272 P. 340 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant in an action for the purchase price of 4,501 pounds of steel alleged to have been sold and delivered.
The appellant is a corporation of the state of New York. Through its agent an order for the purchase of steel bars for foundry use was obtained from an employee of the respondent August 1, 1922. This order was written upon a form furnished by the respondent in the following language:
"Office of F.M. Thatcher. "Order No. 8180. "Sterling City, Cal., Aug. 1, 1922.
"To Gladium Company.
"Please forward supplies listed below, to Sterling City, Calif.; Invoice to Sterling City. Ship by S.P. Co., 4 bars 1" x 10" soft steel bumpers for car bunks; 4 bars 1/2" x 10" for plates; 2 bars 2 1/2" x 10" round for hooks. Price 20 ¢ per pound.
"Approved,
"C.A. WILLIAMS, Manager."
On August 16, 1922, this order was shipped from New York by way of the Panama Canal. The evidence satisfactorily shows that this steel was delivered to respondent's mills in Sterling City, December 29, 1922. On January 1, 1923, for a consideration, respondent's mills, together with all equipment and supplies were transferred to the Diamond Match Company. This shipment of steel was never returned to the appellant, nor was it accounted for by the respondent. The evidence tends to prove that it was in fact conveyed to the Diamond Match Company upon the sale of respondent's mills. On September 22, 1922, after the steel had been shipped from New York, but before its arrival at Sterling City, the respondent wrote the appellant charging it with having procured the order for steel by means of misrepresentations, refusing to accept the shipment, and declaring that upon its arrival the steel would be immediately returned.
The respondent contends that his agent, Williams, had no authority to order the steel, and that he had no knowledge of its actual delivery, and did not know what had become of it. For years, however, Williams had acted as respondent's *88 bookkeeper and manager. A serious doubt is raised by the record as to whether an ostensible agency may not have existed which would have authorized the purchase of steel by Williams. He admitted that he signed the order for the steel, but asserted that he was persuaded to do so through the misrepresentations employed by the appellant's agent. Upon delivery of the goods, Williams also paid the Southern Pacific Company's freight bill for transportation Regarding his knowledge of the delivery and disposition of the steel, the respondent himself testified: "Q. I want to find out what became of the steel . . . (which was) delivered? A. I can tell you; the Diamond Match Company got it — no doubt they got that steel." The court, interrupting: "Q. Do you know whether it did or not? A. I don't know; to tell the truth, I don't know." Mr. Goldstein, interrogating the witness for appellant: "Q. When you quit business on the first day of January, 1923, did you turn over all the property you had to the Diamond Match Company for a consideration? A. Yes sir. Q. And that included all the steel you had on hand, and all the merchandise? A. Everything used in the operations." In further proof of the delivery of the steel in question, Mr. J.B. Barnes, the local agent of the Southern Pacific Company at Sterling City testified that ten bars of steel corresponding to the description of the goods in the written order and weighing 4,501 pounds were delivered at respondent's mills December 29, 1922. A receipt for the identical number of bars and the exact weight of the steel ordered was signed by respondent's agent Williams on that date, and was offered in evidence. Concerning appellant's offer of this shipping receipt, the following proceedings occurred in the examination of the agent Barnes: "Q. I show you a paper and ask you if that is the original receipt for the steel at Sterling City? A. Yes sir. . . ." Thereupon it was offered in evidence. The respondent objected to the offer on the ground that the receipt failed to identify the specific bars of steel in question, and because it did not contain the name of the shipper.[1] Appellant's attorney then offered to prove by this witness that the omitted name of the shipper was that of the appellant corporation, but was denied this privilege. Upon this subject the following colloquy occurred. The court asked the witness Barnes: "Q. Did you testify *89 that this was a shipment of the Gladium Company? A. I canexplain this to you. No, I didn't testify that it was delivered by the Gladium Company — the freight bill doesn't show that." The court: "That is all." Mr. Goldstein: "Have him explain (that), he can explain about that receipt." The court: "That must stand on its face. . . . He cannot explain it. The motion is overruled." Mr. Goldstein then suggested that he could definitely prove that the steel bars described in the shipping receipt were the identical bars shipped from the Gladium Company to the respondent, and that the inventory of the stock transferred from the respondent to the Diamond Match Company would show that it received this steel. He said: "Now, if your Honor please, in view of your last question, I desire to state that I can definitely establish (the fact that) this steel was turned over to the Diamond Match Company, and, also, that it is the identical steel delivered by the Gladium Company, and I would like the court to give me a chance to do that. . . ." To this request the court replied: "The motion is overruled." From a fair reading of the record, there appears to be no reasonable doubt that the identical steel was in fact delivered to the respondent the day before his mill, equipment, and materials were conveyed to the Diamond Match Company for a consideration. Evidently the respondent himself believed this to be true. It was prejudicial error to deny the appellant the privilege of supplying the name of the shipper which was omitted from the receipt, for this was material evidence to establish the delivery of the steel. Both the questions regarding the delivery to, and the disposition of the property by the respondent were material in determining whether there was a legal acceptance of the property. The court found that the steel in question was neither sold nor delivered to the respondent.
[2] It is an invariable rule that mere receipts for money or goods, as well as bills of lading, are subject to explanation by parol evidence. (4 Jones, Comm. on Evidence, p. 2985, sec. 1630, p. 3030, sec. 1652; Comptoir D'Escompte de Paris v. Dresbach,
"Where goods are shipped by car or vessel it seems to be generally recognized that the buyer is not required to make his inspection before removal of the goods from the car or vessel, but may remove them to a warehouse for such purpose, and such removal for the purpose of inspection alone does not constitute an acceptance." But in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, this right of inspection must be promptly exercised. (Jackson v. Porter Land Water Co.,
[7] The respondent contends that his manager, Williams, had no authority to purchase the steel in question. The record raises a serious doubt as to whether an ostensible agency for that purpose may not have existed. But, regardless of whether an ostensible agency existed, when, with full knowledge of the circumstances, one appropriates the property, or accepts the benefits of a transaction, he will be estopped from denying the authority of his agent through whom it was consummated. (Sec. 2310, Civ. Code; Gardner v. City of Glendale,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment should be reversed, and it is so ordered.
Plummer, J., and Hart, Acting P.J., concurred.