Sacramento Suburban Fruit Lands Co. v. Kral

41 F.2d 508, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2827
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 26, 1930
DocketNo. 5853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 F.2d 508 (Sacramento Suburban Fruit Lands Co. v. Kral) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sacramento Suburban Fruit Lands Co. v. Kral, 41 F.2d 508, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2827 (9th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

This is one of a group of cases submitted together here in which the plaintiffs recovered judgments for alleged fraudulent representations made by appellant to induce them severally to purchase divers tracts of land in the Rio Linda district, near Sacramento. In its background and some of its aspects the ease is similar to Sacramento, etc., v. Melin (C. C. A.) filed December 17, 1929, 36 F.(2d) 907. Below there was a judgment against the defendant company for $8,000 and costs, from which it prosecutes this appeal.

Appellant assigns eleven errors, those of which concerning the various proposed instructions are ruled by the Melin Case, and one relating to the comments of the court upon the testimony of the witness Traxler, which, for want of appropriate exceptions, we cannot consider.

The court, in its instructions, discussed the testimony of the witnesses. After referring to Mr. Davis, one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, as an agricultural specialist, nearly two pages of the transcript are devoted to a discussion of his testimony. Among other things it is said:

“He quotes you authorities, men who have made a business of writing and teaching on the subject. * * * -He tells you that, taking this land as it is, in connection with his own experience and his own teachings, it is not reasonably likely that a commercial orchard could successfully be grown on this particular land of the plaintiff. * * *

“Mr. Hyde testified for' the defendant that he analyzed this soil, he and Mr. Twining shared samples; they each took a part of the same sample and analyzed it, and Mr. Twining found 75 per cent, more phosphoric acid than Mr. Davis, 75 per cent, more potash, than Mr. Davis, and he also found 33 per cent, more phosphoric acid than Mr. Hyde, out of the same sample, Twining did, and he found 3 per cent, less potash than Mr. Hyde did, some variation there between the two witnesses for the defense. One would assume a chemical analysis ought to be fairly accurate, and particularly in this field, relating to chemical action and reaction, where they are based on the same chemical analysis, one would think they would agree, but they seem to diverge; they diverge between themselves somewhat .less; they differ from Mr. Davis. When experts differ, it is for you to say what the truth is. You are not bound by any expert’s testimony, any [509]*509more than any other witness. Yon test it ont by what is reasonable, what is likely, where will you get the truth. It is very apparent that these experts cannot all be right when they differ as widely as these. One would think it is apparent that the defendant’s experts cannot be right when they differ between themselves 33 per cent, in respect to the element of phosphorie acid, anyway. And it is for you to say where the truth is.”

«* * * gQj ag the representation of value, if you find it was made, $400' an acre. Plaintiff’s expert, Mr. Kerr, says it was worth $75 and $50 an acre only at that time; that is the test, market value; the market value is the test of value. On the other hand, Mr. Traxler, for the defendant, says it is worth $400 an acre. He says he is selling land out in that district, and that Rio Linda is adapted to commercial orcharding, and he is selling land for that price. You may ask yourselves whether he has an interest in keeping np prices, if he is thus selling lots, not only to get the money, but also to protect himself from like suits if his representations should turn out not to be accurate. You will test the testimony of the experts like any other witnesses; where they differ it will be for you to say whether you believe either or both, or which; you cannot believe both; upon all of the circumstances disclosed to yon by the evidence yon will determine what was the value of that land in 1926; that is the test, when the plaintiff bought it.”

These instructions are argumentative and condemned by the rule stated in Sacramento Fruit Lands Co. v. Parker (C. C. A.) 36 F.(2d) 926. See, also, Sacramento, etc., v. Tatham (C. C. A.) 40 F. 894, this day decided.

It will be observed that in the instruction with regard to the testimony of Mr. Hyde and Mr. Twining it is stated that “it is apparent that defendant’s experts cannot be right when they differ between themselves 33 per cent, in respect to the element of phosphoric acid.” This instruction was unfair.

Mr. Twining and Mr. Hyde were in a reasonable agreement with reference to the content of the soil, and Mr. Davis’ testimony was a wide departure therefrom. If any deduction was to be made by the court in regard to the contents of the soil from, testimony of these three experts, it is evident that the preponderance of the evidence favors the conclusion of the two experts as against the single expert produced by the plaintiff. It appears, however, from the transcript that the analysis was made on a different basis. Mr. Davis testified for the plaintiff:

“I analyzed the samples by the so-called strong acid method, which is a recognized method of testing soil. It is designed'to show that amount of plant food which could reasonably be expected to become available to the plant over a considerable period of years, as differentiated against the method of determination of total plant food which would give you everything that was there without respect to its solvency or availability. This strong acid method gives the potential plant food, I do not think it would give you the available plant food, because I think it would take out much more than available, but it would be the potential supply that would become available over a period of years.”

Mr. Twining testified for the defendant that he took a number of samples and made a conglomerate or composite of them and divided them with Mr. Hyde. Each took a half, and each made a separate analysis. They did not work together. He testified:

“Speaking of the total of the acid soluble, these results are derived by two separate and distinct methods. In determining the total potash and phosphoric acid we use the method of the American Association of Official Agricultural Chemists, that is what we call the official method, and the only one that is recognized in experimental station work, etc., the official method. The association referred to has to do with Government chemists, most of the soil research work being done at such institutions. They employ the official method. Of course, there are other methods used by various plants, but they are not official methods. For instance, there is the diluted water solution, the diluted nitric acid solution, etc. There are a number of methods that are employed other than the so-called hydrochloric acid solution method for a certain purpose. The acid soluble method was used as a sort of a short cut determination of potash and phosphorie acid, but it is being rapidly discarded. We have no satisfactory method of determining what is the available amount of the elements in the soil. It varies in different soils and under different conditions. The total represents the potential amount, that is, if the soil is cultivated and properly prepared, that total amount is made available by differcjit activities in the soil.”

[510]*510Mr. Hyde, a chemist testifying for the defendant, did not testify as to the method used by him in determining the amount of soluble potash and phosphorie acid. He did, however, give figures based upon the acid soluble potash and the acid soluble phosphorie acid. The witness Davis did not testify as to the total amount of potash or phosphorie acid in the soil.

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Paul v. Elliot
107 F.2d 872 (Ninth Circuit, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
41 F.2d 508, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacramento-suburban-fruit-lands-co-v-kral-ca9-1930.