Wilson v. Alcatraz Asphalt Co.

75 P. 787, 142 Cal. 182, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 916
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1904
DocketL.A. No. 1219.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 75 P. 787 (Wilson v. Alcatraz Asphalt Co.) 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
Wilson v. Alcatraz Asphalt Co., 75 P. 787, 142 Cal. 182, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 916 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

At the close of the testimony the judge directed the jury to return a verdict for defendant in the sum of $2,145.95, which it did, and judgment was accordingly entered. Plaintiff prosecutes this appeal from the judgment on a bill of exceptions.

This controversy arose out of the following facts: In December, 1894, the Southern Pacific Company leased to Austin and Doulton, the assignors of plaintiff, for a term of five years from January 1, 1895, for oil-development purposes, certain lands in the townsite of Summerland, in the county of Santa Barbara, for which the lessor was to receive a royalty of one fourth of the oil produced from the land. The lessor, in the leases, reserved the privilege of terminating the same, at any time, upon thirty days’ notice.

On the 14th of November, 1895, the plaintiff was in possession of the leased lands, and had wells thereon producing some eight carloads of oil per month, and he also owned and controlled other oil-producing wells at Summerland outside *184 those on the leased lands. The defendant corporation was1 using, and required for its use, at its works in Santa Barbara County near Summerland a' large quantity of oil.

After some negotiations, and after the oils produced and controlled by plaintiff in Summerland had been tested by defendant, the contract was entered into in regard to the sale and delivery by plaintiff to defendant of certain oil as specified in the contract.

This action was brought by plaintiff to recover $1,449.20 for oil furnished defendant under the contract.

Defendant in its answer set forth facts showing a breach of the contract on the part of the plaintiff, and claimed damages for such breach in the sum of $5,497.19. The evidence showed, without conflict, that the plaintiff had furnished oil to defendant under the contract, for which plaintiff had not been paid, amounting to $1,447.20. The defendant claimed that by reason of the breach of contract by plaintiff it was compelled to buy oil elsewhere, and that the amount it had to pay, including freight charges, in excess of which the oil would have cost if plaintiff had complied with his contract, was the sum named in its answer. It appeared, without conflict, that the defendant bought oil of other parties in Summerland and at Santa Paula to make up the plaintiff’s deficiencies which he failed to- furnish under the contract, and that the extra cost to defendant was the sum of $3,593.45. In the calculation the court refused to allow the defendant for certain sums claimed to be the differences' in value of the oils purchased from the oils agreed to be furnished. The court directed the jury to return a verdict for defendant for the difference between the latter sum and the amount so due for oil furnished under the contract, the amount of the verdict being $2,145.95.

The main argument of counsel, and the issue in the case, is as to the construction of the contract. The Southern Pacific Company gave thirty days’ notice, and thus terminated the leases of the lands from which plaintiff was obtaining the principal part of the oil which he was furnishing to the defendant under the contract, and the claim of plaintiff is, that the termination of this lease had the effect of releasing bim from his contract with defendant, and upon the solution of this question the ease must be determined. The evidence *185 shows that the lease was terminated at the urgent request of plaintiff, and that he wrote several letters to the Southern Pacific Company urging the giving of the thirty days’ notice, so that the lease might be terminated and that he might be thus relieved from his contract with the defendant. He after-wards wrote to the Southern Pacific Company, asking that it destroy the letters thus written, so that they could not be used as evidence against him. After the leases were terminated he procured a new lease from the Southern Pacific Company, which he had previously negotiated, by the terms of which the company took the entire product from the leased premises at a price more advantageous to plaintiff than he was getting from defendant. But these matters are not deemed very material, as, under the view we take of the case, the plaintiff was liable in damages for a breach of his contract, even if the lease had not been terminated by his own procurement. The contract so far as material here is as follows: “Said J. C. Wilson hereby agrees that on the conditions and terms hereinafter set forth he will furnish and deliver to said Alcatraz Asphalt Company at Summerland, in the county of Santa Barbara, state of California, so much crude mineral oil, produced or to be produced during the term of this agreement, at the said Summerland, as the said Alcatraz Asphalt Company shall require for their business and work in the county of Santa Barbara, (whether for fuel or for other purposes,) and as the said Alcatraz Asphalt Company shall from time to time order from said J. C. Wilson; said quantity, however, not to exceed twelve cars per month, but the said Alcatraz Asphalt Company shall have the privilege of purchasing as much more oil as they may require at the same price as herein mentioned on condition that the said J. C. Wilson shall produce enough more oil after giving the Southern Pacific Company their one-quarter share. . . . The said J. C. Wilson shall not be liable to the said Alcatraz Asphalt Company for losses or damages resulting from his failure to supply and deliver oil to said corporation hereunder as demanded, when such failure shall be due to the act of God or unavoidable accidents over which the said Wilson has no control, the complete exhaustion of the oil-wells now in operation or hereafter to be opened in the said Summerland or vicinity, or the Southern Pacific Railroad *186 Company revoking their leases, made out to J. H. Austin and H. J. Doulton, December 20, 1894; but excepting in cases where said Wilson shall be unable for the last aforesaid causes to deliver the oil which may be demanded of him under this contract, he shall at all times during the term hereof be required to supply to said Alcatraz Asphalt Company all of the crude Summerland oil which it shall order or require,. excepting as hereinabove mentioned, and he shall also from time to time keep on hand such supply of said oil as will enable him to meet the current demands and orders of the said Alcatraz Asphalt Company and shall not, for the purpose of supplying any other customer or person ordering oil from him, diminish his supply or stock of said oils to such a point as to interfere with the fulfillment by him of all orders which he may receive during the term hereof from said Alcatraz Asphalt Company. This contract and the obligation of said parties hereunder are to continue in force and effect from date hereof to and until the thirty-first day of December, 1896, inclusive. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
75 P. 787, 142 Cal. 182, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-alcatraz-asphalt-co-cal-1904.