Shields v. Rancho Buena Ventura

203 P. 114, 187 Cal. 569, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 392
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9405.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 203 P. 114 (Shields v. Rancho Buena Ventura) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shields v. Rancho Buena Ventura, 203 P. 114, 187 Cal. 569, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 392 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

This is the second appeal prosecuted by the defendant corporation, Rancho Buena Ventura, from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, A. J. Shields, in an action upon claims alleged to have arisen in connection with the management of a ranch in Shasta County, California.

The ranch was the property of the defendant corporation. Practically the entire capital stock of this corporation was owned by three persons—Frank Short, George Hoxie, and the plaintiff Shields. E. A. Mower was the secretary of the corporation and handled all its accounts. For several years prior to 1910 plaintiff had been in charge of the ranch, developing it and working under a salary. In 1910 plaintiff and defendant corporation entered into a contract under which plaintiff operated and managed the ranch from January 1, 1910, until the month of October, 1912, when the land was sold. The provisions of the contract which are of importance for present purposes may be summarized as *571 follows: Plaintiff was to have complete charge of the ranch and was to manage and conduct the same. It was agreed that: “The party of the second part [plaintiff herein] is to keep full and correct books of account showing all receipts and expenditures by him received, incurred or made in connection with said ranch, all business and the products thereof, and all of the same, and on the first day of January of each year the party of the second part will render a complete, full and correct statement of his accounts and transactions, receipts and expenditures.” The proceeds of the ranch were to be applied in the following manner: After the payment of all expenses incurred in the management of the ranch, including the household and living expenses of himself and family, plaintiff was entitled to one thousand five hundred dollars each year in full payment for his services; all of the residue was the property of the defendant corporation. There was a provision' that the contract should cease to operate upon certain contingencies, one of which was a sale of the premises, and, therefore, the agreement was terminated by the sale of the ranch in October, 1912.

In this action plaintiff seeks to recover compensation for his services, at the rate of one thousand five hundred dollars per year, or $125 per month, for the period during which he managed the ranch under the above-mentioned contract, namely, from January, 1910, until October, 1912; he also asks repayment of a certain sum claimed to have been advanced by him in connection with the management of the ranch and not repaid by defendant. The first trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor for the sum of $7,060.94, but the judgment was reversed by the district court of appeal (Shields v. Rancho Buena Ventura, 38 Cal. App. 696, [177 Pac. 499]); upon the second trial plaintiff voluntarily reduced his claim to $5,742.52 and recovered a verdict and judgment for that amount. This latter sum is arrived at by computing plaintiff’s salary at $125 a month for thirty-four months, making a total of $4,250, and allowing $1,492.52 for money advanced for the use of defendant.

The decision of the district court of appeal in Shields v. Rancho Buena Ventura, 38 Cal. App. 696, [177 Pac. 499], reversing the first judgment in plaintiff’s favor, must, as to all points of law therein passed .upon, be taken as the law of the case upon retrial. Relying upon this fact, defendant *572 contends that the holding in that ease was that plaintiff could not recover without a showing that he had rendered annual accounts to the defendant as required by his contract, and, inasmuch as it is conceded that plaintiff did not report to defendant concerning the state of his accounts at the end of each year during the time that he was managing the ranch, defendant deduces the conclusion that plaintiff has failed to make out a case under the law as established upon the previous appeal. This contention cannot be sustained for the reason that it is based upon an incorrect interpretation of the decision of the district court of appeal. In that decision it was held that “the operation of the ranch by the plaintiff was as to each year a separate and distinct transaction and not a continuous transaction for the entire period,” and that, consequently, before plaintiff could recover for any year the compensation of one thousand five hundred dollars provided for by the contract, it must be made to appear that the net proceeds of the ranch for that year equaled that sum. At the first trial plaintiff made no attempt whatever to show the amount of the proceeds of the same for any one year, but merely introduced in evidence a single account covering the entire period from January, 1910, to November, 1912, and, accordingly, the judgment was reversed for the reason that “The jury, in the condition of the evidence upon which the cause was submitted, had no means of knowing whether for the years 1910 and 1911 there was anything due from the defendant to the plaintiff under the terms of the contract.” Since the total lack of evidence concerning the annual profits of the ranch was the ground of the reversal of the first judgment in plaintiff’s favor, it is apparent that the question of the effect of plaintiff’s failure to render an annual report to the defendant was not within the issues decided upon the former appeal. Upon that appeal it was said: “There can be no doubt that the plaintiff was required by his contract to render an account annually; and it is apparent that without this annual account there was no basis upon which a settlement could be arrived at between the parties.” Defendant interprets this to mean that plaintiff could not recover without proving an annual submission of accounts to the defendant, but that is not the purport of the quoted sentence. The keeping accounts in annual periods and the submission of these accounts to the defendant at the end of *573 each year are distinct obligations, and the sentence in question may be paraphrased thus: The keeping of accounts in annual periods was indispensable to the performance of the contract by its very terms; the contract also called for the presentation of these accounts annually. But the annual presentation of the accounts was not of the essence of the contract. Plaintiff was not entitled to compensation until he proved that the amount of compensation claimed by him had been earned by the ranch during the year in which the services were rendered and¿ therefore, if plaintiff demanded that his compensation be paid precisely at the end of each year, it was incumbent upon him to report upon his accounts at that time. [1] It appears, however, that, owing to the fact that the profits of the ranch were not in the form of cash, there was insufficient money with which to pay plaintiff at the end of the years 1910 and 1911. As a result, plaintiff did not ask payment at the end of these years, but plaintiff and defendant continued under the contract, payment of the salary being deferred, until the sale in 1912. Under these circumstances it must be held that both parties waived the right to a yearly settlement of accounts. Therefore, if plaintiff can prove that there was each year a profit equal to or in excess of the sum of one thousand five hundred dollars, he is entitled to full compensation, irrespective of the fact that his .accounts were not presented and settled annually.

[2]

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 114, 187 Cal. 569, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-rancho-buena-ventura-cal-1921.