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Webber v. Smith

Court of Appeal of California, Second District
Feb 18, 1914
24 Cal.App. 51 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914)

Summary

In Webber v. Smith, 24 Cal.App. 51 [ 140 P. 37], the owner of a milk route delivered a bill of sale of vehicles and other tangible property which recited payment of $2,625.

Summary of this case from Mutascio v. Bartolucci

Opinion

Civ. No. 1463.

February 18, 1914.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. John L. Childs, Judge presiding.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.

G. A. Gibbs, for Appellant.

A. Lincoln Rowland, for Respondent.


Appeal from a judgment entered against defendant. The action was brought to recover, first, an amount of money alleged to be owing to plaintiff from defendant as the purchase price of the goodwill represented by a milk route. There was a second cause of action which it is not material to take notice of, as there is no controversy over the correctness of the adjustment of the matters concerned therein. Plaintiff testified that he sold to the defendant the equipment and business connected with his milk route in the city of Pasadena for the sum of four thousand dollars. A bill of sale was proved to have been made which covered all of the tangible property, made up of automobile delivery wagons and a truck, milk bottles, etc., the price fixed as the consideration therefor being the total amount of $2,625. Plaintiff testified that the difference between the amount represented in the bill of sale and the four thousand dollars was to be covered by a promissory note of defendant for the sum of one thousand dollars and the balance to be paid in cash. He testified that at the time the bill of sale was made there was some talk about drawing a contract covering the sale of the milk route, and that defendant said that he did not think he could word such a contract right that evening, "but if I could do so we would fix it up at that time; I told him that I didn't think that I could word it right and that we would carry it over until another time." This promissory note was not given. It was agreed as a part of the same transaction that the plaintiff should be employed by the defendant as foreman at a salary of one hundred and twenty-five dollars per month, and pursuant to this employment he continued to deliver milk over the same route that he had theretofore managed. The defendant, when settlement was demanded of him at a later date, denied that he had ever purchased the milk route from plaintiff. The plaintiff, prior to the making of the bill of sale, had been indebted to the defendant for a large amount of milk furnished by the latter from month to month and which charges he was unable to meet. It was because of his inability to pay his debts that the defendant took over the delivery equipment. The amount mentioned in the bill of sale was about the amount of indebtedness that was canceled by the transferring of the property therein described. The jury sitting at the trial returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of one thousand dollars, which was based upon the claim of the plaintiff as to the agreement of defendant to pay him for his milk route.

It is contended on behalf of appellant that, as there was a writing (meaning the bill of sale) which expressed the agreement of the parties as to the sale and purchase of the delivery equipment, that the writing is presumed to include all of the matters agreed upon between the parties. It may be noted here that there was no objection made to the introduction of evidence tending to show an oral agreement in addition to and outside of that expressed by the writing, covering the matter of the sale of the milk route as separate from the delivery equipment. And even though such objection had been made and the point thus preserved, the rule adverted to would not be applicable, because the subjects dealt with in the bill of sale were distinct and separate from that about which it was claimed an oral agreement had been made. The bill of sale specified and covered the tangible property. The intangible property was, according to plaintiff's testimony, the subject of a separate agreement which it was the intention of the parties to express in writing, but which was not reduced to that form. The mere fact that it had been the intention to make a writing covering the conditions of the sale of the milk route and that such writing had never been made, would not affect the validity of the contract as it was represented to have been made by the plaintiff, nor entitle it to be viewed in any other light than that of a completed transaction, except as to the execution of it. Plaintiff's testimony was further to the effect that a promissory note was to be given representing one thousand dollars of the balance which was to be paid to him by defendant. It does not appear that anything was said as to when this note was to mature. The defendant, at a date more than a month subsequent to the time of the alleged purchase, sold and disposed of all of the equipment purchased by him from the plaintiff, and the purchaser thereof appropriated the milk route which had formerly been the property of the plaintiff. To be sure, it was testified that this route was not pretended to be sold by the defendant to the purchaser of the equipment, but the fact was that they did appropriate it and there was some testimony tending to show that it was considered as accompanying the sale of the other property. Whether the promissory note which plaintiff testified defendant agreed to execute was to have been made payable on demand or within a reasonable time after the date of the main transaction, becomes immaterial because, in either event, the condition was satisfied before this action was brought; and it may be added that under such circumstances, where the defendant failed and refused to execute the note by repudiating the alleged obligation which it was to cover, plaintiff would have been entitled to enforce his demand immediately upon such repudiation. The case presented is one where the jury was called upon to formulate a verdict based upon conflicting testimony. While it does appear by way of direct testimony and evidence of circumstances that had the verdict been in favor of defendant it would have been supported by abundant proof, still it is not for this court to review the questions of fact. The jury's verdict as to such matters is final and conclusive.

The judgment is affirmed.

Conrey, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.


Summaries of

Webber v. Smith

Court of Appeal of California, Second District
Feb 18, 1914
24 Cal.App. 51 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914)

In Webber v. Smith, 24 Cal.App. 51 [ 140 P. 37], the owner of a milk route delivered a bill of sale of vehicles and other tangible property which recited payment of $2,625.

Summary of this case from Mutascio v. Bartolucci
Case details for

Webber v. Smith

Case Details

Full title:R. W. WEBBER, Respondent, v. ALBERT HATCHER SMITH, Appellant

Court:Court of Appeal of California, Second District

Date published: Feb 18, 1914

Citations

24 Cal.App. 51 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914)
140 P. 37

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