Unruh v. Smith

267 P.2d 52, 123 Cal. App. 2d 431, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1205
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 1954
DocketCiv. 4641
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 267 P.2d 52 (Unruh v. Smith) 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
Unruh v. Smith, 267 P.2d 52, 123 Cal. App. 2d 431, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1205 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

MUSSELL, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment for plaintiffs in an action for damages for breach of the following contract:

11 This agreement entered into Aug. 10, 1950 between Bryan Smith Farms and C. A. Unruh & Howard J. Miller.

“C. A. Unruh & Howard J. Miller agrees to grow 42 acres of cucumbers on their ranch located near the Kern County Airport and to harvest and deliver the same to the Bryan Smith Farms’ packing house in Edison.

*432 “Bryan Smith Farms agrees to advance cucumber seed at the stipulated price of $1.20 per pound which will be deducted from the sale of the cucumbers, furnish planting sled, and some advise in regards to growing and harvesting.

“Bryan Smith Farms also agrees to process, ship, and sell said cucumbers at a reasonable going rate to be determined by the cost of handling and materials at the time of harvest.

“Bryan Smith Farms agrees to rent trailers for harvesting to above mentioned growers for a reasonable going rate. All charges to be deducted from sale of cucumbers, balance of revenue from the sale of said cucumbers to be paid said growers at the time collections are made from sale of said cucumbers.

(Signatures) ”

Plaintiffs allege that pursuant to this contract they planted, cultivated and brought to maturity on their land 50,000 lugs of cucumbers; that they at all times performed all of the stipulations, conditions and agreements on their part to be performed at the time and in the manner specified in the contract; that the reasonable value of the cucumbers at the time the crop was ready for marketing, over and under the cost of processing, shipping and selling was 50 cents per lug; that the defendants failed and refused to perform the contract; that plaintiffs were dependent upon defendants to take care of such crop and were unable to market it because of defendants’ breach of the contract, all to their damage in the sum of $25,000.

Defendants admitted the execution of the contract, denied the other material allegations of the complaint and cross-complained for the sum of $1,925.49 for unpaid advances.

During the trial the court permitted plaintiffs to amend their complaint to conform to the proof and in the amendment plaintiffs alleged that they cultivated and brought to maturity in excess of 60,000 lugs of cucumbers; that plaintiffs picked and delivered to defendants 10,024 lugs and that defendants refused to process, ship or sell the balance of 50,000 lugs and refused to rent trailers to plaintiffs for the harvesting of said balance; that as a result of defendants’ refusal to process, ship and sell said cucumbers plaintiffs were unable to deliver 50,000 lugs so grown and were unable to sell or dispose of the same at the time said cucumbers were ready for market and said cucumbers were left on the vines and became overripe, spoiled and unmarketable; that plain *433 tiffs performed all of the stipulations, conditions and agreements stated in said contract to be performed on their part at the time and in the manner specified, except as prevented by the failure of defendants to process, ship and sell the said crop.

Evidence

Plaintiffs were tenants in possession of a 42-acre ranch in Kern County and the defendant Bryan Smith operated a packing house at Edison in said county. On August 10, 1950, the parties entered into the contract .(prepared by defendants) hereinbefore set forth and thereafter plaintiffs, pursuant to the agreement, planted, cultivated and brought to maturity on said land a crop of cucumbers which matured at the average rate of 800 main lugs per day from October 17, 1950, to December 15, 1950, or a total of not less than 48,000 main lugs.

There was evidence that in order to produce a maximum yield of cucumbers, regular and continuous picking is required during the harvest period; that if so picked the acreage planted by the plaintiffs in 1950 with reasonable certainty would have produced marketable cucumbers for a period of at least eight weeks, from October 17 to December 15,1950, in an amount not less than 54,000 lugs of marketable, good grade cucumbers; that during said period- there were 52 shipping days, not including Sundays and holidays; that during the first 23 shipping days, from October 17 to November 12, 1950, inclusive, there were available for processing and sale sufficient cucumbers from said crop to have packed out 10,000 lugs of good grade, marketable cucumbers, after making allowance for culls and discards, in addition to the cucumbers actually processed and sold by the defendants ; and that during the last 29 shipping days during said period, from November 12 to December 15, 1950, there would have been available with reasonable certainty, if the cucumbers had been regularly picked, 24,000 lugs' of good grade, marketable cucumbers, after making allowance for culls and discards, in addition to those actually processed and sold by the defendants.

Plaintiff Unruh testified that on or about October 5, 1950, the cucumber plants matured; that he made several trips to defendants’ shed and ranch and told them that the plants were matured and that they should start picking; that defendant Smith stated that “he didn’t figure there was enough *434 there to pay to go in and start picking, and he did tell us that he wasn’t set up for them at that time; that he would be set up in a week or ten days”; that defendants’ foreman informed plaintiffs that they had nothing to worry about and that they would have to wait; that he would start as soon as he got the machinery up; that the picking was commenced on or about October 18, 1950; that on one occasion at about the middle of the season plaintiffs delivered to defendants four trailer loads of cucumbers which were allowed to become soft and overripe; that when plaintiffs started, they were picking four or five loads a day; that Smith would stop them and say “don’t bring any more; that is all; that is enough for today”; that Smith told him not to worry about it that in a couple of days or so he would put in a big crew and get over the field but that Smith sent in a crew of pickers on one day only; that it was necessary to go over the field every two or three days and pick the large cucumbers off in order to keep the vines alive; that at the beginning of the season trailers were available but as the season went on, when plaintiffs wanted trailers they , would not be available; that there were “quite a few times when there were not enough trailers; that he could not give an estimate of the average times because there were so many times he went there to get trailers; that Smith was ‘running tomatoes’ and he did not stop and run cucumbers”; that Smith stated that he was harvesting tomatoes and needed his trailers; that “I just kept telling him that we just had to get the trailers and had to pick faster than we were picking and he said he couldn’t just handle it”; that the cucumbers were ready for picking on October 10, 1950, and that it was on October 18, 1950, when he got the first trailers; that in the latter part of the season when the cucumbers were too large Smith told plaintiff to pick all that he could; that it was then too late as the cucumbers were too large.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P.2d 52, 123 Cal. App. 2d 431, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unruh-v-smith-calctapp-1954.