Schubert v. Reich

196 P.2d 944, 87 Cal. App. 2d 268, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1322
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 23, 1948
DocketCiv. No. 16270
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 196 P.2d 944 (Schubert v. Reich) 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
Schubert v. Reich, 196 P.2d 944, 87 Cal. App. 2d 268, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1322 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

DORAN, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment by defendant in an action alleged to be for declaratory relief.

The complaint alleges that plaintiff was in the business of “growing, cultivating, harvesting and marketing dates and date by-products which are grown upon real property owned and operated by plaintiff”; that defendant is engaged in the business of “grading, packing, reconditioning, storing, shipping and selling dates and date by-products”; that during the 1945 season “plaintiff became aware that some of the dates grown and harvested in plaintiff’s date gardens in Riverside County had become infested with insects and mold.” The legal requirements specified by the Agricultural Code in such circumstances are also alleged. It is then alleged that, “during the month of October, 1945, plaintiff discussed said situation with defendant Andrew Reich and informed said Andrew Reich that said field-run dates must be graded and reconditioned so as to comply with said Agricultural Code, and said defendant Andrew Reich did then and there warrant and represent to plaintiff that if plaintiff would deliver said field-run dates to defendant at defendant’s packing house located in Covina, California, that defendant would and he did then guarantee to grade, process and recondition said dates, and each and all thereof, in such manner that the same and all thereof when so graded, processed and reconditioned would comply with each, every and all of the provisions of the Agricultural Code and of the regulations of the Department of Agriculture of the State of California; that in reliance upon said representations and warranties and verily believing the same, plaintiff did then and there enter into an oral contract and agreement with defendant Andrew Reich wherein and whereby the latter contracted and agreed that he would upon receipt at his packing house in Covina, California, proceed forthwith to grade, process and recondition said dates in a good and workmanlike manner and in such manner that the same, and each and all thereof, would conform to the laws, rules and regulations of the State of California, made and provided for dates and date by-products, as aforesaid, for which services plaintiff did then and there agree to pay to defendant the reasonable value thereof, said payment to be made when and after said dates had been [270]*270so graded, processed and reconditioned so as to comply with the laws of the State of California and the regulations of the California Department of Agriculture.” (Emphasis added.)

It is then further alleged that plaintiff, pursuant to said agreement thereafter delivered to defendant 135,000 pounds of dates and that defendant claims to have “rendered services to plaintiff under the terms of said oral agreement,” and, “by reason thereof has claimed and asserted a lien against said dates in the amount of Six Thousand Forty-two and 07/100 Dollars ($6,042.07) and does now claim and continue to claim a lien against said dates under 'the provisions of section 3050 et seq. of the Civil Code of the State of California.” It is then further alleged that defendant failed and refused to “fulfill the terms of said oral agreement.” It is also alleged that “an actual controversy has arisen,” that defendant has demanded payment of the above-mentioned sum but that defendant is not entitled thereto “because of defendant’s failure to comply with the terms of said agreement.” The prayer was for a restraining order to prevent the enforcement of the lien and for a “declaration of the rights of the parties. ’ ’

The answer in substance admits a transaction but denies any failure or refusal to comply with the terms of the agreement and, “admits he claims and alleges that he is entitled to a lien on said dates for the services rendered by him in grading, reconditioning and processing said dates in the sum of $6,042.07 and desires that said lien be enforced and the dates sold and the proceeds applied in satisfaction thereof. Further admits that he has taken steps to foreclose said lien and desires' to continue to do so and has only desisted from the enforcement thereof because of the injunction entered in the above entitled action.”

The court found for plaintiff, which findings, in part, recited, “the custom prevailing in the date and date grading, reconditioning and processing industry for California-grown dates was for California graders, reeonditioners and processors to grade dates by external inspection, sometimes called ‘sight-grading’, if thereby the graded dates met or exceeded the standards set forth in the Agricultural Code of the State of California and the rules and regulations of the Department of Agricultura? of the State of California, and if by the use of said.‘sight-grading’ method the graded dates did not or could not be made to meet or exceed said standards, then in that event said graders graded, and processed dates by sup[271]*271plementing said ‘sight-grading’ method with, or substituting for said ‘sight-grading’ method, grading by internal inspection wherein dates are cut, opened and examined for defects, and no extra charge was made for grading by or with the use of the internal inspection method.” (Emphasis added.)

The findings also recite that “on and after December 10, 1945, defendant demanded that plaintiff pay to defendant sums of money sufficient to defray defendant’s labor costs in the cutting, opening and examining of plaintiff’s said dates, except said culls, and to finance the operation of grading and reconditioning of said dates, except said culls, by internal inspection by paying defendant for each lot as defendant finished said grading and reconditioning; that plaintiff refused and continues to refuse to pay and has not paid said demanded sums or any part thereof, and plaintiff demanded that defendant fulfill the terms of said oral agreement; that defendant has failed and refused to fulfill the terms of said oral agreement and has failed and continues to fail to grade, process or recondition.plaintiff’s said remaining dates or any part thereof in accordance with the terms and provisions of said oral agreement.”

The evidence which, incidentally, is not without conclusions, reveals in substance that plaintiff is a date grower at Indio in Riverside County and that defendant is, and had been for 10 or 12 years, engaged in the business of culling and processing dates at Covina in Los Angeles County and, as correctly recited by defendant and appellant:

“In 1945 plaintiff harvested his crop of dates and as is usual, such ‘field-run’ dates had to be graded, processed, and reconditioned for marketing and to meet the requirements of the law of California as established in the Agricultural Code. The custom of the industry is to grade dates by ‘sight-grading’, that is, picking out dates which are found to be defective by visual observation. If the dates thus graded did not meet the standards required by law, it was the custom of the industry to supplement the sight-grading by cutting each date and making an internal inspection thereof.

“Defendant negotiated with plaintiff for the processing of dates grown by plaintiff during the 1945 season and they entered into an oral agreement under which plaintiff was to and did deliver dates to defendant’s place of business at Covina, California, defendant agreeing to grade, process, and recondition plaintiff’s ‘field-run’ dates in a good and work[272]*272manlike manner and plaintiff agreeing to pay defendant the reasonable value of such services.

“Pursuant to said oral agreement plaintiff' delivered approximately 128,523 lbs.

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Related

Fields v. Fields
178 F.2d 200 (Ninth Circuit, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
196 P.2d 944, 87 Cal. App. 2d 268, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schubert-v-reich-calctapp-1948.