79 Cal. App. 2d 392 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1947
Under a written contract dated September 1, 1945, the respondents sold a 40-acre crop of growing onions to the appellant. The purchase price was $16,000, of which only $1,000 was paid. In accordance with the understanding of the parties the appellant harvested the crop at his own expense some time during the month of October. This action was brought to recover the balance of the purchase price. Relying on the defense that the purchase price of this crop was contrary to OPA regulations, the appellant
The appellant’s sole contention is that this transaction violated the provisions of the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 (Pub. Law 421, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., 56 Stats. 23) as amended, and the provisions of Revised Maximum Price Regulation 271 issued by the Office of Price Administration pursuant to the authority given thereby, and that it follows that the contract entered into between these parties was illegal and void.
The question presented depends upon the applicability, meaning and construction of Revised Maximum Price Regulation 271, relating to the sale of potatoes and onions. In a similar case the United States District Court, Southern District, Northern Division (George J. Barnett v. Atlantic Commission Company, Inc., 233 Civil), held that these OPA regulations were not intended to be applicable to a sale of growing crops in the field. In that case, the court pointed out that these regulations evidenced no intention to cover a growing crop as such, where the harvesting was to be done by the purchaser, where additional labor was called for, and where the factor of labor constituted an unknown quantity but one without which a price ought not to be fixed; and further pointed out that if the OPA intended these regulations to cover such a situation they could and should have directly so provided.
A careful reading of the regulations here in question (RMPR 271) strongly confirms the holding in the case just cited that they were not intended to cover the sale of growing crops in the field where the expense of harvesting is to be paid by the buyer and where many other factors may be involved, including further expense of cultivation and various matters which may interfere with and affect the production of a crop.
The provisions of RMPR 271 may be briefly reviewed insofar as material here. Article I, section 1, covering applicability, provides that “This regulation establishes maximum prices for all sales of white flesh potatoes and dry onions.”
In reply to the proposition that RMPR 271 was not intended to apply to growing crops the appellant contends first that example 2 given under article II, section 9, as above set forth, shows that it was so intended. This contention has already been sufficiently covered. The appellant then contends that there is no evidence here to support the finding that the sale here made was one of a growing crop. Not only does it appear that the parties intended that the appellant should harvest this crop, but it appears that he did harvest it more than a month after the sale took place. The only rea
If it could be assumed that the provisions of RMPR 271 could be applicable to the sale of growing crops it does not here appear that the transaction here in question was illegal on its face and, therefore, void. The appellant contends that the entire contract was illegal and void from its inception, as a matter of law, and without the necessity of introducing any evidence because section 7 of article I contains a prohibition against sales above the maximum prices fixed in this regulation. Section 7 provides that “On and after May 25, 1943, regardless of any contract or other obligation, no person shall sell or deliver and no person, in the course of trade or business, shall buy or receive potatoes and onions at prices higher than the maximum prices established by this regulation, and no person shall agree, offer, solicit, or attempt to do any of the foregoing.” The provision that regardless of any contract no person shall sell or deliver and no person shall buy and receive onions at prices higher than the maximum prices established would seem to be intended to declare that regardless of contract any prices agreed upon which were above the maximum prices allowed would be illegal, rather than to declare that the contract itself was illegal and void. The purposes of the act contemplated the making and carrying out of sales of such commodities, and the prohibition referred to seems to have been directed at any excess over the maximum prices allowed while still recognizing the contract, and not to the end of creating chaos by preventing
Not only does it not appear upon the face of this transaction that it was illegal and void, but there is no evidence in the record from which the court could have found that the contract was illegal or that it was in violation of these regulations. The appellant harvested and removed these onions and is the only one who knew or could have produced evidence as to the quantity of onions which was eventually produced and taken by the appellant by virtue of this sale. He failed to produce any evidence as to this fact, and all presumptions are in favor of the judgment and not against it. For anything that here appears the quantity of onions produced and taken by the appellant may have been such that the contract price agreed upon was at a rate far below the maximum prices provided for in RMPR 271, assuming that the provisions of that regulation were applicable and material here.
The plain situation is that the appellant has failed to meet the prima facie case made by the respondents and has failed to sustain the burden of proof resting upon him. (Basler v. Sharp & Fellows Co., 73 Cal.App.2d 480 [166 P.2d 403] ; Balfour v. Heuer, 77 Cal.App.2d 227 [175 P.2d 55] ; Thacker v. American Foundry, 78 Cal.App.2d 76 [177 P.2d 322] ; Gelb v. Benjamin, 78 Cal.App.2d 881 [178 P.2d 476].)
The judgment is affirmed.
Marks, J., and Griffin, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 27, 1947, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 26, 1947.