155 P. 820 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1916
In this action the plaintiffs sought to recover damages for the alleged breach of a written contract entered into by them with the defendants, whereby the latter agreed to deliver to the plaintiffs, at the city of Santa Rosa, not later than October 15, 1911, forty thousand pounds of hops at eleven cents per pound, of a specified quality, from the hops produced and picked during the season of 1911 upon the ranch of the defendants Shea Brothers in Sonoma County. Judgment was entered for the defendants upon the verdict of a jury, from which the plaintiffs have appealed.
The plaintiffs' complaint alleged that they had duly performed all the terms of the contract on their part to be performed, and that during the season of 1911 the Shea Brothers ranch produced forty thousand pounds and more of hops of *315 the kind and quality specified in the contract, but that the defendants refused to make any delivery of hops in keeping with the terms of the contract, and sold the season's crop to other parties. The defendants, answering separately, admitted the due execution of the instrument sued upon, but pleaded the contemporaneous making of two other written instruments by the same parties, one of which called for the delivery to plaintiff by the defendants of forty thousand pounds of hops at ten cents per pound from the Shea Brothers ranch during the season of 1909, and the other for the delivery to the plaintiffs by the defendants of forty thousand pounds of hops at eleven cents per pound from the crop grown upon the same ranch during the season of 1910. The answers of the defendants further alleged that these two instruments with the instrument in suit, by the terms of a collateral contemporaneous oral agreement, constituted but one single and indivisible contract covering a single transaction, but which for the convenience of the parties was expressed in three separate instruments, and which were executed by the parties thereto at the same time upon the consideration and with the understanding and agreement that the three instruments would constitute but a single contract for the purchase and sale of forty thousand pounds of hops per year for three successive years from the crops produced upon the hop ranch of said Shea Brothers. The answers of the defendants further alleged that pursuant to the terms of the contract there was delivered to the plaintiffs forty thousand pounds of hops in the year 1909, and that in the year 1910 the defendants delivered to the plaintiffs one hundred bales of hops, aggregating twenty-six thousand pounds, of that year's crop, and thereafter tendered and offered to deliver to plaintiffs fourteen thousand pounds of hops, the balance of the forty thousand pounds deliverable in that year; that the plaintiffs refused to accept the same, and that thereupon the defendants notified the plaintiffs that because of their failure to accept the hops tendered the contract was rescinded and terminated, and that no hops grown upon the ranch of Shea Brothers during the year 1911 would be delivered to plaintiffs under the terms of the contract. The answers of the defendants also alleged that the plaintiffs consented to the termination of the contract, and thereupon settled with the defendants by paying for the hops delivered up to that time. *316
Under the issues thus raised the trial court ruled — and we think correctly — that the defendants were entitled to show by parol evidence that the three instruments were intended and executed by the parties thereto to cover but one transaction; and that the controlling consideration for the execution of the particular writing in suit, contracting for the delivery of hops during the year 1911, was the contemporaneous execution of the two other instruments calling for similar deliveries in the years 1909 and 1910.
"Several contracts relating to the same matter between the same parties, and made as parts of substantially one transaction, are to be taken together." (Civ. Code, sec.
The general rule that parol evidence is not admissible to alter, vary, or contradict the terms of a written instrument (Civ. Code, sec.
The same authority, Jones, commenting upon the exception to the general rule, declares the law to be "that agreements or representations made prior to the written contract under which the party was induced to sign the contract, may be shown. In other words, where the parol contemporaneous agreement was the inducing and moving cause of the written contract; or when the parol agreement forms part of the consideration for a written contract, and where the written contract was executed upon the faith of the parol contract or representations, such evidence is admissible." (Jones on Evidence, sec. 439, p. 178.)
The reason for the exception to the general rule is to be found in the fact that the exclusion of such evidence, when relevant to the issues joined in a given case, would operate to permit one of the parties to the written agreement to take an unjust advantage of the other by receiving all of the benefits accruing to him under the contract without assuming all of the burdens imposed upon him by the terms of the contract. (Gibbons v. Bush Co., 52 N.Y. App. Div. 211, [65 N.Y. Supp. 215]; 3 Jones on Evidence, sec. 493.)
If we are correct in our understanding of the exception to the general rule and its application to the issues joined and the evidence adduced in the present case, it follows that the trial court did not err in the particular stated; and likewise correctly charged the jury that it was a question of fact for them to determine whether or not the instrument in suit, in conjunction with the other two instruments pleaded and proven in support of the defendants' case, constituted but a single, indivisible contract covering a single transaction. (First Nat.Bank v. Rothschild,
Likewise the question of whether or not plaintiffs had failed without just cause to keep and perform the terms and conditions of the contract imposed upon them by the covenants of the instrument covering the transaction for the year 1910, and were induced to repudiate the same not because the hops tendered by the defendants for that year were inferior in quality to those called for by the contract, but rather because the market price of hops for that year had fallen below the purchase price specified in the contract, was a question of fact for the jury to determine; and their determination in that particular having been made adversely to the plaintiffs upon what we conceive to be a substantial conflict in the evidence, cannot, under the familiar rule, be reviewed or revised by this court.
It seems to be one of the contentions of the plaintiffs that the defendants were not entitled as a matter of law to defend against the action upon the theory that the three instruments constituted but a single contract, and that a breach of one constituted a failure of consideration which would entitle the defendants to rescind the entire contract. In this behalf it is insisted that the defendants should have resorted to the remedy given by section
It is claimed that the trial court in one of its instructions in effect charged the jury that as a matter of law the three instruments in question constituted but a single contract, and in the same instruction declared that a breach of the instrument covering the purchase and payment for the defendants' hops for the year 1910 would suffice to warrant a judgment for the defendants without regard to its relation to the instrument covering the transaction for the year 1911. We do not think that the instruction complained of, even when considered alone and without reference to the other parts of the court's charge, is susceptible of any such construction; and we are satisfied that when considered and construed in conjunction with the charge of the court as a whole, it correctly stated the law and had no tendency to confuse or mislead the jury.
There is some evidence to support the finding of the jury implied from the verdict to the effect that the plaintiffs willfully and wrongfully defaulted in the performance of their part of the contract covering the transaction for the year 1910, and that thereupon the defendants elected to rescind and cancel the entire contract. These findings are sufficient in themselves to support the judgment; consequently it becomes unnecessary for us to determine whether or not the evidence supports the further finding likewise implied from the verdict that the plaintiffs consented to the rescission and cancellation of the entire contract upon their refusal to accept and pay for the hops tendered to them in 1910.
We think this disposes of all of the points involved upon this appeal.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Richards, J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred. *321
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court. after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on March 2, 1916. Angellotti, C. J., and Shaw, J., dissented from the order denying a rehearing by the supreme court.