would lead the respondents to believe that Neese was, in fact, its agent with authority to bind it on the contracts involved, and other contentions of appellant are answered, the findings of the trial court are sustained.

It must be concluded from a review of the evidence that the record is replete with instances of want of ordinary care, at least, as a result of which respondents could be led to believe, and in fact did believe, that Neese was the agent of the appellant with authority to bind it as principal on the contracts involved. It was in evidence that for a period of a number of months before and during which the contracts involved were entered into, there was displayed outside of Neese’s office in Santa Ana a large sign bearing the words “Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc.,” and a similar small sign on the desk in the office but without the abbreviation “Inc.” Mr. Baumgarten, district sales manager and the only representative of the corporation who visited Neese’s office, denied that he saw the sign outside, or, if he saw it, that it bore the abbreviation “Inc.,” although he admitted that if there was a sign outside it was the sign that was authorized by the company. Wherever Pacific Ready-Cut Homes were being constructed, it was in evidence that at least one large sign, “BUILT BY PACIFIC READY-CUT HOMES, INC.,” was placed on the construction, site. C. O. Neese used business cards and letter-heads with the 'firm name “Pacific Ready-Cut Homes, Inc.,” printed thereon, the cuts and copy for which, according to the testimony of Mr. Baumgarten, were furnished by the advertising department of the appellant. Mr. Baumgarten, himself by letter to Mr. Neese, approved the form of the letterheads. In that letter he stated: “I like your letter-head, business card and your envelope very much and I can see *695

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Bluebook (online)
272 P. 579, 205 Cal. 690, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-ready-cut-homes-inc-v-seeber-cal-1928.