San Joaquin Light & Power Co. v. Barlow
This text of 184 P. 899 (San Joaquin Light & Power Co. v. Barlow) 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.
Opinion
In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $655.20 upon a common count for the alleged reasonable value of electric current delivered by plaintiff to the defendant. From a judgment awarding the demanded sum of money the defendant appeals.
The plaintiff introduced in evidence certain correspondence between the parties, constituting a contract which authorized the plaintiff to deliver electricity and to charge therefor at a stated rate. The evidence further shows that a stated quantity of electric current was delivered, and that the amount due therefor, when computed in the manner and at the rate named in the contract, is the sum demanded in this action. Simpson, a clerk whose duty it was to compute charges from meter readings brought into plaintiff’s office, testified for the plaintiff, and stated that the several charges made were reasonable charges for the service rendered.
The errors claimed and relied upon, as we glean them from the briefs of appellant’s counsel, are as follows: (1) That the letters were not admissible to prove a contract price, because the plaintiff’s complaint counts upon reasonable value and not upon a contract price; (2) That the court erred in preventing cross-examination of Simpson for the purpose of testing his qualifications as a witness on the question of reasonable value, and for the purpose of showing that the charge was not reasonable.
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To the statement made by the court, and without any direct exception, counsel responded, “Well, on the ruling of the court, then, I will not ask any further questions on cross-examination as to the reasonableness of the rate.”
Although no question was formally propounded, with a ruling thereon from which under the statute an exception would be implied, the record made, as above stated, was equivalent to such formal ruling and exception. (Pastene v. Pardini, 135 Cal. 431, [67 Pac. 681].)
The judgment is reversed.
Shaw, J., and James, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on September 30, 1919.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
184 P. 899, 43 Cal. App. 241, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-joaquin-light-power-co-v-barlow-calctapp-1919.