From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

J. Bidegaray v. Ormaca

Court of Appeal of California, First District, Division Two
Jul 27, 1920
48 Cal.App. 665 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920)

Opinion

Civ. No. 3209.

July 27, 1920.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Fresno County. M. F. McCormick, Judge. Affirmed.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.

C. K. Bonestell and John A. Steele for Appellant.

Harris Hayhurst for Respondent.


The defendant appeals from a judgment against him for $1,250. He presents a single question of law in support of the appeal, based on an objection to the admission of evidence over the objection that it was an attempt to change the terms of a written contract by parol in contravention of section 1698 of the Civil Code. The respondent maintains that the section has no application to the facts of the case.

The respondent sued on two counts, the second being in the ordinary form of an action for debt. In the first count it was alleged that, in May, 1918, the defendant sold to plaintiff 500 lambs at the agreed price of seven dollars per head; that the plaintiff then paid the defendant $250 on account, and the defendant agreed to deliver the lambs to the plaintiff at Helm Station, in Fresno County, on or about May 26, 1918; that plaintiff was ready and willing to pay the balance of the purchase price on May 26th and thereafter; that the defendant had failed and refused to make delivery, and, on information and belief, that defendant had sold the lambs to others on or about May 26th, and still retained the $250 paid him; and that plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $1,750. The appellant alleged that the plaintiff agreed to take the lambs on May 26th at Helm Station and to pay for them; denied the readiness of the plaintiff to pay the balance of the purchase price; denied that the defendant had failed or refused to deliver, and alleged that he was willing to deliver on May 26th; that he then offered delivery; that the plaintiff then refused to accept delivery, and that the defendant thereafter held the lambs for a period of five days, up to June 1st. He denied damage, and denied the debt set up in the plaintiff's second cause of action.

The court made general findings, first, that all the allegations in the first cause of action in the complaint were true, except as to the amount of damages, which the court found to have been $1,250, and, second, that all the allegations of the second count were true, except as to the amount of the debt, which was found to be $1,250.

Exclusive of the evidence to which the objection was interposed, the record shows that May 26, 1918, was Sunday. The appellant stands upon what he considers his strict contractual rights. An act appointed by law or contract, other than an act of necessity or mercy, to be done on a holiday, may be performed on the next business day. (Civ. Code, sec. 11) The appellant's corral was about four or five miles from Helm Station. The respondent's corral was about seven miles from the station and about two miles from the appellant's corral. On Sunday morning the appellant stated that he went to the station about 7 or 8 o'clock and stayed all day. He left his lambs at his corral. On his direct examination he first testified that he went alone. Later he said that afternoon he came up to town. He ate lunch with his herder about four miles from Helm. "We went out there," he said, "and got lunch. Then we went back to Helm again and back to camp again." It is immaterial whether he went to Helm on Sunday or not, or whether the respondent was there or not on that day. As a matter of fact, he was not. The evidence is important in connection with the evidence concerning what he did on Monday. He testified that he went back to Helm early Monday morning, also that he went there on Tuesday and Wednesday, on which latter day, he testified, he sold the lambs to his brother-in-law, Ahado. The market price of lambs was then ten dollars a head. The appellant's herder testified that the appellant was at the corral on Sunday, and told them to put the lambs in the corral until Mr. Bidegaray came. He further testified that Ahado, who had also testified that he bought the lambs on Wednesday, had said on May 31st, in the presence of Bidegaray and others, that he had bought the lambs on Monday, May 27th. Another witness testified positively that at Huron, on May 31st, in the presence of himself, Pete Irigary, and Bidegaray, Ahado said that he had bought the lambs from Ormaca, on Monday, May 27th, at 10 o'clock in the morning, at Kutner-Goldstein's, in Fresno. If the appellant was in Fresno at that hour on Monday, his testimony that he was at Helm waiting to meet the respondent could not have been correct. The trial court resolved the conflict in the testimony against the appellant, and this court is bound in such a case by the implied finding of the trial court. Under the appellant's evidence he never took the lambs to Helm and he did not seek in any way other than by going there, if he went, to find or communicate with Bidegaray. The respondent was not at the station, but there is no evidence that he would not have gone there had the appellant taken the lambs there for delivery. On this appeal the appellant stands upon a rigid application of the law in regard to the evidence to which objection was made. In the foregoing no reference has been made to any part of the evidence in dispute.

