The failure of the appellants to furnish this court with a complete transcript of evidence to support the positions taken by them permeates the entire appeal. As developed during this opinion, if all of the evidence received by the trial court had been incorporated in the reporter’s transcript, it is possible that a different view of one or more of
Plaintiff pump company sued the ranch partnership, together with the general partners, in two causes of action. The first was on a specific written contract for the installation of a pump on the defendants’ ranch in San Luis Obispo County; this count was dismissed on motion of appellants at the close of respondent’s case on the ground that there had been a complete payment under the agreement alleged.
The second cause of action was a common count for goods, services and materials furnished by the plaintiff to the defendants at their request. The amount claimed to be due in the pleading was $12,562.75, plus interest at 7 percent per annum from November 1, 1962, being for goods and services furnished while installing a pump for the development of a well on the San Luis Obispo property. The defendants filed a cross-complaint, which, in due course, was amended; the cross-complainants were Richard D. Walker, Jack 0. Nutter, W.A.P.A. Corporation, and Owanu, Inc., as general partners of El Chicote Ranch Properties, Ltd. Negligence of the plaintiff and cross-defendant was alleged and damages in the sum of $36,301.15 were sought for loss of the well. The jury found in favor of plaintiff and against “defendant, counter-claimant, and cross-complainant, El Chicote Ranch Properties, Ltd.,” for the amount of $9,566.84, this being the exact amount billed in detail by the plaintiff on one occasion. Pursuant to the requirement of section 664 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the county clerk, within 24 hours thereafter, filed a judgment based on the verdict for $9,566.84, plus costs in the amount of $282.60. Two days later, the trial judge filed a document entitled “Judgment by Court Upon the Jury Verdict,” in which it was stated that the jury had rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the amount of $9,566.84, and that judgment was granted to the plaintiff against the defendants for that amount, together with interest accumulated from November 2, 1962, in the additional amount of $3,063.60, and for costs. In connection with the appeal, the appellants did not request an entire reporter’s transcript. On the contrary, although the ease lasted several days, the only portion of the reporter’s notes which the appellants sought to have transcribed were the “oral proceedings
“1. The verdict is against the law, in that the Jury made no finding whatsoever on the Cross-Complaint and failed to make findings of any kind as to all of the Defendants to the Complaint.
“2. Prejudicial error occurred through misconduct of counsel for Plaintiff during argument to the Jury.
“3. The Court erred in awarding pre-judgment interest, the only cause of action tried in this case being in Quantum Meruit.”
This reservation of points served only to keep open the contention of the appellants that the trial court erred in allowing interest, but obviously the reservation of the point did not serve to supply this court with evidence to establish the point.
The three major contentions made by appellants on this appeal are the three points quoted above.
One contention is that prejudicial error was committed when counsel for appellants accused certain witnesses for respondent of perjury; it is said by appellants that, in addressing the jury, the attorney for respondent expressed “great indignation that counsel for appellants should impute perjury to the said witnesses,” and that after respondent's counsel had repeated the word “perjury” for the third time, appellants’ counsel objected, and the court instructed respondent’s attorney to refrain from further remarks of such nature. The attorney for appellants says, “It was improper conduct and unmistakably an appeal to the passion and prejudice of the jury. ’ ’ After the judgment was entered, Michael J. Pasman, attorney for defendants, filed an affidavit in which he stated that, as attorney, he had made fair comment to the jury with respect to the employer-employee relationship between the plaintiff and the witnesses, and that counsel for the respondent in rebuttal incorrectly said that Mr. Pasman had accused those witnesses of perjury. As already stated, there is no reporter’s transcript, except for a small part of the proceedings which did not include the arguments of counsel at the trial.
The appellants next complain that the verdict did not cover the issues made by the counterclaim or by the amended cross-complaint and the answer thereto; they contend that in a case of this kind the jury must specifically find on each issue and allege that there is no finding at all relative to the cross-complaint. It is pointed out that the sheet of paper containing the verdict has a single caption and appellants complain that the court failed to find on material issues raised by any of the pleadings except the complaint and the answer thereto. The verdict is as follows:
“In the Superior Court of the State of California In and For the County of Kern
“We, the jury impanelled to try the above-entitled cause, find in favor of the plaintiff, Worthington Corporation, doing business as Wintroath Pump Company, and againstthe defendant, counter-claimant and cross-complainant, El Chicote Ranch Properties, Ltd., and assess plaintiff’s damages in the amount of $9566.84.
“Dated : December 6, 1966.
“/s/ Joe Reynolds
Foreman”
Thus, in the verdict El Chicote Ranch Properties, Ltd. is particularly described as defendant, counterclaimant and cross-complainant, and it states that the jury finds against such partnership on all three specifications. This is a sufficient answer to appellants’ claim. In paragraph II of the first amended cross-complaint for negligence filed by the general partners of this limited partnership, it is said: ‘ ‘ That cross-complainant is informed and believes and upon such information and belief . . . ,” obviously, thus showing that the cross-complaint itself contained, at times, a composite word standing for the limited partnership. Even though other paragraphs of the pleadings use the term cross-complainants in the plural, the first paragraph shows that the cross-complainants are the general partners of El Chicote Ranch Properties, a limited partnership, and have executed and published the certificate required in such circumstances by the Civil Code. Section 388 of the Code of Civil Procedure states that: “When two or more persons, associated in any business, transact such business under a common name, whether it comprises the names of such persons or not, the associates may be sued by such common name, the summons in such cases being served on one or more of the associates; and the judgment in the action shall bind the joint property of all of the associates, and the individual property of the party or parties served with process, in the same manner as if all had been named defendants and had been sued upon their joint liability.” Furthermore, no objection was made to the form of the verdict prior to its submission to the jury, although counsel for the appellants was shown the verdict form several days before the case was submitted to the jury, and there was no objection made by him to the use of this form or any of the others. No objection was made to the form of the verdict at the time the jury first returned to court with it or when the trial court again sent the body out to complete their verdict through the insertion of the amount of the award in the appropriate blank provided therefor.
