120 Wash. 498 | Wash. | 1922
— The appellants, McNeff, are engaged in the business of buying and selling hops. The respondents, Capistran, are hop growers. On May 20, 1921, the parties entered into a written contract, wherein the appellants agreed to buy of the respondents, and the respondents agreed to sell to the appellants, at seventy-five cents per pound, six thousand pounds of the hops to be grown by them on a certain described tract of land during the year named. The contract provided that the hops should be “of prime quality, i. e., of sound condition, good and even color, fully matured, but not over-ripe, flaky, cleanly picked, properly dried and cured, and free from sweepings and other foreign matter, and not affected by spraying or vermin damage.” It was provided that the hops should be baled by the seller in new twenty-four ounce baling cloth, each bale to weigh between one hundred and eighty-five pounds and two hundred and ten pounds gross; that the buyers should have the privilege of inspecting the hops before delivery, and if, in their judgment, the hops were inferior in quality to the quality provided in the contract, they should have the privilege of buying any or all of them at a reduced price, to be determined in a prescribed manner ; and that the hops should be delivered to the buyers on board cars or in a warehouse at Moxee City,
After the hops were gathered and baled, they were inspected by the appellants and claimed by them to be inferior to the quality provided for in the contract. The respondents, on the other hand, claimed the hops to be of the required quality. During the growing period of the hops, the appellants advanced, pursuant to the terms of. the contract, to the respondents’ use the sum óf nine hundred and one dollars.
In this action the appellants sought to recover the sum advanced, and have the same declared to be a lien on the hops; also, to have the lien foreclosed and the hops sold in satisfaction of the lien. Possession of the hops was not sought by the appellants nor obtained during the pendency of the action. To the complaint, which contained allegations appropriate to the relief sought, the respondents interposed an an: swer, which, after certain denials, affirmatively set forth the operative provisions of the contract and alleged that the respondents had performed all of the conditions of the contract. They further alleged that there was grown upon their premises two thousand nine hundred and seventy-five pounds of hops and no more, demanding judgment for the contract price of the hops, less the sums advanced by the appellants. The allegations in the answer as to due performance of the contract on the part of the respondents, and as to the quantity of hops grown, were put in issue by a reply.
When the cause was called for fixing a time of trial, the respondents demanded a trial by jury. This the
In this court the appellants first assign error on the order of the court granting a jury trial. But this was within the discretion of the court. As we read the record, the court regarded and treated the verdict as advisory only, adopting it as a correct conclusion on the issue submitted. True, the court made no separate findings of fact or conclusions of law, but this is unnecessary in an action of equitable cognizance. Wintermute v. Carner, 8 Wash. 585, 36 Pac. 490; Dunlap v. Seattle National Bank, 93 Wash. 568, 161 Pac. 364.
The contract contained the following provision:
“If at any time a difference of opinion shall exist between the parties hereto regarding the quality or condition of any of the hops tendered by the said seller in fulfillment of this agreement, each party shall have the privilege of selecting an arbitrator to whom the question as to the quality of the hops shall be submitted, and in case of disagreement a third arbitrator shall be called by the two others chosen and the decision of the third shall be final.”
After the differences arose between the parties as to the quality of the hops, the respondents employed an attorney to represent them in negotiations looking to a settlement of the differences. The negotiations failed, whereupon the appellants served upon the at
The further contention is that the record does not justify the judgment entered by the court. As we have stated, the evidence introduced at the trial was directed solely to the issue whether the hops grown were of the quality provided for by the terms of the contract. No evidence as to quantity of hops grown was admitted or offered, nor was there any evidence that the respondents had stored the property or were themselves retaining it for the benefit of or as the property of the appellants. The conclusions of the court upon these questions must find their support in the allegations and admissions of the pleadings. In the complaint it is alleged in substance that, pursuant to the contract, the respondents raised and grew on the described premises fifteen bales of hops “which are now in their possession,” and that, after the hops were dried and baled, they tendered them to the appellants, but that the appellants refused to accept them, or any part of them, on the ground and for the reason that the hops were not of the quality provided for in the contract, but were of a much inferior quality. The respondents, in their answer, denied that the hops were not of quality prescribed by the contract, and affirmatively alleged that they were of the quality so provided, and further alleged that the hops grown and tendered weighed two thousand nine hundred and seventy-five pounds. These affirmative allegations
In the early case of Dunstan v. McAndrew, 44 N. Y. 72, it was held that a vendor in an executory contract for the sale of personal property (in that case hops), where the vendee refuses to take or pay for the property, has a choice of remedies; first, he may store or retain the property for the use of the vendee and recover the entire contract price; second, he may sell the property, acting as agent of the vendee for the purpose, and recover the difference between the contract price and the price obtained upon the sale; or, third, he may keep the property as his own and recover the difference between the market price of the property at the time and place of delivery and the contract price. The case has been cited many times since its announcement, and it is possible that the rule there laid down is the rule in the majority of jurisdictions (see note to Todd v. Gamble, 148 N. Y. 382, 42 N. E. 982, 522 L. R. A. 225; 24 R. C. L. 86, §352), although there is a respectable line of authority which holds that the first of the cited rules is applicable only to executed contracts. (Acme Food Co. v. Older, 64 W. Va. 255, 61 S. E. 235, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 807, and note.) But assuming that the first line of cases state the applicable rule, we are unable to conclude that the record brings the respondents within it. The allegation and the admission taken together is that there was a tender of the hops which the appellants refused, and that the respondents now have them in possession. There is nothing to show that the respondents are
There was, moreover, an issue as to the quantity of the hops, with no evidence upon the issue. It may be that the court concluded that the form of the reply did not put this allegation of the answer in issue; that the general denial of the allegation as to the quantity of the hops was a denial in manner and form, a negative pregnant, and did not raise an issue. But if this was the ground of the conclusion, the court was in error. A general denial, under the code, is the equivalent of the general issue at common law, and puts in issue not only the direct averments of the pleading, but those that are implied from such direct averments as well. Peters v. McPherson, 62 Wash. 496, 114 Pac. 188.
The evidence was also wanting in other particulars. There was no evidence that the hops were baled in accordance with the requirements of the contract— that is to say, that they were baled in a new twenty-four ounce baling cloth, or that the bales weighed between one hundred and eighty-five pounds and two hundred and ten pounds, and the court seemingly made no deduction for tare as provided by the contract.
Since there must be a reversal, it remains to inquire what disposition of the ease this court shall direct.
Parker, C. J., Mitchell, Tolman, and Bridges, JJ., concur.