Southern California Telephone Co. v. Carpenter

171 P.2d 142, 75 Cal. App. 2d 336, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 15, 1946
DocketCiv. No. 14981
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 171 P.2d 142 (Southern California Telephone Co. v. Carpenter) 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
Southern California Telephone Co. v. Carpenter, 171 P.2d 142, 75 Cal. App. 2d 336, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

DESMOND, P. J.

A verdict rendered by a jury under direction by the court awarded to plaintiff the sum of $1,638, principal, and $112.86, interest, as due under a contract en[337]*337tered into between the parties on January 15, 1943. Defendant has claimed an appeal from this judgment, also from the orders of the trial court denying his motions for a new trial, to tax co'sts, to strike the cost bill and to vacate the judgment. Referring to section 963, Code of Civil Procedure, we find that there is no authority for an appeal from any of the matters mentioned except from 'the judgment itself. It will be necessary, therefore, to dismiss the purported appeals from the various orders of denial. As to the appeal from the judgment, the appellant, appearing here in propria persona as he appeared also at the trial, has not clearly stated his grounds, but it appears that he takes exception to many rulings of the court in regard to the admission and rejection of certain items of testimony; he also claims that by reason of the court’s granting the motion for a directed verdict he was denied his right of trial by jury in violation of the Constitution.

The appellant, for some years, has been engaged in the business of moving service and also storage. As a means of advertising and as a convenience for the public, his patrons and himself, he secured various listings in the Los Angeles Classified Telephone Directory, sometimes called the “Buyer’s Guide.” These listings, eight in number, appear in the contract which appellant signed, hereinafter set out, and it will be noted that the first three items provide for publication under the same name as the “advertiser,” namely “Argonne Van & Storage Company,” a title under which appellant did business, and that the balance of the listings incorporate that name. The Los Angeles Telephone Directory, issue of March, 1943, was introduced as Exhibit 6 in this ease and, on page 379, appears the two-column ad for “Moving Service,” for which a charge of $100 monthly was made under the contract. On page 378 appears a half-inch columnar ad, reading “Hollywood Argonne Van & Storage Company.” On page 376, another half-inch columnar ad, reading “Clipper Line Argonne Van Lines,” appears. The other ads mentioned in the contract also appear in the directory and in all these ads the same telephone number is listed, namely ADams 1-1121. On page 579 of the directory, under the title “Storage,” appears in the lower left hand quarter thereof under the name “Argonne Van & Storage Company,” the second item listed in the contract, double one-half column, for which a monthly charge of $55 was fixed.

The contract upon which the action is based reads as follows:

[338]*338“SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TELEPHONE COMPANY —ADVERTISING CONTRACT
“Subject to the terms and conditions printed on the reverse hereof and expressly made a part of this contract, the undersigned requests the Southern California Telephone Company at Los Angeles, to insert advertising as indicated below in the March 1943 issue of the Los Angeles Classified Telephone Directory for one issue only, for which we agree to pay $182.00 per month, in advance, on publication of the advertising and a like amount each and every month thereafter as long as the advertising appears in the directory.
“No employee of the Company is authorized to vary any of the terms and conditions of this contract.
H. E. Dryden for Hulme Argonne Van & Storage Co.
Salesman Advertiser
Date Jan. 15, 1943 Address 806 W. 47th by W. L. Carpenter
Title Owner
Name Space Headings Mo Charge Same ADams 1-1121 2 Col Moving Service 100.00 Same ADams 1-1121 Dbl y2 Col Storage-Household 55.00 Same ADams 1-1121 %"Infl Moving Service 4.50 Beverly Hills Argonne Van & Storage Co. ADams 1-1121 y2"Infl Moving Service 4.50 Hollywood Argonne Van & Storage Co. ADams 1-1121 y2"Infl Moving Service 4.50 Clipper Line Argonne Van Lines ADams 1-1121 y2"Infl Moving Service 4.50 L.A. Argonne Van & Storage Co. ADams 1-1121 y2"Infl Moving Service 4.50 Wilshire Argonne Van & Storage Co. ADams 1-1121 y2"Infl Moving Service 4.50”
Among the “Terms And Conditions” listed on the reverse side of the contract, the first item is couched in the following language: “This contract constitutes the entire agreement between the parties and is subject to the approval of the Southern California Telephone Company herein called the [339]*339‘Company’ it being understood that the advertising copy furnished by the advertiser must be acceptable to the Company and that the printing of the advertising’ herein specified will constitute such acceptance and approval.” The last of the “Terms and Conditions” reads as follows: “This contract shall at all times be subject to such changes or modifications by the Railroad Commission óf the State of California as said Commission may from time to time direct in the exercise of its jurisdiction.”

The initial step in this proceeding was the filing, on September 18, 1943, in the Municipal Court of Los Angeles, of a complaint for services rendered against W. L. Carpenter, individually and doing business as Argonne Van & Storage Company. After a demurrer was sustained, respondent filed an amended and supplemental complaint, to which appellant filed a pleading entitled “Defendant’s Answer to Amended and Supplemental Complaint: Counter Claim and Cross-Complaint,” seeking a total of $10,000 damages. Although there was no separate cross-complaint filed, respondent treated the pleading as containing a cross-complaint and filed an answer thereto. Since the amount prayed for in the ‘ ‘ Counter Claim and Cross-Complaint” exceeded the jurisdiction of a municipal court, the case was transferred to the superior court.

When the matter came on for hearing and before the jury was impaneled, it was stipulated between the parties that respondent might file a “Second Amended and Supplemental Complaint” and that appellant’s “Answer . . . Counter Claim and Cross-Complaint” be deemed a responsive pleading.

The second amended and supplemental complaint alleged, in substance, the making of the contract between the parties; that the form thereof and the rates upon which it was based were on file with the Railroad Commission of the State of California and that the advertising was subject to the rates, rules and regulations on file with the commission; that the directory was published on March 1, 1943, and contained the appellant’s advertising and listings provided for by the contract; that said issue of the directory was in force for the period of March to November, 1943, inclusive; that respondent performed all the terms of the contract called for, and pursuant thereto was entitled to the sum of $182 per [340]*340month for the nine months ’ period; that no part of that sum, $1,638, had been paid and that it was due with interest thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 P.2d 142, 75 Cal. App. 2d 336, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-california-telephone-co-v-carpenter-calctapp-1946.