Wilkinson & Co. v. McKinley

190 P.2d 35, 84 Cal. App. 2d 100, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1167
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 1, 1948
DocketCiv. 3570
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 190 P.2d 35 (Wilkinson & Co. v. McKinley) 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
Wilkinson & Co. v. McKinley, 190 P.2d 35, 84 Cal. App. 2d 100, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1167 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

This action involves an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment in its favor in an amount less than that to which it claims to be entitled.

On October 20, 1943, defendant A. B. McKinley, by Max McKinley, his agent (later relieved of personal liability) placed with plaintiff, a drilling corporation, an order to drill a water well and install easing at an agreed price of $3,919.45. •This written agreement was later modified and the costs increased to $4,427.27, due to the size of the casings. One thousand two hundred fifty dollars had been paid on this indebtedness. The written order provided that “Seller shall not be liable for delays caused by act of God, ... or any other cause beyond seller’s control, including inability to secure material. Purchaser agrees to make all claims in writing for shortage or noncompliance with this order promptly upon delivery, and in the event purchaser does not make a claim in writing within ten days of date of delivery purchaser waives all claims for shortage or noncompliance with the above order. . . . Interest at 7 per cent will be charged on past due accounts. In the event seller places the collection of the amount owing hereunder in the hands of an attorney purchaser agrees to pay a reasonable attorney’s fee in addition to the amount owing.” On November 4, defendant and plaintiff company made application to the War Production Board for authority to do the work and supply the material. The separate form shows: “Period of Construction—Beginning 12/15/43—Completion 2/1/44.”

*102 In the answer of defendant it was admitted that Max McKinley was acting only as agent; that certain changes in price and material were agreed upon, but it was claimed that defendant only agreed to pay plaintiff the original contract price of $3,919.45, and then only upon condition that the well be completed by February 1st, 1944. He admitted the payments on the account ($250 on April 15, 1944, and $1,000 on August .17, 1944) and claimed by way of cross-complaint $10,536.80 damages to planted crops as an offset for failure of plaintiff to complete the well before February 1st, 1944.

After evidence was taken the trial judge authorized an amendment to the cross-complaint to conform to the proof. Paragraph 1 was amended to allege that defendant advised plaintiff that he planned to grow, in the cropping season of 1944, barley and other crops, if plaintiff could drill a water well to a depth of 600 feet by February 1st, 1944, or within a reasonable time thereafter; that relying upon said promise defendant planted 120 acres of barley.

The court then found that defendant executed the above-mentioned written order for materials and work and agreed to the change in price as indicated; that an attorney had been employed. Attorney’s fees in the sum of $250 were allowed. He then found that it was not true that on October 20, 1943, plaintiff orally agreed with defendant to drill and complete a water well on this land to a depth of 600 feet by February 1st, 1944, but that it was true that defendant owned a certain parcel of land which was suitable for growing crops if water could be obtained to irrigate the same; that defendant advised plaintiff that he planned to grow, in the cropping season of 1944, crops on said land if the plaintiff would drill a well to a depth of 600 feet; that defendant did plant 120 acres of land to barley upon the promise of plaintiff made on or about October 20, 1943, to commence and complete said water well within a reasonable period of time. The court then found that a period of 12 weeks from October 20, 1943, was a reasonable time to commence drilling said well, and that a period of six weeks from the date of its commencement was a reasonable period within which to complete said well; that plaintiff waited until February 25, 1944, and was therefore negligent in failing to commence said well prior to that time; that plaintiff negligently delayed the completion of said well until August 10, 1944; that defendant did not have *103 sufficient water to irrigate the potatoes, barley and alfalfa during the spring and summer of 1944, which were planted on said land; but found that “only said barley was planted on a reliance of a promise to commence to drill and complete said water well within a reasonable period of time” (as above determined), and that “said potatoes and alfalfa were not planted in reliance upon any such promise”; that it is true that defendant “permitted work to be commenced pursuant to said order after the time that it shonld have been completed and at no time made any claim for shortage or noncompliance with said order as therein provided and in accordance therewith.” And the court accordingly found “That by virtue thereof, defendant waived any breach in the performance thereof as to the potatoes and alfalfa.” It found that the defendant was damaged, in reference to the barley crop only, in the sum of $1,200. After allowing this offset, judgment was entered that plaintiff recover a judgment in the amount of $1,977.27, plus $250 attorneys’ fees, and ordered that neither party recover costs.

On appeal plaintiff states that the sole issue is the propriety of allowing the offset of $1,200 and the denial of costs to it for the reasons that: (1) defendant permitted the work to be commenced after the time of performance under the contract had expired and thereby waived the time of performance and any damages resulting to any crops; (2) that damages were waived by the unqualified acceptance of the work; (3) that the contract required a written claim to be made for noncompliance and no claim in writing was made; (4) that the finding that the barley crop was planted in reliance on the promise to drill and complete the well within the time found by the court is not supported by the evidence; and (5) that where a plaintiff recovers judgment in excess of the jurisdictional amount of the highest inferior court in the county costs are allowed as of course.

Max McKinley testified that he talked to Mr. Wilkinson a few days before he signed the purchase order; that he told him his father was developing new land next to his property; that it was “some time before we would have to have the water but he wanted to know for sure if he could get the water before he went too far along with it, and I asked him if he could drill the well and how long it would be before he could finish it. He said that he could not do it then—that his men were all busy, and I remember that was the latter *104

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Bluebook (online)
190 P.2d 35, 84 Cal. App. 2d 100, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-co-v-mckinley-calctapp-1948.