Stockel v. Elich

297 P. 595, 112 Cal. App. 588, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1116
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 1931
DocketDocket No. 4193.
StatusPublished

This text of 297 P. 595 (Stockel v. Elich) 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
Stockel v. Elich, 297 P. 595, 112 Cal. App. 588, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1116 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

*589 MR. JUSTICE THOMPSON (R. L.) Delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal on the part of the interveners from that portion of a judgment in favor of plaintiff which declares that the defendant Elich was the owner of $1493.36, the proceeds of the sale of 2,000 ties, and that plaintiff’s attachment on said proceeds is valid.

For several years the interveners had been financing the defendant Elich in the manufacturing and sale of ties. The defendant Elich owned 40 acres of timber land in Humboldt County upon which he had been manufacturing ties. Elich was indebted to the interveners in the sum of $3,908.91 on account of ties previously manufactured on the said 40-acre tract. By a deed of conveyance duly executed and recorded June 4, 1928, Elich and his wife transferred to the interveners “all timber of every kind and character” which was situated on that tract of land. On that date, and as a part of the same transaction, Elich and the interveners' executed a written contract authorizing Elich to enter upon the premises and cut and manufacture into ties the timber situated thereon. This contract recited that the foregoing deed of conveyance was executed as “security for the payment of the said sum of $3,908.91”, together with such other sums of money as were advanced for the manufacturing of ties. The contract further provides that “all timber products manufactured from timber situated upon above described premises shall be sold or disposed of only through said first parties [interveners] ; that the net proceeds received from the sale of any of the timber products from said premises shall be applied to the payment of the above-mentioned sums; . . . that this agreement shall terminate when the said sum of $3,908.91 and the interest thereon, together with such other sums as may be advanced by first parties shall have been fully paid”. It was then provided that when such sums had been fully repaid, the grantees would reconvey the property to Elich.

Lawrence L. Chapman was the owner of 80 acres of timber land in the vicinity of the above-mentioned tract. The defendant Elich had been manufacturing ties on this last-mentioned land. May 3, 1928, this 80-acre tract of land was conveyed from Chapman and wife to Haight and Mitchell. On June 4, 1928, another contract for the sale of land and the manufacturing of ties from timber on this *590 80-acre tract was executed by Elich and the interveners. This contract provided for sale of the 80-acre tract to Elich for the sum of $5,500 and seven per cent interest thereon, together with all money advanced by the interveners for the cost of manufacturing ties from the timber thereon. The contract further provides: “The party of the second part [Elich] shall cut, manufacture and remove the products with due diligence and . . . the said products shall only be sold through the' parties of the first part [interveners] ; . . . that the net proceeds from the sale of all timber products from above lands shall be applied to the payment of the full purchase price as stated above, together with interest thereon and all other sums advanced, ’ ’ for manufacturing ties. It was then provided that upon payment of all said sums of money, the interveners would convey said 80-acre tract of land to Elich.

Pursuant to these agreements the defendant Elich entered upon the above-mentioned tracts of land and manufactured ties. Up to the time of the transaction which is involved in this action, all ties were sold by the interveners in their own names. The proceeds of such sales were remitted to them and applied pursuant to the terms of the foregoing contracts. Mr. Haight, who personally attended to these transactions, was going away for a temporary visit. He left on April 28, 1928. Prior to this he wrote to Elich telling him of the prospective trip and asking him to make a shipment of ties to the Southern Pacific Company. During the month of June, in the absence of Haight, Mr. Elich shipped to the Southern Pacific Company, in his own name, 3,000 ties. One thousand of these ties belonged to another party by the name of Flickenstein. Two thousand of these ties came from the premises covered by the above-mentioned deeds and contracts. While the proceeds of the sale of these 2,000 ties, amounting to the sum of $1,493.36, remained in the possession of the Southern Pacific Company, the plaintiff brought a suit in assumpsit against Elich based on another claim and thereupon attached the said sum of money. A third-party claim to this sum of money was duly served upon the Southern Pacific Company by Haight and Mitchell. Upon proceedings duly had a complaint in intervention was filed in the last-mentioned suit, in. which pleading Haight and Mitchell claimed to be the owners and *591 entitled to said 2,000 ties and the proceeds of sale thereof. Upon trial of the cause the court held that the interveners were not owners or entitled to the proceeds of sale of the 2,000 ties; that the attachment on said sum of money was valid, and thereupon rendered judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $1493.36.

It seems quite evident from a construction of the foregoing deeds and contracts that the interveners held a lien upon the property, including the ties manufactured thereon, in trust for the payment of the several specified sums of money, together with all additional sums advanced to Elich for the cost of manufacturing the timber into ties. Mr. Elich testified in this regard: “Q. Now this stuff that was shipped out, who was the bill of lading sent to? A. To Mr. Haight and Mitchell. Q. And to whom was the money paid? A. Mr. Haight and Mitchell. Q. No matter whether they placed the order or you placed the order, as a matter of selling it, the proceeds went to Haight and Mitchell? A. Yes. Q. Who did the money belong to? A. Them. . .. Q. Now those ties that were shipped, two thousand, I believe, came off out of the camp you were working ? A. Yes sir. Q. Had you . . . paid up Haight and Mitchell everything that was owing them for money that they had advanced in those operations of yours? A. No sir. Q. And to whom was the proceeds from the sale of the two thousand ties that came off your claim, to be paid, who was to get the money for them? A. Mr. Mitchell and Haight. Q. Haight and Mitchell? A. Yes sir. Q. The bills of lading were sent down to them? A. Yes. . . . Q. Were any of the ties, the two thousand ties that were shipped in June, taken off the Chapman timber ? A. Yes sir. Well I am not sure, between -five and six hundred ties. . . . Q. Did any of these ties come off of land to which the Stockels claimed ownership? A. No sir. Q. No question about that, is there? A. No sir. . . . Q. Now with reference to any ties that were on the ground out there at the time these agreements were drawn up on June 4, 1928, what arrangement if any did you have with Haight, with respect to such ties? A. No arrangements made of any kind. They bought whatever there was on the ground before we made out the agreement. They paid for everything and it was not specified in the agreement; just our understanding, be *592 tween me and Mr. Haight that everything there was . . . in the camp would belong to them. Q. They had paid for it all before? A. Yes sir. . . . Q. Who is entitled to the money from the two thousand ties from your camp ? A. Mr. Haight and Mitchell.” The foregoing testimony is uncontradicted.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pacific Fruit Exchange v. Duke
284 P. 729 (California Court of Appeal, 1930)
Halleck v. Mixer
16 Cal. 574 (California Supreme Court, 1860)
Herriter v. Porter
23 Cal. 385 (California Supreme Court, 1863)
Moisant v. McPhee
28 P. 46 (California Supreme Court, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 P. 595, 112 Cal. App. 588, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockel-v-elich-calctapp-1931.