Sun-Maid Raisin Growers v. Papazian

240 P. 47, 74 Cal. App. 231, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 190
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 26, 1925
DocketDocket No. 5221.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 240 P. 47 (Sun-Maid Raisin Growers v. Papazian) 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
Sun-Maid Raisin Growers v. Papazian, 240 P. 47, 74 Cal. App. 231, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 190 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

Plaintiff commenced this action in claim and delivery. The cause was tried hy the court sitting without a jury and judgment went to the plaintiff, from which the defendant has appealed on a record prepared under section 953a, Code of Civil Procedure.

The suit involves the right to the possession of about 75 tons of raisins produced on the defendant’s land in the county of Fresno during the year 1923. Plaintiff’s claim rests on an assignment from the Sun-maid Raisin Growers Association of a written contract executed by its assignor and *233 the defendant for the disposition of all the raisins or raisin grapes produced by the defendant for a specified period upon a certain described piece of property. The complaint is in the usual form in claim and delivery and alleges that the value of the raisins which the defendant holds in his possession was about $6,000. The answer is in the usual form denying plaintiff’s ownership or right to the possession of the raisins. With the issues so framed the plaintiff rested its case upon proof of the execution and assignment of the contract and of defendant’s refusal to relinquish possession of the raisins. Thereupon the defendant moved for a nonsuit upon the ground that the contract under which plaintiff claimed was in fact a contract of agency and not a contract of sale, but upon the suggestion of the trial court it was agreed that this motion should be held in abeyance until defendant’s case was closed. Defendant’s case consisted of proof of his rescission of the contract upon the ground that his signature thereto had been secured by menace and coercion and that his refusal to deliver possession of the raisins under the contract was justified because the contract, having been executed through menace and coercion, was void and did not confer upon the plaintiff any right to the possession of the property. As the complaint did not plead the contract or set forth any right of the plaintiff under it the defense of menace and coercion was not specially pleaded and accordingly no finding was made thereon. However, the whole case was tried upon the theory that the two issues were before the court: First, whether the contract was one of sale or one of agency only, and, second, whether the contract was void because it had been signed.under menace and duress. On this appeal the main point urged by the defendant is that the evidence conclusively shows without contradiction that defendant’s signature to the contract was obtained through menace and coercion, and as we are satisfied that the judgment must be reversed for that reason it is not necessary to consider the other grounds urged by the defendant.

The Sun-Maid Raisin Growers Association was a mutual association organized under the laws of this state by the raisin-growers of the section, having its headquarters in the county of Fresno, for the purpose of controlling the output *234 and marketing of raisins and raisin-grapes produced in that locality. In aid of this purpose, and for the further purpose of avoiding competition in the marketing of raisins, the association publicly announced some time in the spring of 1923 that it would not operate for that season unless at least ninety per cent of the growers of the locality joined with the association through the execution of growers’ contracts similar to the one in suit. To secure these contracts a concerted “drive” was instituted by the officers of the association through the aid of committees and captains of groups of solicitors. The drive was begun about the first of April, 1923, and the association announced that it would end on April 29th of that year. The required number of signatures not having been secured at that time the period of the drive was therefore extended to May 5th. In fairness to the officers of this association it should be said that so far as this record discloses no one of them was directly engaged in any of the unlawful acts hereinafter related, but, on the other hand, it must also be said that these unlawful acts were specifically brought to their knowledge; that they used the threat of a repetition of such acts in their campaign to “persuade” other growers to sign with the association, and that they and the association profited by these acts. All the evidence on the issue of menace and coercion stands in the record uncontradicted; |some of it comes from the testimony of witnesses called by the plaintiff; but in no case did the plaintiff attempt to controvert any of this showing except through the testimony of one officer of the association who stated that he personally had not used any threats for the /purpose of securing defendant’s signature. The defendant, Peter Papazian, testified that he had lived in Fresno County fifteen years and in the United States about twenty-nine years. He occupied the premises involved in the contract in suit with his wife and children during the year 1923, and upon this property raised a large quantity of raisin-grapes. The so-called drive for signatures to contracts with the Growers Association, which had commenced on April 1, 1923, reached its height about the 19th- or 20th of that month. The defendant’s home was burdened by a mortgage held by one of the banks of the county and he was at that time endeavoring to get some assurance from the bank to *235 aid him to harvest the season’s crop. He soon found that it was impossible for him to get any assistance in this quarter unless he became a member of the association by signing one of the prepared contracts which the association used for that purpose. About the 20th of April he was called to the bank by one of the officers thereof acting in the interests of the association and urged to sign the contract. Having refused to do so after an hour’s persuasion he was turned over to another to whom he also announced his intention to decline to sign the contract. Other persons whose connection with the association was more or less remote frequently urged him to sign and called his attention to the fact that those who refused to sign were being subjected to severe penalties through the destruction of their homes and vineyards and through personal injuries inflicted by what were then termed “night riders.” Some of these persons came to him at his ranch, others telephoned to him, and others sent messages through friends urging him to sign and predicting severe trouble if he refused. Finally he was told that if he refused to sign “we are going to get you,” or “we will fix you.” In the latter part of April he was told that numerous threats were being made against him and that he should leave the county, that “unless you go, the people are after you, and they are going to fix you.” He thereupon went to Modesto, where he remained about five days, during which time he received many telegrams and telephone calls from people in Fresno County demanding that he sign' the contract. Finally he was approached by two Fresno men who insisted that he return to Fresno and sign up. He again refused and these same people telephoned to him again early in the evening asking him to reconsider and give them his final conclusion. He stated to them that he would not sign the contract and late that night he received a message from one of his neighbors that his home was being wrecked. He thereupon got into communication with his wife, met her in Stockton and learned from her something regarding the methods of the campaign for signatures which was being conducted in his home county; how his neighbors had been threatened and abused and their homes attacked and their vineyards destroyed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 P. 47, 74 Cal. App. 231, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-maid-raisin-growers-v-papazian-calctapp-1925.