Yakima Sash & Box Co. v. Kopp

249 P. 786, 140 Wash. 420, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 719
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1926
DocketNo. 19876. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 249 P. 786 (Yakima Sash & Box Co. v. Kopp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yakima Sash & Box Co. v. Kopp, 249 P. 786, 140 Wash. 420, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 719 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

— Under a written contract between the parties, the Yakima Sash & Box Company, a corporation, sold and delivered to the C. M. Kopp Company, a copartnership, a quantity of fruit boxes and box *421 shook manufactured and to he manufactured in the year 1924. The corporation brought suit against the copartnership and C. M. Kopp, a member of it, to recover judgment for the balance alleged to be due. The defendants have appealed from a judgment on findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of the plaintiff.

On behalf of O. M. Kopp, it is claimed there should have been no individual judgment against him and that his demurrer to the complaint against him individually should have been sustained. He is a member of the copartnership. He was served and made a Separate appearance in the action. Subdivision 1 of our joint debtor act, Bern. Comp. Stat., §236 [P. C. § 8449], provides:

“1. If the action is against the defendants jointly indebted upon a contract, he may proceed against the defendants served unless the court otherwise directs; and if he recovers judgment it may be entered against all the defendants thus jointly indebted so far only as it may be enforced against the joint property of all and the separate property of the defendants served.”

This action is upon a contract. C. M. Kopp as one of the partners is jointly liable. The joint property of the partnership and the separate property of C. M. Kopp may be subjected to the payment of any judgment recovered. The statute says so. Warren v. Rickles, 129 Wash. 443, 225 Pac. 422; Livingstone v. Lovgren, 27 Wash. 102, 67 Pac. 599.

The trial court found that a given quantity of boxes and shook had been delivered, which included a quantity destroyed by fire when respondent’s plant or mill was burned. It was also found that the shook actually delivered out of the factory to the users was up to the standard of quality and manufacture required by the contract. Exceptions were taken to these findings, so that, as appellants say, the two main ques *422 tions in the case are (1) had title to the shook that was burned passed to appellants so that they must stand the loss; and (2) were the shook actually delivered out of the factory to the users up to the standard of quality required by the contract.

Upon the first question, the authorities discussing such subject are numerous and apparently discordant, elucidating or confusing by a variety of distinctions and refinements. But, as counsel for appellants say, on this the cases agree that “whether or not and when” title passes is dependent upon the intention of the contracting parties. So-called tests do not control, if without or beyond them the intention of' the contracting parties can be ascertained; or, as said in Pacific Lounge & Mattress Co. v. Rudebeck, 15 Wash. 336, 46 Pac. 392:

“While it is true that in many instances the test of an actual conveyance is the doing of everything which is to be done, yet under the modem authorities, at least, the doctrine of intention prevails, and where the intention of the contracting parties can he ascertained without doubt, no test is necessary and the property in the thing vests whether something else is to be done or not.”

The contract between the copartnership as first party and the corporation as the second party provides:

“Said box shook shall all be manufactured from good dry pine stock, and shall be delivered to first parties at the plant of second party in Yakima, Washington, excepting that second party will deliver to Yakima Valley points carrying not more than a 14 cent freight rate 125,000 of said apple and pear boxes. Second party will either load the shook representing the above sale of material (other than said 125,000 boxes) upon a track furnished by first parties or on board ears ordered and furnished by first parties and spotted at the factory of second party in Yakima, Wash-igton. . . . Delivery of said boxes shall begin not *423 earlier than April 15,1924, and shall proceed as rapidly as same are manufactured by second party in the regular course of its mill and box factory business. . . . It is agreed that first parties will take delivery of this box shook as rapidly as same are produced by second party at its factory at Yakima, Washington, but at their option in lots of not less than 4000.”

The contract also provided that the price to be paid by the appellants on apple and pear boxes was the wholesale price at Yakima, less 1 y2 cent per box; the price to be paid for apple and pear sides, ends and cleats was the wholesale price at Yakima of apple and pear boxes, less 3% cents per box, less 1% cent per box; and the price for peach boxes was to be the wholesale price at Yakima, less % cent per box. The manufacture and delivery of the articles was to commence on April 15.

Outside of the making of the contract and its terms, there is substantial conflict in many respects in the testimony on behalf of the respective parties. Prior to the fire, no goods were shipped out to Yakima valley points under the 14 cent freight rate provision of the contract. Testimony on behalf of the respondent, introduced without objection, was to the effect that the provision requiring the respondent to load trucks or cars at the mill was to cover the expense of that work. The mill had a limited capacity for storage and at the time of making the contract it was explained and understood that appellant must take delivery as did the purchaser of the output the year before, that is, at the plant as manufactured, so that it was provided by the contract that delivery would be taken of boxes and shook as rapidly as the same were produced at the factory. Shortly after commencing to cut the material and manufacture boxes under the contract, the material commenced to accumulate and require rehandling to keep it out of the way, during which time the respond *424 ent urged the appellants to take it away. But appellants made excuses that their warehouse had no available storage room, that their customers were not yet ready to take from them such articles for use in their orchards, and requested the respondent to store the goods at its own premises. On May 5, pay day by the terms of the contract for boxes and shook manufactured in April, a representative of the appellants went to the mill, received a list of the April output, and paid for it by a trade acceptance in the sum of $2,500. The appellants had theretofore arranged payments in the sum of $10,000 to be applied on shook to be cut during August and September. On May 5 appellants again stated they had nowhere to store the goods, to let them stay where they were and that they would look after having them insured. Again, before the fire on May IB, it was insisted without success that the shook still accumulating should be moved out of the way by appellants.

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 786, 140 Wash. 420, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yakima-sash-box-co-v-kopp-wash-1926.