Tomlinson v. Wander Seed & Bulb Co.

177 Cal. App. 2d 462, 2 Cal. Rptr. 310, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2495
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 27, 1960
DocketCiv. 23732
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 177 Cal. App. 2d 462 (Tomlinson v. Wander Seed & Bulb Co.) 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
Tomlinson v. Wander Seed & Bulb Co., 177 Cal. App. 2d 462, 2 Cal. Rptr. 310, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2495 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

VALLÉE, J.

Appeal by defendants from a judgment for plaintiff in an action for damages for breach of a contract to deliver dichondra seed.

The contract on which the action was based provided for the sale of 2,000 pounds of dichondra seed by defendants, wholesalers of seeds and bulbs, to plaintiff, operator of a nursery, at a total price of $8,000. Defendants delivered only 744 pounds. They contend that under the terms of the contract they were excused from delivering the balance of the seed and, in any event, the awards of lost profits and of interest were improper.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, it appears that about July 1, 1954, defendant Wander, then president and owner of over 80 per cent of the stock of defendant corporation and at time of trial the sole owner, called on plaintiff and represented to him that dichondra seed was in short supply and that he had control of the only seed available. He told plaintiff he had the seed on hand and it would be available to plaintiff after tests had been made and the seed tagged to show the percentage of germination by the state. Plaintiff agreed to purchase 2,000 pounds of seed at $4.00 a pound and to pay $4,000 in advance on the first thousand pounds and $500 in advance on the second thousand pounds. He offered to have the seed insured but Wander told him he had insured it. Plaintiff asked Wander to let him have some of the seed allocated to another customer of defendants while the tests were being made but Wander refused, stating that each customer’s stock was set aside specifically for him.

On July 2, 1954, plaintiff received the first shipment of seed, 24 pounds. On July 6, 1954, Wander presented to plaintiff a printed form which displayed the letterhead of Wander Seed and Bulb Company and was titled “Acknowledgment of Order.” Plaintiff’s business name and address had been typewritten opposite the printed words “sold to.” The body of the form contained the following typewritten matter:

“2000 lbs Dichondra Seed $8,000
“1000 lbs Dichondra Seed to be taken in, completely by October, or sooner (depending on the request for delivery by Mr. Tomlinson) and $4,000 for said seed to be paid immediately. The balance of the 1000 lbs. will be held in our *466 warehouse until such time that Mr. Tomlinson requests delivery. Deposit of $500.00 on same.
“Paid to date: $4500.00.
“Balance of $3500.00 to be paid as the second 1000 lbs. of seed is picked up.”

The following paragraph printed in small type appeared on the face of the printed form immediately above the typewritten matter:

“We guarantee all stock true to name and sound when shipped by us. In keeping with trade custom and, as we exercise no control over conditions under which stock is stored or planted by the purchaser, we will not be responsible for the results obtained. All • quotations are subject to crop and other conditions beyond our control.”

At that time plaintiff delivered his check for $4,500 to Wander and both parties signed the completed form, Wander signing in the name of the Wander Seed Company. Plaintiff did not “pay any attention to” or read the printed provision referring to “quotations” when he signed the agreement because “it didn’t enter into it. We didn’t care about the crop. This was seed on hand I was buying. I wasn’t going to giving him money to raise it.”

Subsequently plaintiff received four additional shipments of varying amounts after he had made numerous requests for delivery. On October 11, 1954, plaintiff’s secretary requested further delivery of seed from Wander and made a written memorandum on the reverse side of the “Acknowledgment of Order” stating, “Mr. Wander said see[d] has to dry out Maybe Wed.” On October 24 plaintiff made a formal demand for the balance of the seed and on October 29 he received a shipment which brought the total he received to 744 pounds. Defendants had no seed and made no further deliveries.

Wander testified: he told plaintiff at the time negotiations were being carried on between them that he had a commitment from a grower for seed from the California crop which was then being harvested; he did not tell him the name of the grower; he told him that if he would make an advance payment of $4,500 he would sell 2,000 pounds for delivery as it was harvested, tested, and processed; the contract was made in contemplation of this specific source of seed.

Wander further testified he had advanced to Alice Harbaugh, the grower to whom he had referred, a total of $9,000 over a period of time pursuant to contractual arrangements *467 he had with her. He was not her employer and he had no title to any of her seed. She had accepted his money and had obtained seed from other growers but had not delivered the seed to him nor paid the growers for the seed. He filed an action against her for money due, and caused an attachment to be levied on October 14, 1954, on 1,900 pounds of seed in her possession.

On November 22, 1954, Alice Harbaugh filed a petition in bankruptcy and some time later the seed was awarded to the unpaid growers who had filed claims. Defendants made no effort to obtain seed from other sources. Wander testified that seed was still available on the market and that other growers “had dichondra seed to sell’’ but that he made no attempt to purchase from them because until March 1955 he had hoped to obtain the seed held under the bankruptcy proceedings, after that he intended to replace the seed ordered by plaintiff with seed from an Arizona grower which would be ready in May 1955, and he would not buy seed from some place else in any case because it would have caused friction with his grower in Arizona.

Plaintiff was able to purchase 73.1 pounds of seed in small quantities at $8.00 a pound on the open market during November and December, 1954, but was unsuccessful in obtaining more until August, 1955. His nursery had been established in 1930 and the area in which it was located was in the midst of a building boom. He readily resold all of the seed he had obtained. He sold the 744 pounds obtained from defendants at $1.98 for a quarter pound package, and the 73.1 pounds obtained from other sources at $3.98 for a quarter pound.

The court found: the agreement was a contract for the sale of specific goods already in existence; defendants’ failure to supply the balance of the seed was not due to crop failure or other condition beyond their control; the agreement was not conditional upon the phrase in the printed portion of the form which states, “All quotations are subject to crop and other conditions beyond our control’’; the seed which was the subject matter of the agreement represented plaintiff’s business needs for the year following its date; plaintiff had paid in advance for a large portion of the order so as to assure an ample supply of seed for his needs; he had placed advertising and had accepted orders for the seed in reliance on the agreement, and had been required to attempt *468

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 Cal. App. 2d 462, 2 Cal. Rptr. 310, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 2495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomlinson-v-wander-seed-bulb-co-calctapp-1960.