DocketNumber: Civ. No. 1235
Citation Numbers: 139 Cal. App. 320, 33 P.2d 1042, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 525
Judges: Barnard, Haines, Marks
Filed Date: 6/18/1934
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
As of date July 25, 1930, respondent D. M. Herman, of Wasco, California, a grower of alfalfa hay, executed to one George E. Martin, operating at Los Angeles, California (apparently under the fictitious name Vernon Feed & Milling Co.), a bill of sale acknowledging receipt from Martin of $5,500, and, in consideration thereof, conveying to Martin:
“Five hundred (500) tons No. 1 quality baled alfalfa bay, now stored in barns located on lots 90 and 211-31 Fourth Extension Colony.
“Said hay to be loaded on cars F. O. B. Wasco, California, as ordered by the buyer, on or before January 1st, 1931.”
The parties also executed a contract in writing beaded “Hay Contract”. This contract began as follows:
“In conjunction with Bill of Sale made on this day at Wasco, California, . . . 1930, Geo. E. Martin Buys and*322 D. M. Herman sells 500 Tons No. 1 quality alfalfa bay @ $11.00 per ton (a little more or less) said hay being located in barns located on land described as follows:
“I agree to deliver the hay purchased in good order and in accordance with contract terms and conditions as herein specified.
“F. O. B. cars as ordered by Buyers, by January 1st, 1931, which time may be extended with Buyer’s consent but not otherwise.”
After certain further provisions, including those concerning the manner of delivery, there appears a paragraph as follows:
“Part payment of $1.00 is hereby acknowledged in consideration of above. Advance of $3.00 per ton is to be made as soon as all papers are signed. Balance to be paid when hay is unloaded in good order.”
Then follow certain other provisions which we need not recite. The contract is signed “D. M. Herman, Address Wasco, Calif.”, and “Vernon Feed & Milling Co. By. Geo. E. Martin”. Respondent Herman testified that he received from Martin the contract and bill of sale at the same time; that the contract was actually signed on July 25th, but that he kept the bill of sale and did not sign and deliver it until some days later.
At the time these writings were executed respondent Herman had upon his premises more than 500 tons of alfalfa hay in barns and a further quantity in the fields. All of it was mortgaged to the Bank of Italy by a chattel mortgage on which there was an unpaid balance of $3,070.58.
Under date July 29, 1930, Martin contracted in writing to sell 500 tons of U. S. Grade No. 1 leafy alfalfa hay to one Luckensmeyer at $18 per ton, 13 tons to be delivered at once and the rest during December, 1930, and January and February, 1931, Luckensmeyer to pay for each shipment within 30 days after delivery.
.At some time late in July, 1930, Martin approached appellant Seaboard Dairy Credit Corporation for a loan and told one Knox, its secretary and manager, that he, Martin, could get 500 tons of hay, but that it was then mortgaged to the Bank of Italy (the idea evidently being to pay off the bank from what appellant was to loan). Knox was made
Before accepting this chattel mortgage Knox had sent a representative of appellant’s Fresno office to Herman’s premises to report on the hay. What investigation he made there does not appear, but his report was to the effect that the hay was all there and that none had yet been shipped. According to Knox, Martin also assured him in person that none of the hay had yet been shipped.
Some six days intervened between appellant’s receipt of the chattel mortgage made to it and its disbursement of any funds on Martin’s account. In the meantime Knox insisted on having delivered to him the bill of sale from Herman to Martin which he says that he had previously seen. After the situation had reached this point appellant proceeded to advance $5,000, of which !$3,070.58 was paid to the Bank of Italy, whereby respondent’s indebtedness to that institution secured' by the earlier chattel mortgage of the hay to it was satisfied. The remaining $1929.42 was paid by appellant to Martin direct.
Shortly subsequent to these transactions it was discovered that Martin was in financial straits and that a month, more or less, before the making of the bill of sale from Herman to him of July 25, 1930, with the accompanying written contract of sale, he had received from respondent Herman 106 tons of hay, for which Herman -was now claiming credit as part of that which he was, under the bill of-
Of the hay bought from Martin by Luckensmeyer there was, in late July or early August, 1930, actually shipped to Luckensmeyer some 22 tons, inclusive as we take it, of the 13 tons that, according to Martin’s bill of sale to him, Luckensmeyer was to have received coincidently with the execution of that document. The effect of Martin’s chattel mortgage to appellant Seaboard Dairy Credit Corporation was to 'subrogate appellant to Martin’s right to collect the proceeds of the hay delivered to Luckensmeyer from the latter. Luckensmeyer, however, failed to pay for the 22 tons of hay delivered to him, the result of which was to bring him in default on his contract of purchase from Martin, and coincidently to bring Martin into default under his chattel mortgage to appellant, and to entitle appellant as against Martin to take possession under the terms of this chattel mortgage of the whole 500 tons of hay therein described. Thereupon appellant, recognizing that respondent Herman was entitled to credit for the 132 tons that he had delivered after making his written contract with Martin and his bill of -sale to the latter, but claiming that Herman was obligated under these instruments to deliver to it, as subrogated to Martin, the rest of the 500 tons, brought against him the present action in claim and delivery for 350 tons of the hay stored in his (that is respondent Herman’s) barns. • "Why appellant asked only for 350 tons instead of the 368 tons that would result from a deduction
In support of the judgment respondent Herman claims:
First, that the writings of July 25, 1930, did not fully express the real arrangement between himself and Martin, but that what actually occurred was that about July 1, 1930, a verbal contract was made by the terms of which he sold Martin 500 tons of his hay, not necessarily out of what Herman had in his barns, but with the idea of clearing his fields because his barns were already full; that he thereupon, not from his barns, but from his fields, delivered to Martin 106 tons to apply on the 500 tons, for which he is entitled to credit as against the amounts claimed by appellant; and
Second, that having in fact been paid only $4,070.58, which at the agreed price of $11 per ton would call for the delivery of but 370 tons he is entitled to have credited against that amount the two items of 106 tons delivered by him prior to the time the writings were made and 132 tons delivered by him afterward, aggregating 238 tons, leaving him obligated to deliver only 132 tons more, and that he is entitled to have the remaining 218 tons taken out of his possession by the sheriff and 'delivered to appellant returned to him or in default thereof to recover from appellant their value.
