279 P. 795 | Cal. | 1929
On hearing after decision by the District Court of Appeal, First District, Division Two [273 P. 161]. Defendant, Sam Sebastiani, appealed from a judgment entered against him by the trial court in favor of plaintiff, Louis Engelberg, for the sum of $8,122.75. The jury brought in its verdict for the sum of $7,003.39, and the court, upon motion of plaintiff, directed the clerk of said court to add to the amount of the verdict interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum from the respective dates the several claims comprising the verdict became due to the date of the entry of judgment, and to enter judgment for the amount of said verdict plus interest thus computed. In accordance with the court's direction the clerk entered judgment for $8,122.75, which included interest. The trial court had given no instruction to the jury regarding the plaintiff's right to interest upon the demands in suit. The defendant contends that said court exceeded its power in directing an allowance of interest to plaintiff.
The action is upon a contract whereby plaintiff agreed to sell and defendant to buy the entire crop of grapes growing upon plaintiff's ranch in Sonoma County at the price of $76 a ton. In the first count of the complaint plaintiff sued to recover $3,065.70, the balance of the purchase price remaining unpaid for 85 tons and 150 pounds of grapes actually delivered to and received by defendant. In counts two and three plaintiff sought to recover at the contract rate of $76 a ton for two lots of grapes tendered to defendant and which defendant refused to accept. Plaintiff alleged that he had sold said lots of grapes on defendant's account, and from the sale of the first lot which defendant refused to accept he had realized $271.55, which he had paid to defendant. As to the *729 second lot, plaintiff alleged that the expenses of sale exceeded the proceeds by $26.05, and this sum he sought to recover in addition to the price of the grapes computed at $76 a ton.
The jury verdict of $7,003.39 for plaintiff was for the full amount prayed for, but made no allowance of interest, in regard to which the court had given no instruction. In the prayer of his complaint plaintiff asked for interest.
[1] Upon the pleadings and proof, plaintiff was entitled to interest by virtue of the provisions of section
[2] Since plaintiff was entitled to interest in the amount allowed by the trial court as a matter of law, neither section
In McAfee v. Dix,
In support of the rule here announced, see 27 R.C.L. 888; notes, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) 311; 10 Ann. Cas. 753; Lowenstein v.Lombard,
[3] The jury in bringing in a verdict where the court grants a motion for a directed verdict acts in a ministerial capacity. (Estate of Sharon,
By the appeal taken by defendant a number of objections were made to the judgment besides the question of the right of the court to incorporate in the judgment interest upon the sums found to be due. Those questions were sufficiently considered and correctly determined against defendant's contentions by the District Court of Appeal. The plaintiff petitioned this court for a hearing, urging as erroneous that portion of the decision which held that the trial court was without power to incorporate an allowance of interest in the judgment. Defendant did not petition for a hearing. Making no objection upon petition for a hearing to that portion of the decision which was against him, it must be assumed that he was convinced of its legal soundness and did not feel justified in further urging said other points. Upon examination of said other points we find no such merit therein as would require or justify a reversal.
Judgment affirmed.
Langdon, J., Shenk, J., Curtis, J., Waste, C.J., and Richards, J., concurred. *732