265 P. 828 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
Action by plaintiff to recover a certain sum alleged to be due as liquidated damages by virtue of a contract entered into between plaintiff's assignor and the defendant. The defendant had judgment and the plaintiff appeals.
On or about the twenty-fifth day of April, 1923, the Sun-Maid Raisin Growers, a corporation, the assignor of the plaintiff herein, and the defendant entered into a written agreement pertaining to the marketing of certain crops of raisins to be produced upon the lands of the defendant. The Sun-Maid Raisin Growers, a corporation, was a corporation organized for profit, having a paid-up capital stock. The plaintiff in this action is a co-operative association organized for the marketing of raisin grapes.
The contract entered into between the Sun-Maid Raisin Growers, a corporation, and the defendant, among other things provided as follows:
"The buyer agrees to properly manufacture and pack said raisins and thereafter sell them as rapidly as possible and pay the proceeds over to the sellers named in this and similar contracts, according to the quantities and varieties of raisins (or if Bleached Thompsons or Bleached Sultanas then according to the quantities and grades thereof) received from the respective sellers, first deducting any advance or advances previously made to them and each seller's pro rata share of all losses and expenses of the buyer incurred in its operations hereunder, including any loss incurred in handling and reselling the crop of 1922, and seven per cent on the capital stock of the buyer outstanding on *3 December 31st in each year; and provided further that at the option of the buyer such payment of such excess may be made in capital stock of the buyer or in 7% preferred capital stock of the Sun-Maid Growers Association of Delaware, at par, fully paid up, at the rate of not over $4.00 per ton of raisins received from the seller by the buyer and the balance in cash."
The contract further provided that the raisins purchased from the defendant should be pooled and sold with raisins of like quality purchased from other persons with whom the Sun-Maid Raisin Growers Corporation held similar contracts. There was also a provision in the contract permitting assignment by the corporation to a co-operative association in the event of the organization of such an association under the laws of the state of California. The paragraph in the contract relative to stipulated damages is as follows: "The parties hereto fully understanding and admitting that it will be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix the actual damages to the buyer, which will result from the breach of this contract by the seller, hereby expressly agree and stipulate that in the event of the seller's neglect, failure or refusal to deliver to the buyer the raisins purchased hereunder, the seller will pay to the buyer the sum of three cents per pound for all raisins covered hereby, and so undelivered, as liquidated damages for such breach."
[1] The trial court found that it was not impracticable to ascertain the damages suffered, and no damages having been proven, judgment was entered for the defendant.
The record shows that the appellant simply introduced a contract, and there rested its case on the question of damages without making any effort whatever to show the circumstances surrounding and attendant upon the execution thereof, upon which the court might base a finding of liquidated damages, the contention of the appellant being that the contract in and of itself is sufficient without further proof.
Before considering the contention of the appellant we may properly state that so far as the record discloses this is not a case which involves either the morale or prestige of a co-operative association. In a number of the cases involving the question of liquidated damages, where a number in a co-operative association has failed and neglected to deliver *4 his crop, in allowing liquidated damages the standing of the co-operative association is considered, its prestige, the effect upon its members, if any of the members declined to perform the obligations imposed upon them by the co-operative contracts. The agreement in this case was not made with a co-operative association. It was made simply with a corporation organized for profit. There is nothing in the complaint, and not a scintilla of evidence in the record showing that the defendant in this action is or was, at any time during the period involved, a member of the plaintiff co-operative association. So far as this action is concerned it is simply one where a co-operative association is seeking damages from an outsider for refusing to be bound by the terms of a contract made with a corporation organized for profit, of which contract the plaintiff has become the assignee. The only evidence in the record as to membership by the defendant in the plaintiff co-operative association is found in the following sentence taken from the assignment under which the plaintiff holds, which excludes any idea of membership. It is as follows: "but second party shall not be deemed, by reason of this instrument or of anything contained herein, or on any other ground, or for any other reason, to have accepted any of said applications for membership." This is in reference to the contract entered into between the plaintiff's assignor and the defendant, wherein the defendant was contracting for the handling of his grapes by the corporation in the manner set forth herein by the excerpt taken from said contract and the agreement of the defendant to deliver his grapes for a certain period of time. In fact, there is nothing in the record before us which brings this case within the decisions relative to controversies between nonprofit co-operative associations and members thereof.
While a number of questions are suggested by a reading of the record, only one needs to be considered, and that is the failure of plaintiff to make out a case justifying the allowance of liquidated damages. There appears nothing in the record showing that the plaintiff was doing any business, handling raisins, expending money, incurring overhead expense, or that the failure by the defendant to deliver raisins would in any manner affect the standing or prestige of the corporation, or that the plaintiff was performing any *5
of the acts such as appear in the record of the cases having to do with co-operative associations in this state. One of the most recent is that of the California Bean Growers' Association v.Rindge Land Nav. Co.,
In Pacific Factor Co. v. Adler,
In Dyer Bros. Iron Works v. Central Iron Works,
In the case of McInerney et al. v. Mack,
In the case of Anaheim C.F. Assn. v. Yeoman, supra, the court, in considering the elements which parties would have in view in contracting for liquidated damages, uses the following language: "The association was organized for the purpose of the better handling of citrus fruits through the co-operative and joint effort of its members. From the nature of the organization and the statement of its purposes as found in its articles and by-laws, it can be fairly and reasonably inferred that by the co-operation of its members, mutual advantages would accrue to all through greater economy in handling and shipping and the securing of more advantageous marketing facilities. These results would be dependent, directly upon the performance by the members of their agreement to deliver their fruit into the hands of the association for the purposes declared. Defendant sought to show at the trial that the damage which would accrue to the association by reason of any of its members failing or refusing to market their fruit through the association could be easily and exactly ascertained, and that such damage would consist wholly of a proportionate amount of overhead operating cost. By the line of questioning pursued, it was made clear that the association would suffer an actual monetary loss by reason of the failure of defendant to deliver his fruit at the *8
association packing house for market, as he had agreed to do, but in the very nature of the case we do not think that such damage should be the only damage considered to have been suffered by the plaintiff. Other elements have already been suggested. The existence and life of the association itself depended upon its being furnished fruit to dispose of in the public market. A reduction in the amount of fruit so handled would not only tend to increase the overhead cost to the nontransgressing members, but, we may assume, to some extent affect the prestige and standing of the association as a marketing concern." And as said in California Bean Growers' Association v. Rindge Land Navigation Co.,
[3] Sections
The case of May v. Hunt, Hatch Co.,
This being a case involving a breach for the sale of personal property in not making delivery, as agreed, and not involving anything further, nothing is presented which would authorize our holding that the court was in error in making the finding attacked herein.
Appellant relies upon the case of Wright v. Rodgers,
Hughes, J., pro tem., and Finch, P.J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on April 7, 1928, and a petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on May 7, 1928.
All the Justices concurred.