Tevis v. Savage

62 P. 611, 130 Cal. 411, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 853
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1694.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 62 P. 611 (Tevis v. Savage) 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
Tevis v. Savage, 62 P. 611, 130 Cal. 411, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 853 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

*412 COOPER, C.

This action was brought to recover of defendants the sum of seventeen hundred and sixty-two dollars, balance due for sale of fruit by plaintiff to one Herbert during the year 1896. The complaint alleges that defendants willfully and fraudulently represented to plaintiff that they were backing Herbert in buying fruit, and that any contract that he might make with Herbert would be performed on his part. That the defendants promised to pay, or guaranteed the payment of, the amount that should become due to plaintiff by reason of sales of fruit to Herbert during the season of 1896. Hpon the close of plaintiff’s testimony the court granted a nonsuit as to both defendants, and judgment was accordingly entered. Plaintiff made a motion for a new trial, which was denied as to defendant Savage and granted as to defendant corporation. Plaintiff appeals from the order denying his motion as to defendant Savage, and defendant corporation appeals from the order granting the motion as to "it. By stipulation both appeals are brought up and argued upon the same record. The question to be determined is as to the correctness of the ruling of the court in granting the nonsuit. The learned judge of the court below, in an opinion printed in one of the briefs, sets forth the gist of the evidence and the reasons which impelled him to grant a new trial as to the defendant corporation and to deny it as to defendant Savage.

It appears from the evidence that Herbert went to plaintiff to buy his fruit in the latter part of July, 1896, and defendant Savage, as the agent, and not otherwise, of the defendant corporation, went with him. Savage told plaintiff that he was the agent of the corporation, and that the corporation was backing Herbert, furnishing him with money to carry on his business, handling all his fruit; that plaintiff would be perfectly safe in making any contract with Herbert for the sale of fruit, and that the corporation would see that any such contract was paid by Herbert. Savage further asked plaintiff to look into the financial standing of the corporation. On the twenty-eighth day of July, 1896, without making any inquiry into the financial standing of the corporation, plaintiff entered into certain contracts with Herbert in writing, whereby he agreed to sell, and Herbert agreed to buy, the fruit of *413 plaintiff upon the terms therein named. About two weeks after entering into these contracts plaintiff inquired as to the financial standing of th'e corporation, and was informed that it was perfectly responsible. Plaintiff then delivered the fruit to Herbert under the contracts made with Herbert alone.» Plaintiff states that he looked primarily to Herbert to pay. for the fruit sold to him, and if he did not pay then to the corporation. The evidence does not show any willful misrepresentation or bad faith, or intent to deceive on the part of either of the defendants. It shows that there was no contract or agreement in writing by either of them to answer for the debt, contract, or default of Herbert. The agreement, therefore, if such there was, to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of Herbert was void. (Civ. Code, sec. 1624, subd. 2; Clay v. Walton, 9 Cal. 328, 333; Ellison v. Jackson Water Co., 12 Cal. 542, 553; Harris v. Frank, 81 Cal. 280, 286.)

The evidence shows that in all the transactions the defendant Savage was only the agent of the corporation and was dealt with and treated as such by plaintiff. He was introduced to plaintiff as such agent, and plaintiff in his testimony says that Savage said to him, “I .represent the Feron & Ballou Company and they will see you paid.” It "follows that the court properly granted the nonsuit as to defendant Savage. But a different state of facts is presented as to the corporation. It has before been shown that the corporation did not become bound to pay the debt of Herbert originally. But under the contract made by the corporation with Herbert it received the fruit sold by plaintiff to Herbert. It appears from the testimony (which we must presume to be true on the motion for nonsuit) that Herbert paid plaintiff s'even hundred and fifty dollars, and one thousand dollars more was due upon the delivery of the fruit as the first payment under the contract. The contract provided that one-half should be due upon the completion of the delivery of the fruit by plaintiff, and the balance sixty days thereafter. The plaintiff then, having delivered all the fruit to Herbert, and the defendant corporation having received it all from Herbert, demanded the balance of the one-half due upon delivery, to wit, one thousand dollars. Plaintiff Went with Herbert to Savage, the agent *414 of the corporation, and Savage stated to plaintiff that he had made arrangements with the Union Savings Bank for Herbert to draw a check for the one thousand dollars, and Herbert accordingly drew and delivered to plaintiff the eh'eck for one thousand dollars, which was paid. Savage went with plaintiff to the bank to collect the check, and on the way to the bank said to plaintiff, “That Mr. Herbert’s credit was good; that he was entitled to credit,.and that the goods had all been sold as fast as they were delivered; he was waiting on returns from them to pay us out of the proceeds of Mr. Herbert’s fruit.” Savage requested plaintiff to allow the money to remain in the bank for a month, as this would the more easily enable him to raise at the same bank the final payment when it became due. Plaintiff left the money in the bank as requested by Savage. Savage further stated to plaintiff, in the same conversation, “That the fruit had been forwarded, and as fast as the returns came in we would be paid out of the proceeds of the fruit.” Savage further said to Mr. Wright, the attorney for plaintiff, “That the fruit had gone forward, and just as soon as they received returns from the consignment that the fruit would be paid for.....He said that as soon as the returns came in he would pay plaintiff’s bill. . . . . Savage said that they had money on hand to pay all of Herbert’s bills; that he had made money and said he would clear at least two thousand dollars.”

Herbert testified that after the fruit had been delivered he was at defendant’s office, and there in the presence of plaintiff Savage wrote on a piece of paper in 'effect: “How, I tell Mr. Tevis when the balance becomes due to come to me and I will give him check for the amount and charge the same to your account, and you can give me a check to cover it.” The witness said that he was hard of hearing, and that for this reason Savage wrote on the slip of paper as he often did in talking to witness.- This testimony shows that after plaintiff had been paid the first installment of seventeen hundred and fifty dollars, and at the time the last check of one thousand dollars was given, the fruit was all in the hands of the corporation; that Savage promised to pay plaintiff out of the proceeds of the fruit; that Herbert was present and made no objection to the arrangement.

*415 Now, the corporation had received the property of Herbert. The fruit of plaintiff had been delivered to it. It owed Herbert for the fruit and undertook and -promised, not to nay the debt of another, but its own debt to Herbert. True, it was to be paid to plaintiff, but itwas still the debt of the corporation, and plaintiff was by consent substituted as the party to whom payment should be made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 611, 130 Cal. 411, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tevis-v-savage-cal-1900.