The findings of fact and conclusions of law show that these contentions on respondent’s part were adopted by the trial court and their soundness is what we are now called upon to review.
We are unable to perceive on what theory the action of the trial court in allowing respondent credit for the delivery of the 106 tons of hay can be sustained. Over
On the part of the respondent, however, it is urged that “even if the preliminary negotiation and understandings of the defendant and George E. Martin were merged in a bill of sale and contract between the parties, this does not preclude parol testimony as to the amount of hay delivered prior to the execution of the bill of sale”, and that “in the absence of an estoppel”, or in any suit between Herman and Martin, Herman could show that Martin had
It has been seen that for the hay described in the writings referred to respondent has in fact been paid only :$4,070.58. That would, at the agreed price of $11 per ton pay for only 370 tons. If, therefore, respondent is only obligated to deliver the hay that he has actually been paid for, it being admitted that he actually delivered 132 tons under the contract, the extent of his obligation to make further deliveries without further payment would be limited to 238 tons, whereas, at appellant’s behest the sheriff took from -him and delivered to appellant 350 tons. We must determine, therefore, whether respondent is entitled to so much of the hay awarded to him by the judgment (or, if it cannot be redelivered, to its value) as is measured by the difference between 350 tons and 238 tons, that is, 112 tons. The bill of sale dated as of July 25th purports, indeed, to acknowledge receipt by respondent Herman of the whole $5,500 necessary to pay for the entire 500 tons of hay. But the written contract between the parties purporting on its face to be executed “in conjunction with Bill
“One who sells personal property has a special lien thereon, dependent on possession, for its price, if it is in his possession when the price becomes payable, and may enforce his lien in like manner as if the property was pledged to him for the price.”
It had been expressly held in Eads v. Kessler, 121 Cal. 244 [53 Pac. 656], that under this enactment the personal property on which the seller retained a lien was not personal property as to which the seller retained the title, since as to that, having the title, he needed no lien, but personal property to which he had already parted with the title but of which he retained the possession. The court in that case says (Ibid., p. 246): “But that section (3049) contains nothing which changes the common-law rule upon the subject; it was a mere statement in a convenient form of what the common law is. . . . and the common law is, that a lien such as is contended for in the case at bar exists only under a complete sale which passes the title to the property. ’ ’
It follows that respondent retained a lien on any part of the hay for which he had not in fact been paid, and that that lien must prevail unless by some application of the doctrine of estoppel he is not permitted to rely on it, but we cannot see that under the facts of this case there can be any such estoppel. Appellant, when it acquired its chattel mortgage, knew that respondent was still in possession of the hay and it is charged with knowing the rights with which respondent was clothed under the law by reason of such retained possession. It is indeed claimed that respondent’s daughter, as his representative, visited appellant’s office in connection with respondent’s chattel mortgage to the bank and familiarized herself with appellant’s arrangements to pay off that mortgage and that her knowledge of these arrangements must be imputed to her father. It is doubtful whether the evidence would support such a contention but in any event the amount appellant paid in discharging the mortgage was, as we saw, only $3,070.58, which would at $11 per ton, pay for only a fraction over 279 tons of hay, arid even if respondent were charged by reason of information believed to have been imparted to his
Our conclusion is that appellant became entitled to the hay for which respondent was actually paid, that is, 370 tons, as against which respondent is entitled to credit for 132 tons delivered by him after the maldng of the bill of sale and prior to the seizure by the sheriff, leaving the appellant entitled to retain 238 tons of the hay so seized and delivered to it and that the judgment should be so modified as to provide for the return to respondent of only the residue of 112 tons of the hay seized by the sheriff or in case it cannot be redelivered for its value stipulated to be $11 per ton, making $1,232, together with his costs in the superior court, instead of the 218 tons or the alternative of $2,398 and costs awarded by the trial court.
The judgment of the trial court is therefore so modified, and as modified is affirmed. •