Shepherd v. DeVille Engineering Construction Co.

268 Cal. App. 2d 596, 74 Cal. Rptr. 174, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1350
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1968
DocketCiv. 32265
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 268 Cal. App. 2d 596 (Shepherd v. DeVille Engineering Construction Co.) 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
Shepherd v. DeVille Engineering Construction Co., 268 Cal. App. 2d 596, 74 Cal. Rptr. 174, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1350 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

COLLINS, J. pro tem. *

This action was commenced as one to foreclose a chattel mortgage on a Caterpillar Tractor which defendants had hypothecated to plaintiffs as security for the payment of all rentals and other obligations under a Machinery Lease Agreement covering three units of earth-moving equipment. However, by the time the litigation reached the trial stage, the action, without any amended or supplemental pleadings being filed in the interim, became one to collect a *598 balance allegedly due as unpaid rental and for liquidated damage as provided in a formula set out in the agreement. 1

Plaintiffs (appellants) are Shepherd Machinery Co., a copartnership, and three members of the Shepherd family who are the partnérs. They distribute, sell and lease earth-moving equipment, among other types of machinery. Defendants (respondents), so far as this appeal is concerned, are DeVille Engineering Construction Co., a copartnership, and its members, Hector Dominguez and John A. Kavanagh.

Early in August 1964 defendants made an oral ar'rángément with the Janss Corporation to perform extensive grading and earth-moving work on a contemplated residential development by Janss known as the Las Posas Hills Project in Ventura County.

The project required the use of three Caterpillar Tractor-Scraper units (Model 641) which were not available from defendants’ normal sources of rental equipment. Later in August 1964 defendants arranged to lease from plaintiffs three “641” units, after receiving assurance that they could be delivered by September 15, 1964. The Machinery Lease Agreement, a formal printed document prepared by plaintiffs, was signed by the parties on August 23, 1964. It specified that the lease terms would commence on September 17, 1964; but later, when it developed that there would be a delay in shipping the three units from the Caterpillar factory in Peoria, Illinois, a new formal agreement was signed by the parties on September 18, 1964. This latter agreement is the one on which plaintiffs base their claim for accrued rental payments and liquidated damages. 2

*599 In order to qualify for plaintiffs’ requirements for credit, defendants executed a “Mortgage of Chattels,” so-called, covering a Caterpillar Tractor which defendants had acquired from plaintiffs pursuant to a conditional sales contract dated March 7, 1963 (and which plaintiffs caused to be sold at a non judicial sale as already noted).

The evidence, as reflected in one of the trial court’s findings, is that, at some time prior to October 5, 1964, the parties were in agreement that plaintiffs were under no duty to make delivery until such time after October 5, 1964, as defendants should request plaintiffs to do so. No such request was ever made. 3 Instead it developed that defendants’ starting time on the Janss Corporation’s project was postponed from time to time after September 15, 1964, and finally in mid-November Janss notified defendants that due to revised financing plans and other changes, the earth-moving and grading work would be awarded on bid to the low bidder. The record shows that between September and November, defendants sought to persuade Janss not to submit the work “to bid”; that in late October 1964 they represented to Janss that they were “on the hook” to plaintiffs for approximately $25,000 because of a rental agreement covering the equipment. Thereafter, on December 8, 1964, pursuant to an invitation, defendants submitted a bid for the contemplated work, but they were not awarded a contract.

In the meantime, plaintiffs shortly prior to the scheduled monthly rental payment dates of November 5 and December 5, respectively, (as well as the later date of January 5, 1965) mailed to defendants monthly invoices for $14,040 each.

In the meantime, namely, on November 13,1964, defendants received in the mail from plaintiffs two tissue copies of a manifold printed form designated “Credit” (hereinafter referred to as the Credit Memo). That document, under the caption “Description” recites: “Cancel Lease No. 6423 in its entirety. Machines never delivered,” and under the caption “Machinery description,”—the serial numbers of three model 641 Tractor-scraper units is entered. 4

*600 On December 22, 1964, representatives of the parties met to discuss settlement of their differences. Defendants, at that time, advised plaintiffs that they would not accept or pay rent on the equipment, contending that their arrangements with Janss had been seriously jeopardized by reason of plaintiffs’ earlier failure to deliver. Defendants testified that the Credit Memo was discussed at the December 22d meeting, while plaintiffs ’ witnesses categorically deny that any reference was made to the memo at any time prior to or on January 5, 1965, when plaintiffs elected to cancel the Machinery Lease Agreement, allegedly in accordance with their rights thereunder. Plaintiffs’ representatives at the December 22, 1964 meeting were John Pilón, general sales manager, and Deaderick, the salesman. Both testified that at that time the defendants did not mention a credit memo or a cancellation memo and did not display any such document; that when they later reported on the meeting to Mr. Tom Shepherd, they did not mention any memo because none was discussed. Mr. Pilón testified that he first learned of the existence of the memo some time in January 1965, when Mr. Shepherd told him of its existence, 5 stating that unfortunately an internal credit memo had been issued on the DeVille lease.

Mr. Victor explained that invoices and credit memos are utilized as a matter of procedure for billing the customer “and also for certain internal purposes.” He stated that ‘ ‘ credit memos are used to give the customer credit, obviously, and in that case there are additional copies, at least one of which is pink in color is mailed to the customer. ’ ’ He testified further that when a lease of equipment is involved, a copy of the lease is furnished the accounting department, and in this manner the inventory accountant is informed that “the machines are now going into the field, they remain in our inventory because they are property, [sic] but this identifies them as out in the field;” that in the instant situation the *601

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 Cal. App. 2d 596, 74 Cal. Rptr. 174, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-deville-engineering-construction-co-calctapp-1968.