Sacramento Suburban Fruit Lands Co. v. Nelson

36 F.2d 929, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2294
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1929
DocketNo. 5683
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 F.2d 929 (Sacramento Suburban Fruit Lands Co. v. Nelson) 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. Nelson, 36 F.2d 929, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2294 (9th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

This is a companion case to Sacramento, etc., v. Melin (No. 5671) 36 F.(2d) 907, to which reference is made for a general statement of the situation involved in this ease.

The appellants asked the court to give the following instruction:

“The law presumes that a person is innocent of crime or wrong; that private transactions have been fair and regular; that the ordinary course of business has been followed.
“The presumption against fraud on the part of defendant must be overcome by the plaintiff.
“The evidence must amount to proof of fraud, and not a mere suspicion thereof.”

This request was refused, and exceptions noted to the refusal. On that subject the court instructed the jury as follows: '

“Coming now to the nature of the case which is that of fraud, of deeeit, the rule of law is in the first place that transactions between men dealing in a business way are presumed to be fair and regular; but, of course, [930]*930you might see in the evidence reason to believe in any ease, and in this ease, why the defendant is not entitled to that presumption. However, it is a matter dependent upon proof in the case, the greater weight of the evidence and your judgment.
“Fraud is never presumed. It might, however, be inferred from the evidence in the case, the circumstances. It is not necessary, to make out a case of fraud, to prove that the defendant and its agents deliberately • made up their minds and announced they were going to cheat plaintiffs; not at all; you would never find such a ease.; in the eases of fraud, it is worked secretly and underhandedly, so far asi disclosing intent to defraud is concerned. The intent may be manifested by the representations, the actions of the defendant. You infer a man’s intent from what he says; you cannot see into his mind. So in the case of a corporation that acts only by agents, if there is any evil intent you infer it from the agent’s representations and the like, and ask yourselves whether it is just to infer, or not.”

While this instruction covers in a general way the ground covered by the proposed instruction, it is erroneous, for by it the jury were informed that they might conclude from the evidence that the defendant was not entitled to the presumption of innocence and fair dealing. The presumption of innocence and fair dealing is of universal application. No one is ever, to be deprived of the presumption as a matter of law or because a jury may decide that the person is not entitled to the benefit of the presumption.

In addition to the foregoing error, which requires reversal of the judgment, the trial court made extended comments on the testimony of the witness C. G. Hopkins, who testified for the defendant. This witness, on direct examination, testified as follows:

“I am an attorney at law, practicing in Sacramento, and have been living in this county for thirty-three years. I am the owner of a pareel of land in the Arcade district on the Haggin Grant. It is probably about two and a half miles south of the Rio Linda district, and about a mile or so east of the land owned by Mr. Morley. I have thirty acres. The depth of soil on my property varies from about a foot to three feet. There may be spots where it is a little deeper. The entire thirty acres is planted to orchard. I have been planting that orchard since about 1914, about five acres a year, and so on, until it is all planted. The oldest trees I have are almonds, and about thirteen acres of prunes. The trees are about six or seven years old. It was blasted for all of the trees before planting. I did not find any great mortality among trees for the first year or so. Yery little of the young trees died. I have given them very good care for the last five or six years. I have cultivated, plowed and harrowed them, and irrigated them to- a very great degree. I have almonds, prunes, and some peaches, and also oranges. I consider they have made a very splendid growth. They are large trees for the time they have been in the ground. My prunes have produced splendidly in the last two years. I estimate the crop in my prune orchard this year to be nearly a ton an acre, dried.
“Four acres of my almonds always do very well. On six aeres I have intermittent crops. They are about the same varieties. On the six acres that have not produced, the almonds are Nonpareils and Drakes. I attribute their failure to produce to pollenization. I have had a very satisfactory return on the four acres that have produced. I have no estimate of the quantity. As to failure of the crop on those six acres, I probably need fertilization, which I have attempted to give them.
“I have had very good crops of peaches for the age of the trees. They are about five and six years of age. They have not come into full bearing.
“Q. How about the quality and size of the fruit? A. Yery fine'fruit, Tuscan peaches, cling peaches.
“I have very large trees on four acres of olives. I cannot be proud of- the production, because my olives have not been good the last three years. The olive trees vary from twelve years down to five or six. Before the last couple of years when the crop has not been good, I had some good crops oft the trees before that. Climatic conditions are the factor for the failure of that crop in the last two years. That has been general throughout the Valley over this section of the state in this county. In my opinion, there is nothing in the soil, as depth or quality, to which I attribute the failure of the olive crop.
“I have about seventy large orange trees. I had a good crop every year, very fine fruit, of good quality.”

It will be noted that on his direct examination he testified to the facts concerning his cultivation of this thirty-acre tract in the Rio Linda district. He was not called upon in his direct examination to give any opinion concerning the commercial fruit-bearing possibilities of the soil. The only thing in the nature of an opinion ventured by him in bis direct examination was the following:

“In my opinion, there is nothing in the [931]*931soil, as depth or quality, to which I attribute the failure of the olive crop.”

The cross-examination of this attorney at law was apparently conducted in, and replied to, in a jocular vein. The cross-examination is as follows:

“I am an attorney at law in Sacramento, and have been in that occupation for more than thirty years. I care for these trees myself pretty largely.
“Q. I suppose you have been making a lot of money out of that enterprise? A. I get a lot of exercise out of it, a lot of fun out of it.
“Q. In that way do you consider it profitable; is that right? A. I consider it profitable up to date.
“Q. Prom an exercising standpoint? A. I take that into consideration, too.”

In view of the part of the charge presently to be quoted, it should be noted that, although the question was asked of the witness whether he considered his operations profitable because of the exercise he got out of it, his first answer ignored that factor, and the second answer merely stated that he took that into consideration in arriving at his conclusion that it was profitable.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F.2d 929, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacramento-suburban-fruit-lands-co-v-nelson-ca9-1929.