Action for damages for the alleged failure of respondent to fulfill a contract whereby it sold and agreed to deliver to appellant a quantity of cotton of a character, grade, and quality and at a price named in the contract, the details of which it is not necessary to amplify.
Appellant alleged that respondent failed to deliver the entire amount of the cotton contracted for, and that the portion that was delivered was of a quality or grade inferior to that provided for by the contract. For the alleged breach appellant sought damages. Findings of fact were in favor of respondent on all material issues and from the judgment which followed the appeal is taken.
1. The evidence and the findings. The evidence is in sharp conflict on all issues except as to the provisions of the contract which are admitted. Appellant offered expert testimony to the effect that the cotton which was actually delivered was not of the quality or grade required by the contract. On the other hand, respondent offered not only expert evidence but positive testimony of those who handled the cotton that the same was of the kind specified in the contract.
Counsel have entered into elaborate discussions of the qualifications of the experts and the value to be given to their testimony. Appellant asks us to review the evidence in its entirety and to weigh the various statements of some of the witnesses as opposed to testimony given by others. That duty devolved upon and was performed by the trial judge. It has been said so often that it seems unnecessary to repeat here that a reviewing court may not invade the field of the fact finding court, and that where a conflict in the evidence exists the findings of the trial court are conclusive and every substantial conflict must be resolved in favor of the finding.
(Patten & Davies Lumber Co.
v.
McConville,
In reviewing the evidence all conflicts must be resolved in favor of the respondent, and all reasonable inferences must be indulged by this court to sustain the judgment.
(Mah See
v.
North American Acc. Ins. Co.,
The only question for us to determine here is whether there , is substantial evidence, even though contradicted, that will support the conclusion reached by the trial judge
(Crawford
v.
Southern Pacific Co.,
Appellant having refused further deliveries of cotton of the same quality and grade as that received by him in the first shipment is not entitled to recover damages for loss of profits on the amount not delivered.
2. Effect of trial judge’s opinion. Appellant com *781 plains that a written memorandum or opinion filed by the trial judge, indicating his conclusions upon certain of the facts, is in conflict with the findings of fact subsequently signed and filed. We have made no comparison of the opinion and the findings for the purpose of ascertaining whether appellant’s claim is well grounded for the reason that if there be such conflict the result of the appeal would not be affected.
The writing of opinions by trial judges is not to be discouraged, whether the questions determined be purely of law or of mixed law and fact. Such course is sanctioned by the Canons of Judicial Ethics of the American Bar Association and is desirable for the purpose of showing that the judge has a full understanding of the case and of indicating to the litigants and their counsel his reason for believing the evidence given by some of the witnesses and disbelieving that given by others.
An opinion of the judge of the trial court, although not a part of the record, is of value to the reviewing court as an aid in illustrating the theory of the decision and in discovering the process by which the judgment has been reached.
(Coakley
v.
Ajuria,
3.
The motion for a new trial.
Respondent’s witnesses, in describing the character of the cotton and its origin, testified that the same was taken from certain railway cars which were identified by letters indicating the railway companies to which the cars belonged together with car numbers. Upon appellant’s motion for a new trial affidavits were presented to the effect that subsequently to the trial appellant had ascertained that the cars thus identified were in other parts of the United States at the time when respondent’s employees asserted that they were at Pinedale, California, where the cotton was unloaded. Respondent presented counteraffidavits to the effect that errors in the car numbers might have been made for the reason that the copies of the receiving weight sheets were made up from a fourth carbon copy, originally made by hand in pencil, which was practically illegible. The trial court weighed these affidavits and denied the motion for a new trial. When a motion for a new trial is made on the ground of newly discovered evidence the ruling of the trial court will not be disturbed unless there be a manifest abuse of discretion
(Montaldo
V.
Hires Bottling Co.,
59 CaI.App.2d 642, 651 [
A new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence is not warranted where it appears that a different judgment would not necessarily result from the new evidence if presented. (Berkowitz v. Kiener Co., supra.)
If the evidence referred to in appellant’s affidavits had been introduced at the trial the most that can be said for it, considering respondent’s explanation of its possible inaccuracies, is that it would have created a further conflict in the evidence. The court found, upon a plenitude of substantial evidence without considering the initials and *783 numbers of the railway cars, that respondent had not violated its contract, and there is no reason to assume that the aggravation of the already abundant confusion would have resulted in a judgment in favor of appellant.
The judgment is affirmed.
Moore, P. J., and McOomb, J., concurred.
