247 P. 247 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1926
On the seventh day of June, 1923, the parties entered into a written contract of sale by defendant to the plaintiffs of a certain lot of grapes. The parts of the contract material to the questions raised by the appeal are as follows:
"Whereas, the seller covenants and warrants that he is the owner of a certain lot of 2,400 twenty-five pound boxes of dried black grapes, principally Zinfandel and Mission variety; . . . the said seller . . . does hereby sell said dried black grapes, and all of them to the buyer, and the buyer . . . does hereby buy the same from the seller for the price of 11 1/4 cents per pound net f.o.b. cars . . . Fresno, California, loading to commence not later than the 8th day of June, 1923, or as soon thereafter as the transportation company can furnish cars suitable for loading. The buyer agrees to pay said seller the sum of . . . $6,750 as follows, to-wit: Net cash and acceptance, Fresno."
Admittedly, on the eighth day of June, 1923, 3,561 twenty-five pound boxes of dried grapes were, by agreement of the parties, "delivered by defendant to plaintiffs under and by virtue of the terms of the written contract," for which the plaintiffs paid the defendant the agreed price of eleven and one-fourth cents per pound. The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs, in reliance upon the warranty contained in the contract, received the grapes and shipped *580 them to New York City, believing that the grapes were of the kind mentioned in the warranty; that upon their arrival in New York the plaintiffs ascertained that the lot of grapes purchased "contained dried white grapes, as well as dried black grapes"; that the "defendant well knew that plaintiffs purchased said dried grapes for shipment to eastern markets"; that if the grapes had been as warranted they would have been of the value of $16,000 in New York, but that, by reason of the white grapes contained therein, they were of the value of only $6,000. The answer denies the foregoing allegations and alleges that the plaintiffs inspected the grapes before the execution of the contract and inspected and accepted them upon their delivery at Fresno. The court found the facts in accordance with the allegations of the complaint except as to the value of the grapes. In that respect it found that had the grapes been as warranted they would have been of the value of $14,021.43 in New York, but that, by reason of the mixture of white grapes with the black, they were of the value of but $7,789.68 in that city. Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiffs for the difference. The defendant has appealed from the judgment.
Plaintiff S.A. Porter, who made the purchase for the plaintiffs, testified that the plaintiffs are wholesale jobbers, located in San Francisco; that defendant called at plaintiffs' place of business and stated that he "had about a car" of black grapes at Fresno and asked witness to go to Fresno and "look the lot over and he could probably sell them" to plaintiffs; that witness went to Fresno a few days later "for the purpose of examining the black grapes"; that he and defendant "looked at part of the pile, examining fifteen or twenty boxes, and they seemed to be apparently all black grapes"; that the witness later examined seven or eight more boxes; that "The pile was stacked so we couldn't break into it all and I took Mr. Gestri's warranties that they would be black grapes"; that he and defendant then went to a lawyer's office to have a contract drafted and executed; that in the lawyer's office, "I told Mr. Gestri that as long as they were all black grapes, that I was satisfied. Mr. Gestri said they were all black grapes. I said, `As long as you will warrant that, we will take them'"; that the "contract was then drawn up. I *581 said I had to rely on him that they were to be all black grapes, that I was in a hurry to get them on the boat and I didn't have time to look them all over. . . . I told Mr. Gestri that they had to make the steamer of the American-Hawaiian line"; that he told defendant at that time that plaintiffs expected to ship the grapes to New York and had cargo space reserved for that purpose; that after the grapes arrived in San Francisco, and three-fourths or more of them had been loaded in the steamer's hold, "I noticed the spillage on the dock, and that it was a little bit off at the time. . . . We spoke to Mr. Gestri about it and he said they were all right, so I thought it could be settled with very little adjustment"; that at that time the boxes were strapped, "two boxes to a bundle, wire strap on each end so it was almost impossible to break the wires on those cases, and there was a few cases yet unstrapped, and I looked at five to seven cases. . . . I told Mr. Gestri we thought we might have trouble with the raisins, . . . that they were not all black grapes, and Mr. Gestri said they were all right. He said: `They will go through, they are all black grapes, you won't have any trouble.' . . . And then I relied on it more than ever, because he said there might be a few cases like that, but they were all black grapes. . . . I opened a few cases that were still unstrapped and there I noticed a little difference from what I had purchased. . . . I relied solely on Mr. Gestri's warranties, more than I did on the inspection." The witness further testified that the New York buyer rejected the whole lot of grapes because they were not black grapes; that an inspection in New York disclosed that only twenty per cent of them were black grapes; that plaintiffs sold the grapes, after such rejection, for eight and three-fourth cents a pound; that that was the "very best" price that could be obtained for them; that the market price of black grapes in New York at that time was from sixteen to seventeen and one-fourth cents a pound; and that before shipment to New York the plaintiffs had contracted to sell the grapes at sixteen cents a pound for a part thereof and sixteen and one-half cents for the remainder. Most of the grapes purchased were of the crop of 1920. The contract is silent as to the year grown. The evidence shows that in 1923 black grapes of the 1922 crop were of the market value of *582 from fifteen to sixteen cents a pound f.o.b. at Fresno; those of 1921 fourteen and one-half to fifteen and one-half cents, and those of 1920 fourteen to fifteen cents. Witnesses for the defendant testified that about half of the grapes were of white varieties. The defendant testified that the boxes were labeled "dried black grapes"; that at the time of the execution of the contract he did not know and that Porter did not tell him where the grapes were to be shipped, except that they were to be sent to San Francisco. In other respects Porter's testimony stands uncontradicted.
Appellant contends that "the general demurrer should have been sustained because there is no allegation in the complaint . . . that the defendant did not deliver to the plaintiff the goods specified in said contract." The theory of the complaint, however, is not that the plaintiffs did not receive the particular lot of grapes purchased, but that the grapes contained in such lot were not of the kind warranted. [1] It is clear that the clause of the contract first quoted herein constitutes an express warranty that the grapes mentioned therein were of black varieties. (Burge v. Albany Nurseries, Inc.,
[2] It is next urged that "there should have been a statement of specific facts which prevented the discovery of the breach at the time of the delivery." If it be conceded that the complaint is defective in the particular mentioned, the answer alleged that the plaintiffs did in fact inspect the grapes prior to the execution of the contract and at the time of delivery, and the undisputed testimony, admitted without objection, shows that no effective inspection was made and that by reason thereof the warranty was inserted in the contract. Under such circumstances the alleged defect in the complaint did not prejudice the rights of the defendant. [3] "Where there is an express warranty the buyer is under no obligation to inspect or examine the goods purchased, but may rely on the warranty. The *583
main purpose of a warranty is often to excuse examination and render examination unnecessary." (35 Cyc. 378; Morris v. FiatMotor Sales Co.,
[5] It is contended that there is no evidence to show the market value of black grapes produced in 1920. The plaintiff testified that the market price of black grapes in New York was from sixteen to seventeen and one-fourth cents a pound. Another witness testified that black grapes have a higher market value than white grapes; that "they want a grape to make claret wine . . . as a rule in the eastern cities"; that in 1923, about the time of the sale herein involved, black grapes grown in 1922 were of the market value of fifteen to sixteen cents, f.o.b. Fresno, and that as to those grown in 1920 "there would not be a difference in value of over a cent a pound on them." There is no other evidence bearing upon the question of value. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, it may be inferred that there was the same difference in value in New York as in Fresno between grapes grown in 1920 and those *584 grown in 1922. The court found that if the grapes had all been black grapes as warranted they would have had a market value in New York of fifteen and three-fourths cents a pound. The evidence fully supports this finding.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Plummer, J., concurred.