Transport Clearings-Bay Area v. Simmonds

226 Cal. App. 2d 405, 38 Cal. Rptr. 116, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1293
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 20, 1964
DocketCiv. 20869
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 226 Cal. App. 2d 405 (Transport Clearings-Bay Area v. Simmonds) 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
Transport Clearings-Bay Area v. Simmonds, 226 Cal. App. 2d 405, 38 Cal. Rptr. 116, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1293 (Cal. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

In this action brought to recover certain sums allegedly paid by plaintiff in purchasing freight bills of defendant’s trucking company, plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of defendant and against plaintiff and also from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

Plaintiff, Transport Clearings-Bay Area (hereafter referred to as Transport) is a nonprofit corporation organized by a portion of the trucking industry for the purpose of purchasing the freight bills of its member carriers and collecting the amount, of the bills from the obligors thereof. It has approximately fifty members consisting of various truck lines in the Northern California area. Defendant, Evelyn 0. Simmonds, is an individual doing business in Berkeley, California, under the firm name and style of West Berkeley Express & Draying Company (hereafter referred to by the initials WBX). She was admitted to membership in Transport in 1953.

The freight bills purchased by Transport were actually *410 invoices issued by the member carriers to cover transportation services rendered to the debtor named therein. The debt- or was usually the shipper if the freight was prepaid or the consignee if it was not. Generally speaking, the freight bills were of two types: local bills covering shipments moving in or out of the Bay Area and interline bills which were strictly bills between member carriers normally covering a pro rata share of the freight charges. Transport purchased the bills at a slight discount and then collected their face amount from the debtor. As a general practice, bills received by Transport at its office were mailed to the debtor either daily, every other day or once a week depending on the particular type of account. Transport however mailed checks to the members in payment of the assigned bills within 24 hours after receiving them.

On March 30, 1960, defendant and one Anton P. Skya entered into an agreement of purchase and sale covering WBX for a total price of $316,900, payable $25,000 not later than March 1960 and the balance in specified installments over a period of years. This agreement was subject to the approval of the California Public Utilities Commission and the United States Interstate Commerce Commission and provided that if such approvals were not secured by June 24, 1960, the obligations of the parties under the contract would forthwith terminate unless the time for approval was extended by mutual consent. On the same day the parties entered into a management agreement in the form of a letter directed by Skya to defendant and endorsed by the latter as “accepted.” In said letter, Skya stated that “in anticipation that said approvals will be forthcoming,” he proposed to manage the business of WBX commencing April 1, 1960, until the sale was approved or the contract expired, whichever occurred first, Skya agreeing to pay all expenses of WBX and retaining all net profits during the period as “my compensation for such management.” Defendant, on her part, was to be responsible for all liabilities of WBX as shown on its books at the close of business March 31, 1960, excluding payments on certain tractors and trailers.

Edward Simmonds, defendant’s husband, had been the actual manager of WBX since 1956, defendant at that time ceasing to be active in the business. Defendant had been negotiating with Skya since January 1960. About March 1, 1960, Skya paid her $5,000 which was to be credited on the *411 initial payment of $25,000. In the middle of March she permitted him to take over the business of WBX, Skya having stated that he was anxious to tie in such operations with his trucking operations in the north. At about the same time Mr. Simmonds curtailed his activities at WBX. On March 30, 1960, he moved into an adjoining office in order to attend to more or less personal matters. On April 7, 1960, Skya appointed as manager of the business one Reuben Barclay, a former employee of defendant’s, who remained with WBX after March 30.

Defendant gave no written notice of either agreement to Transport. Nor did she ever apply to the Public Utilities Commission for approval of the sale of WBX to Skya; or apply to the City of Berkeley for the transfer of her business license, or file with the county clerk any certificate of abandonment of the fictitious name under which she did business.

Beginning about April 1, 1960, and continuing until about July 18 or 20, 1960, Transport purchased from WBX certain freight bills which indicated thereon that the debtor was Custom Traffic Service, hereafter referred to as Custom. This was a corporation owned by Anton Skya, a fact which, as we point out infra, was known to Transport’s manager prior to April 1, 1960. After purchasing WBX’s bills against Custom, Transport paid WBX for them by check. Thereafter, following its normal collection routine of mailing bills to the debtor’s address shown thereon, Transport mailed the bills to Custom Traffic Service, 1700 Sixth Street, Berkeley, California. This was the address of WBX from which, strangely enough, the bills had emanated. Transport thereafter collected from Custom 262 of the above bills, representing a total amount of $230,000, said bills being paid by Custom’s cheeks drawn on a Seattle bank.

On June 27, 1960, Transport’s manager, Albert Uniack, discovered that Custom’s account was delinquent to the extent of $18,000 or $20,000. Upon checking WBX’s bills, Uniack observed that the business of that company had increased by three to four times its normal operations and that the increase was due to one type of bill, namely those against Custom. He admitted that he had never before seen this type of bill coming from WBX in such consistently large amounts and that, from his experience, such bills represented a substantial increase in the volume of business for a firm of the *412 size of WBX. He immediately stopped the purchase from WBX of bills against Custom and telephoned Skya in Seattle. Uniaek and Skya arranged a luncheon meeting in San Francisco on July 1, 1960. At this meeting Skya explained to Uniaek that he was in the process of merging into one corporation several corporations which he owned “up north” and that the delay in paying Custom’s bills arose from accounting difficulties pertaining to the merger. The outcome was that Uniaek agreed to continue purchasing WBX bills against Custom on Skya’s promise that he would bring Custom’s account up to date promptly.

On cross-examination Uniaek testified in pertinent part as follows: During the above luncheon meeting Skya detailed his operations and the many companies he owned, informing Uniaek that he also owned WBX. The latter responded by advising Skya that he could not be the owner of WBX until the California Public Utilities Commission approved the transfer. Uniaek eventually told Skya that Transport would again accept Custom’s bills. However he denied telling the latter that he, Skya, could continue submitting such bills through WBX. On this last point he was impeached by earlier testimony given in a deposition where he admitted making such a statement on the occasion in question and acknowledging that Skya continued his course of conduct by submitting the bills.

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Bluebook (online)
226 Cal. App. 2d 405, 38 Cal. Rptr. 116, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 1293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/transport-clearings-bay-area-v-simmonds-calctapp-1964.