(Brown
v.
Regan,
The principal point on appeal raised by the appellants is that the trial court committed serious error in awarding prejudgment interest amounting to the sum of $3,063.60 more than the jury awarded and that much more than was included in the clerk’s judgment.
Section 3287 of the Civil Code reads as follows: “Every person who is entitled to recover damages certain, or capable of being made certain by calculation, and the right to recover which is vested in him upon a particular day, is entitled also to recover interest thereon from that day, except during such time as the debtor is prevented by law, or by the act of the creditor from paying the debt. This section is applicable to recovery of damages and interest from any such debtor, including the State or any county, city, city and county, municipal corporation, public district, public agency, or any political subdivision of the State. ’ ’
It is well established that a dispute as to the price agreed upon between the parties or the amount of work done will not prevent the allowance of interest where the damages are capable of being made certain. Furthermore, the rule is also clear that where the amount of the demand in itself is sufficiently certain, the fact that there is an unliquidated setoff or counterclaim will not prevent an award of interest on the claim due to plaintiff.
The following is stated in 1 Witkin, Summary of California Law (1960) Contracts, section 286, pages 314-315: “Interest (at the legal rate of 7%; supra § 167) is recoverable from the time of breach where the amount of money due is liquidated, or from the time it becomes liquidated. (C.C.3287; see Rest., Contracts § 337;
Continental Rubber Works
v.
Bernson
(1928) 91 C.A. 636,
( C
“Even though the demand is not for a specific sum, interest may be recovered where the damages are ‘ capable of being made certain by calculation.’ (C.C.3287.) This is the case, e.g., where the amount may be ascertained by reference to market value.
(Bare
v.
Richman & Samuels
(1943) 60 C.A.2d 413, 419,
“In
Charlton
v.
Pan American World Airways
(1953) 116 C.A.2d 550, 554,
‘ ‘ Similarly, interest is recoverable from the time an unliquidated claim becomes liquidated, e.g., where the plaintiff supplies the defendant with all necessary data for determining the amount due.
(Bein
v.
Housing Authority
(1958) 157 C.A.2d 670,
“Interest may be given on the balance due under a liquidated claim notwithstanding the fact that the defendant debtor claims an unliquidated offset.
(Hansen
v.
Covell
(1933)
The solution of the problem is stated in
Shell Chemical Corp.
v.
Owl Transfer Co.,
In the reply brief of appellants, their argument on the interest problem rests on the basis that, because the cross-complaint is one for negligence and patently unliquidated, the net reasonable value of the plaintiff’s services could not possibly be established before judgment. If this were so, in any suit for goods or services a plaintiff’s claim for interest could be defeated ipso facto by a cross-complaint for negligence.
It is clear from the cases in California that even though a demand is not for a specific sum, interest may be recovered where damages are capable of being certainly calculated. We do not have an adequate reporter’s transcript.
In
Ansco Const. Co.
v.
Ocean View Estates, Inc.,
. .‘ “A dispute as to the price agreed, or as to the amount of work done or its cost, will not prevent the allowance of interest. . . .
Where the data necessary to determine the amount due are supplied to the debtor by an invoice
or statement, he will be charged with interest for failure to pay.” ’
(Anselmo
v.
Sebastiani, supra,
In 47 Corpus Juris Secundum, Interest, section 19, page 31, it is stated: ‘ ‘ Although a claim may in a sense be unliquidated, interest thereon will generally be allowed where the amount due can be readily ascertained by mere computation, or by a legal or recognized standard.
“Ordinarily, where the amount of a demand is sufficiently certain to justify the allowance of interest thereon, the existence of a set-off, counterclaim, or cross claim which is unliquidated will not prevent the recovery of interest on the balance of the demand found due from the time it became due. ’ ’
On motion for a new trial, the court reduced the judgment by a single item of $165 on the ground that the item was not certain or capable of being made certain; the elimination of this one item does not affect the judgment as to the other items of the account.
(Coleman Engineering Co.
v.
North American Aviation Inc.,
One of the matters requiring decision by us is which judgment appearing in the clerk’s transcript is controlling. It is a rule of thumb that when there are two judgments shown in the clerk’s transcript, the latter of the two is the official judgment in the absence of a showing to the contrary. Lacking a full record, there is no showing to the contrary, and we must assume, under the law, that the second judgment is controlling.
It was said in
Colton Land & Water Co.
v.
Swartz,
See also
Wood
v.
Pendola,
Appellants contend that the jury was charged with the duty of finding the amount of recovery and the jury should have found the interest, not the judge. The answer turns on the question whether plaintiff was entitled to interest as a matter of law; if so, the court correctly stated in
Engelberg
v.
Sebastiani,
Under the clearly established rule applicable to the facts shown in this case, we must assume that the judgment of December 8 signed by the court is controlling, and that, by some means or other, possibly a stipulation of the parties, the first judgment entered bv the clerk was effectively set aside.
(Estate of Kent,
The judgment is affirmed.
Stone, J., and Gar gano, J., concurred.
