Ramsey v. Powers

241 P. 567, 74 Cal. App. 621, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 329
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 1925
DocketDocket No. 2967.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 241 P. 567 (Ramsey v. Powers) 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
Ramsey v. Powers, 241 P. 567, 74 Cal. App. 621, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 329 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action for damages for the alleged seizure and conversion by defendants of a certain quantity of tomatoes and a certain quantity of Egyptian corn.

The action is in conversion, and the complaint, among other facts therein stated, alleges:

“That at the time of the commencement of this action and for a long time prior thereto the plaintiff was the owner of and entitled to the possession of all the following described personal property, namely: 196,605 pounds of tomatoes and 102,040 pounds of Egyptian corn which were raised on plaintiff’s ranch in said San Joaquin County in the year 1918.
“That on or about the - day of October, 1918, while plaintiff was so the owner of and entitled to the possession of all the aforesaid tomatoes and Egyptian corn, the defendants entered upon plaintiff’s said premises and without plaintiff’s consent or knowledge, wrongfully and unlawfully seized, took and carried away all of the aforesaid personal property and converted the same to their own use, whereby plaintiff was damaged by such unlawful taking and conversion on the part of said defendants in the sum of forty-seven hundred seventy-two and 15/100 dollars, which was the market value of said tomatoes and Egyptian corn at the time of said conversion.”

The defendants were and are represented by different attorneys. The defendant corporation demurred to the complaint on the general ground and also on certain special grounds, among which was that of misjoinder of parties defendants, and that “several causes of action have been improperly united, or not separately stated.” (Sec. 430, subd. 5, Code Civ. Proc.)

The defendant Powers demurred to the complaint on the general ground. The demurrer in each instance was disallowed, and within due time the defendants filed separate answers, in both of which the material allegations of the *623 complaint were specifically denied. Bach of the answers also sets up several special defenses, which will hereinafter be noticed.

Upon the close of plaintiff’s case, the defendants made separate motions for a nonsuit, the same were granted and the action as to each of the defendants was dismissed.

The cause is before us on appeal by the plaintiff from the judgment entered upon the orders granting said motions.

A case growing out of precisely the same transactions has previously been before and decided by this court, the judgment of nonsuit from which the appeal therein was prosecuted by the plaintiff there and here having been affirmed. (Ramsey v. California Packing Corp. et al., 51 Cal. App. 517 [201 Pac. 481].)

The facts of the transactions from which this action arose were gone into more extendedly or in greater detail at the trial of the former action than in the trial of the present action. It appears from the present record, as it was made to appear by the record in the former action, that the plaintiff was the owner of a certain ranch, situated-in San Joaquin Count)', and consisting of 320 acres; that, on the first day of November, 1917, he leased the whole of said ranch to one W. T. Kim and one C. H. Hahn, for the term of one year; that, on the eighteenth day of March, 1918, said Kim and Hahn executed and delivered to the plaintiff their promissory notes for the sum of $3,000 and $2,000, respectively, and at the same time as security for the payment of said notes, gave to plaintiff a mortgage on all crops of sugar-beets, tomatoes, beans, Egyptian corn and similar products “being, standing and growing” on the demised land, and which is described in the mortgage. It further appears that Kim and Hahn first attempted to grow sugar-beets on the land. In January, 1918, they planted the entire acreage of the land to sugar-beets, but, as Kim stated, they “blew out.” Shortly thereafter they again planted sugar-beets in the land, with the same result. In May, 1918, they put the land in tomatoes and Egyptian corn. When these crops had matured, Kim and Hahn sold the tomatoes to the defendant, California Packing Corporation, and the corn to the defendant Powers. They (Kim and Hahn), upon effecting those sales, conveyed the tomatoes *624 to Manteca, a railroad station not far distant from the land, and there put them aboard a car and consigned them to the defendant corporation, at its packing plant. The corn, by request of Powers, was removed from the land and deposited on “high land” near a road, a short distance from the Ramsey ranch, at which point Powers took possession of the corn and by means of trucks carried it away.

The above comprehends a statement of the general facts.

The only testimony in this case directly bearing upon the transactions constituting the basis of this action was that contained in a deposition given by Kim. There was some other testimony received, but it has no direct relation to the transactions herein involved and need not, therefore, be here presented.

The nonsuit here was based on substantially the same grounds as those upon which the nonsuit in the former action was allowed, and many, if not all, the legal points herein urged upon us in support of the appeal were presented and considered in the appeal from the judgment of nonsuit entered in the former action. There were, however, two other grounds added in this case to those presented in the former case, to wit: 1. That there is a misjoinder of parties defendants; 2. That arising upon the pleas of estoppel interposed by defendants as against the right of the plaintiff to maintain this action, in that the judgment in the former action is res adjudicate. In limine, it may as well be stated that the doctrine of res adjudicate, as a plea in estoppel, is not available as against a judgment entered upon an order granting a nonsuit. “It is fundamental that the doctrine of res adjudicate has no application to judgments of nonsuit.” (Merritt v. Campbell, 47 Cal. 543; City and County of San Francisco v. Brown, 153 Cal. 644, 648 [96 Pac. 281].)

On the appeal from the judgment entered in the former action, these points, among others, were raised and considered: 1. That the mortgage in question there and here does not cover or include the crops of tomatoes and Egyptian corn purchased by the defendants; 2. That the mortgage, the execution of which was acknowledged by the mortgagors before one Emerson, as a notary public, was, as to third parties, invalid, because said Emerson was a *625 partner of the plaintiff in the ownership of the mortgage and the notes it was given to secure. As to what was said in the opinion disposing of the appeal in the former action upon those propositions, the supreme court, in denying a hearing there, expressly declined to state its views. (Ramsey v. California Packing Corp. et al., 51 Cal. App. 517 [201 Pac. 481].) Clearly what was said in that opinion with regard to the scope of the mortgage was dictum. As to the other point, the supreme court in effect held that the judgment of this court could be sustained without regard to whether the mortgage covered the crops in question.

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 567, 74 Cal. App. 621, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-powers-calctapp-1925.