Ross v. Tabor

200 P. 971, 53 Cal. App. 605, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 473
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3545.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 200 P. 971 (Ross v. Tabor) 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
Ross v. Tabor, 200 P. 971, 53 Cal. App. 605, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 473 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

This is an action to recover damages for the alleged breach of a contract. At the trial defendant’s motion for a nonsuit was granted and a judgment of nonsuit entered. From that judgment plaintiff appeals.

The evidence introduced by plaintiff discloses the following : By the terms of their contract, which was in writing and executed December 26, 1914, plaintiff agreed to furnish five hundred or more colonies of bees, which defendant agreed to care for in a workmanlike manner for a period of three years from the date of the agreement. Defendant further agreed to make from the bees thus to be furnished by plaintiff five hundred additional colonies' during the year 1915, one thousand additional colonies during the year 1916, and during the year 1917, a number sufficient to bring the total to two thousand colonies on the expiration of the three-year term of the contract. The contract further provided that plaintiff would furnish defendant with a tent-house, or other suitable dwelling place, free of rent; and that he likewise would furnish defendant with an automobile to be used by the latter in his work of caring for the different colonies of bees, which, it seems, were scattered over a number of locations covering a wide area in the Imperial Valley. Plaintiff also agreed to furnish defendant with an extracting outfit with which to extract the honey and wax. Defendant, among other things, agreed to keep all tools and “appliances” in good repair, at his own expense, and, during the term of the contract, not to engage in any occupation or vocation other than the care of plaintiff’s bees, without the latter’s consent. The contract provided that plaintiff and defendant should receive, rcspec *607 tively, sixty and forty per cent of all the honey and wax produced by the bees during the three years that the contract was to run.

Immediately after the execution of the contract defendant took charge of the bees. Plaintiff furnished him with a house to live in and likewise with an automobile, as he had agreed. Indeed, plaintiff furnished defendant with everything that he had agreed to supply, excepting only the extracting outfit, which, it was testified, would not become necessary until the following June or July. Defendant’s counsel expressly stipulated that no question was raised on the failure to supply the extracting outfit prior to the time when its use would become necessary in June or Juiy of 1915.

In the latter part of March or the first of April, 1915, defendant moved into the house that plaintiff had provided for his use during the three-year term of the contract. On May 15th following, defendant left the house and moved off of plaintiff’s land into a house about an eighth of a mile away. On the same day, after using it for the removal of his personal effects, defendant took the automobile that plaintiff had supplied him for the care of the bees back to the house that plaintiff had supplied for his use and left it there.

Some time between the 25th and 30th of May, 1915, plaintiff called at the house that he had provided for defendant’s use and found it vacant. He also found the automobile standing in the yard without any oil or gasoline in it, exposed to the heat of the sun and the elements. Prom these circumstances plaintiff seems to have assumed that defendant had abandoned his contract. Thereupon plaintiff removed the automobile to his own home, some distance away, and took possession of the colonies of bees, thereafter earing for them himself.

Called as a witness by plaintiff under section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure, defendant testified that he quit taking care of the bees when plaintiff removed the machine to his own home; that when he found the machine was gone he walked to Brawley; that he was told that plaintiff had the machine; that he went to plaintiff’s house and saw the machine in his yard; that he did not see plaintiff and did not go on his premises at all; that he turned around *608 and went back; that he did not make any inquiry where plaintiff was, because he was told that plaintiff had said that he, defendant, “had skipped out of the valley”; that he did not explain to plaintiff that he “had not skipped out”; that after that he saw plaintiff several times passing the ■house where he was then staying, about an eighth of a mile south of plaintiff’s ranch; that plaintiff never stopped, and that he, defendant, never talked to him; that he never went to see plaintiff to ascertain whether the latter had taken the machine; that he never made any effort to find plaintiff or to have a talk with him to ascertain whether he took the machine or to explain that he, defendant, had not run away.

Plaintiff testified that some time between the 25th and 30th of May he went to the ranch where defendant had been living in the house that he had supplied for defendant’s use; that he went to the ranch intending to irrigate, and found the car standing beside the house, which was empty; that he took the car home; that the car was in good condition, but that there was neither gasoline nor lubricating oil in it; that he tried to start it but could not; that an automobile man who was with him supplied him with oil and gasoline, and that he then drove home with the car; that this occurred at about 8 or 9 o’clock in the morning; that he was at the ranch between an hour and two hours before he went away with the machine; that there was nothing in the house abandoned by defendant except a desk which the latter had made while he was living on plaintiff’s place in Brawley; that he never thereafter saw defendant until late in the fall, and that defendant did not do any work thereafter under the contract.

Defendant’s answer, in addition to denying a breach of the contract on his part, pleaded the statute of limitations, alleging that plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by subdivision 1 of section 337 of the Code of Civil Procedure, whereby it is provided that “an action upon any contract, obligation or liability founded upon an instrument in writing executed Within this state” must be commenced within four years after the accrual of the cause of action.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence defendant moved for a nonsuit upon two grounds: 1. That the evidence did not show any breach of the contract on defendant’s part, but *609 did show that it had been breached by plaintiff, and that that was the reason why defendant ceased work. 2. That the cause of action, if any, is barred by the above-mentioned code section.

[1] It may be that had the case, upon the close of appellant’s evidence, been submitted to the trial court for a decision on the merits, the evidence would have warranted a decision on the facts in respondent’s favor. In that case the court would have been called upon to decide questions of fact only, and would have been free to deduce from all the evidence any reasonable inferences, whether favorable or unfavorable to appellant, and regardless of whether opposing inferences might reasonably have been drawn from all the evidence. By moving for a nonsuit, however, respondent presented to the court a pure question of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 P. 971, 53 Cal. App. 605, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-tabor-calctapp-1921.