86 P. 693 | Cal. | 1906
In September, 1892, E.L.G. Steele, the owner of a ranch in El Dorado County, entered into a written contract with plaintiff with reference to the care and proceeds of certain live-stock, which were to be and were delivered by plaintiff to Steele. By the terms of the contract plaintiff was to deliver about one hundred jacks, jennies, and mares to *304
Steele upon his ranch. Steele was to receive the animals and care for them "as carefully as he did for his own stock." They were to be bred for four years, and at the end of four years the colts were to be sold for the mutual benefit of the parties to the contract, provided that, by the consent of both parties, a portion of the colts might be sooner disposed of. It was provided that the agreement should come to an end at the expiration of four years, and that Steele should have no ownership in the original stock delivered to his custody. About two years after the execution of the contract Steele died, and the defendant and respondent herein became executrix under his will. After she had qualified as such executrix, plaintiff presented the contract in question to her as a contingent claim against the estate. The claim was rejected, and plaintiff then commenced suit in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco. Judgment passed for the executrix upon the pleadings, it being shown on the face of the complaint that the action was prematurely brought and that the claim was not due when the complaint was filed. Upon appeal the judgment of the lower court was affirmed by this court in Morse v. Steele,
To meet this, appellant contends that the cause of action set forth in the complaint is not for breach of contract, but is for tort pure and simple, and that the presentation of a claim is therefore not necessary. This position is untenable. The complaint sets up the contract, alleges performance upon the part of plaintiff, and avers that Steele in his lifetime, and afterwards defendant as executrix, failed and neglected to take care of the animals, and that by reason of such failure and neglect they were lost or destroyed, and that they had never been returned to him, to his damage in the sum of eight thousand dollars. Though not expressed, it was the implied duty of Steele in his lifetime, and of the executrix, to have returned the stock at the expiration of the bailment, and this duty itself arose under the contract, as explicitly as though it had been expressly provided for. The complaint avers that "immediately after said contract was executed and in pursuance thereof" plaintiff delivered the live-stock to Steele, and the case is, in all its essentials, like that of Chapman v. State of California,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
*307Hearing in Bank denied.