Allen v. Globe Grain and Milling Co.

104 P. 305, 156 Cal. 286, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 323
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1909
DocketS.F. No. 5049.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 104 P. 305 (Allen v. Globe Grain and Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Globe Grain and Milling Co., 104 P. 305, 156 Cal. 286, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 323 (Cal. 1909).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal by defendant Globe Grain and Milling Company from a judgment in favor of plaintiff, and from an order denying its motion for a new trial, in an action brought to recover the sum of five thousand dollars, a deposit paid by plaintiff, as vendee, to the Globe etc. Co., as vendor, under a written contract for the sale of certain real property in San Francisco.

The contract was entered into on April 11, 1906, and bore that date. It recited the sale by said company to plaintiff of the property, describing it, for one hundred and two thous- and dollars, five thousand dollars cash, the receipt of which was acknowledged, and ninety-seven thousand dollars payable on or before June 1, 1906. It then provided: “30 days (from the date hereof) are to be allowed for the examination of the title. If the title is not found valid, or made so, within 60 days after notice to us of the defect therein, the deposit for which this is a receipt is to be returned upon demand. If the title is found, or made valid, within the time herein specified, and the sale is not closed in accordance with the above terms, the sum of $5,000.00 for which this is a receipt, is to be forfeited. . . The owner hereby binds itself upon receipt of the purchase money, to deliver to said W. G. Allen a valid title to said property. But if the title is defective, and it cannot be perfected within the time above specified, this contract will thereupon become null and void. Due diligence, however, will be exerted by the seller in perfecting the title. Time is of the essence of this contract.” Within the time specified in said contract for “the examination of the title,”— viz. on June 4, 1906 (each and every day from and including April 20, 1906, to and including June 3, 1906, having been a legal holiday duly and regularly declared by the governor of the state), plaintiff served upon said company and its agent, Baldwin & Howell, written notice, directed to each and which read as follows: “I hereby reject the title to the property described in the contract made and entered into between us April 11, 1906, for the reason that there is no official record in the city and county of San Francisco, showing that you are thé owner in fee of said property, or any part thereof, and nothing to show that the record title to the same is vested in *289 you. Please have this defect cured within sixty (60) days from the date hereof, or I will demand the return of the deposit of five thousand dollars ($5,000.00), as per terms of our agreement.” At that time and at all times after April 19, 1906, it was alleged and found, the vendor “did not have a good, perfect or valid title to the said property or any part thereof” for the reasons stated in said notice already set forth. The evidence in support of this allegation and finding was practically the same as that given in Crim v. Umbsen, 155 Cal. 697, [103 Pac. 378], showing as stated in that case, that in the great conflagration of April 18-20, 1906, “the greater part of the records of the county recorder’s office, as well as most of the other public and official records of San Francisco, were burned,” with the result that it was impossible to determine from any public or official record whether or not the vendor’s title was valid or perfect. Nothing was done in the way of perfecting the record title. After the expiration of the sixty days specified in said notice of rejection of title, the plaintiff demanded the return of the five thousand dollars deposit. Payment thereof being refused, this action was instituted. The •date of such demand is not alleged, and we must assume that it was not made prior to the day on which the complaint was verified and the action instituted, December 13, 1906.

Learned counsel for appellant concede that it is established by the decision in Crim v. Umbsen, decided after the taking of this appeal, and after the filing of appellant’s opening brief, and as to which a petition for rehearing was denied, that where a contract of sale relating, to real property in the city and county of San Francisco made prior to the -fire of April 18-20, 1906, the time fixed for the performance of which had not arrived at the time of said fire, was such as to entitle the vendee to a title “fairly deducible of record,” the vendee could not be required to take such property in view of such destruction of official records/the theory of the decision being that the title was rendered defective within the meaning of the contract by such destruction of records, and that in determining the vendee’s rights we can only consider the title as it existed at the time fixed for the performance of the contract and the delivery of the conveyance. It was further decided in that case that such a vendee was entitled to recover from the vendor the portion of the consideration paid at the time of the execution *290 of the contract, the agreement in that case providing, as does the agreement here, for a return of such consideration if the title was found to be defective. Upon his eross-coniplaint filed in the action brought against him by the vendor for damages for breach of contract, the vendee in that case was given judgment for the recovery of the portion of the consideratioh paid by him.

It is urged that the contract in the case at bar did not call for a title “fairly deducible of record.” This fact was conceded by counsel for the vendors in Crim v. Umbsen as to the contract there involved, such contract providing that the vendee should have thirty days for examination of the title, that the vendors should have thirty days to “perfect” the title if it was found to be defective, and that if the title proved to be incurably “defective” the deposit was to be returned. We have no doubt that counsel in that case were amply warranted in making this concession in view of the decisions of this court. It is settled law in this state that where the provisions of a contract for the sale of real estate are such as to call for a “perfect title,” the purchaser is entitled to a title free from reasonable doubt and fairly deducible of record. (See Gwin v. Calegaris, 139 Cal. 384, [73 Pac. 851], and cases there cited. Peckham v. Stewart, 97 Cal. 147, [31 Pac. 928]. See, also, Title etc. Co. v. Kerrigan, 150 Cal. 305, [119 Am. St. Rep. 199, 88 Pac. 356].) The provisions in the contract in the case at bar were, as we have seen, for a “valid title,” for a title that was not “defective,” for a "perfected” title in the event that on examination the title was found to be defective. It was expressly provided “that if the title is defective and it cannot be perfected within the time above specified this contract will thereupon become null and void.” These provisions practically called for a “perfect title” to the same extent as if the precise words “perfect title” had been used. When these provisions are read in connection with the provision for “examination of the title,” which clearly referred to an examination of the public records, we cannot doubt that the parties were stipulating for “a good title by the record.” (See Gwin v. Calegaris, 139 Cal. 384, [73 Pac. 851].)

The notice of rejection of title served on appellant did substantially show that the objection was that appellant did not have a title fairly deducible of record.

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Bluebook (online)
104 P. 305, 156 Cal. 286, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-globe-grain-and-milling-co-cal-1909.