The appellant contends that the respondent was bound to accept and to pay for the lambs at Helm Station. The respondent was not bound to pay for them until the appellant delivered the lambs, or in good faith offered to perform the contract. [1] He never took the lambs to Helm Station, and, therefore, must base his right on an offer of performance. His evidence shows affirmatively he made no such offer. An obligation is extinguished by an offer of performance only when made in accordance with the rules prescribed in sections 1485 to 1505 of the Civil Code. There must be an actual offer. (Civ. Code, sec. 1487) It must be made to the person to whom performance is due, if an agent has not been appointed, and if he is not at the place fixed for performance, wherever he may be found. (Civ. Code, secs. 1488, 1489.) It must be made in good faith. (Civ. Code, sec. 1493) It is only when these requirements have been fulfilled that actual production of the thing to be delivered is excused. The appellant failed to meet these requirements, and he never became entitled to resell the lambs he had already sold to the respondent, nor to retain the $250 paid on account, and which he testified he intended to keep. The evidence was sufficient to support the findings, and they in turn support the judgment.

The reason why the respondent did not go to Helm appears from the evidence to which objection was made. The respondent testified that on May 24th the appellant visited the respondent in his office in Fresno and said that the 26th would be Sunday and they could count the lambs on another day. The respondent replied that with stock Sunday or Monday was just the same, but that the appellant could bring them any time on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday to the respondent's main corrals. The appellant testified that he had a conversation with the respondent at the time stated, and that "I saw the contract dated on Sunday, so I went on the 24th and asked him if he was going to take the lambs out on Sunday, and he said: "Didn't you ever work on Sunday?' That was all that was said about it." The trial court probably believed the evidence given by the respondent upon this subject. The essential conditions of the contract of sale were the delivery of the lambs and the coincident payment of the balance of the purchase price. Neither the time nor the exact place of delivery was of the essence of the contract. [2] Regardless of the rule requiring modifications of written contracts to be evidenced by writing, one party to a contract may not on the pretense of desire on his part to depart from the exact performance of a nonessential detail induce the other party to believe that delivery of goods sold will not be made either at the time or place specified in the contract, and then take advantage of the other's reliance upon his representations. To apply section 1698 of the Civil Code to such a state of facts would be to make it an engine for the perpetration of fraud instead of a defense against it. [3] If, even under the most technical application of the section, the trial court was in error in admitting the evidence to which objection was made, there remains in the record sufficient evidence to support the findings, and there does not appear to have been any miscarriage of justice. The case is peculiarly within the constitutional restriction on the power of appellate courts to reverse judgments for error in the admission of evidence, unless the court is of the opinion that there has been such a miscarriage. Upon the entire record that is not the opinion of the court.

The judgment is affirmed.

Nourse, J., and Langdon, P. J., concurred.


Summaries of

J. Bidegaray v. Ormaca

Court of Appeal of California, First District, Division Two
Jul 27, 1920
48 Cal.App. 665 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920)
Case details for

J. Bidegaray v. Ormaca

Case Details

Full title:J. BIDEGARAY, Respondent, v. LOUIS ORMACA, Appellant

Court:Court of Appeal of California, First District, Division Two

Date published: Jul 27, 1920

Citations

48 Cal.App. 665 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920)
292 P. 176

Citing Cases

People v. Cacioppo

Moreover, it cannot be said that the admission of such evidence, under the circumstances related, was so…

Kellogg v. Snell

The appellant is estopped by his conduct. ( Bidegaray v. Ormaca, 48 Cal.App. 665 [192 P. 176]; Hulen v.…