Andover Land Co. v. Hoffman

264 Cal. App. 2d 87, 70 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2052
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 17, 1968
DocketCiv. 31353
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 264 Cal. App. 2d 87 (Andover Land Co. v. Hoffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andover Land Co. v. Hoffman, 264 Cal. App. 2d 87, 70 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2052 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

SHINN, J. *

January 8, 1964, Walter W. Hoffman and Andover Land Company, a corporation,, established an escrow with Title Insurance and Trust Company in Santa Ana (to be referred to as Title Insurance) in which Andover promised to deposit in escrow $325,000 tó be paid to Hoffman for a deed to a 50-acre lemon grove, owned by Hoffman, located in Ventura County and Hoffman promised to deposit into escrow a deed to the Ventura Comity land in favor of Andover to be delivered upon receipt of $325,000. The escrow instructions constituted the only agreement between Hoffman and Andover.

January 8, 1964, Andover entered into a written agreement with Edward Haruo Yoshikawa to exchange the Hoffman land plus $13,000 for 12 aeres owned by Yoshikawa. in Orange *89 County. The parties- opened 'án escrow with Orange-County Title Company. The agreement-was deposited in' -the escrow with appropriate instructions for consummation of - the exchange through the escrow. In the Andover-Hoffman escrow it was provided that closing of the escrow was to-bé'“concurrent and contingent upon closing of” the Andover-Yoshikawa escrow and the latter was made contingent upon-closing of the Andover-Hoffman escrow.

The Andover-Hoffman escrow was not consummated and the Andover-Yoshikawa escrow necessarily failed. Andover sued Hoffman and his wife and Yoshikawa and his wife seeking specific performance of each contract, or in the alternative, damages. Yoshikawa and his wife sued the Hoffmans and Andover, by cross-complaint, for specific performance of each contract, or in the alternative, damages.

At the trial the plaintiff and the cross-complainants abandoned their claims for specific performance and stood upon their demands for damages. The Yoshikawas withdrew their claim against Andover for damages.

In the trial the court determined that the two escrows constituted a single contract; the Hoffmans breached' their contract and in so doing acted in bad faith; the Hoffman land was worth $350,000, the Yoshikawa land was worth $338,000; Andover was not damaged by its failure to get the Hoffman land; the Yoshikawas were damaged in the amount of $25,000 by Hoffman’s breach of his contract with Andover, and judgment in that amount against the Hoffmans was given the Yoshikawas.

The Hoffmans (to be mentioned in the singular) appealed; claiming they did not breach their contract and that; in fact, Hoffman rescinded it for cause. Andover appealed, claiming there were two separate contracts and that it should have been awarded the damages for Hoffman’s breach of its agreement with him. Yoshikawas (to be mentioned in the singular) appealed but dismissed their appeal and urge affirmance of the judgment.

Briefs have been filed by all parties and numerous questions of law have been fully and ably argued.

There are two phases of the litigation. In the first the question is whether the Hoffmans breached their agreement; in the second phase the question is whether Andover or Yoshikawa should recover damages, if any. We have concluded.that the Hoffmans did not fail to comply with their contract and' that *90 the award of damages was in error. Therefore we do not reaeh the Andover-Yoshikawa controversy.

The basis of the judgment is the court’s finding that Hoffman breached his contract with Andover in failing to comply with the escrow instructions. Hoffman claims he did comply although it is clear that he does not understand what constituted compliance. Upon this issue the facts were undisputed. They establish beyond question that Hoffman did comply with the escrow instructions, did not breach his contract with Andover, and that the finding to the contrary is without support in the evidence. The judgment must be reversed.

In the consideration of the question of the alleged breach of the contract by Hoffman a fact of first importance is that the escrow instructions constituted the entire and the only contract between Andover and Hoffman.

Contracts of sale consisting entirely of escrow instructions constitute a common but special class of contracts. Performance consists of furnishing the money and the documents which the respective parties promise to deposit with -the escrow holder, within the time and upon the conditions stipulated in the instructions.

Time is usually made of the essence of performance, as it was in the Andover-Hoffman escrow, and strict compliance is required. (Todd v. Vestermark, 145 Cal.App.2d 374 [302 P.2d 347].)

In a sale transaction the escrow holder is, initially, the agent of the buyer with respect to the money and the agent of the seller with respect to the deed. If the instructions are sufficient when carried out to effectuate the sale, and if they have been fully complied with, the escrow holder becomes the agent of the seller with respect to the money and the agent of the buyer with respect to the deed.

When the escrow is ready to close in accordance with the instructions, the escrow holder has a strict duty to close it by delivering or recording instruments and paying the money in accordance with the instructions. (Amen v. Merced County Title Co., 58 Cal.2d 528 [25 Cal.Rptr. 65, 375 P.2d 33].) .

When all conditions of the instructions have been complied with an equitable title to the money vests in the seller and an equitable title to the property vests in the buyer. (Todd v. Vestermark, supra, 145 Cal.App.2d 374.) So it was with the Andover-Hoffman escrow.

Yoshikawa did not want to sell his land for cash,- he wanted to exchange it for agricultural land. Andover wished to acquire Yoshikawa’s 12 acres. When the Hoffman land *91 became available to Andover for a cash consideration, negotiations were carried on for several months before the three-cornered deal was worked out. These negotiations are fully described in the briefs but in our opinion they do not bear upon the question of Hoffman’s alleged failure of performance. Our discussion will be limited to the Andover-Hoffman escrow, to what it was and what happened to it.

When the three-party transaction had been orally agreed upon, Hoffman contacted Ralph L. Bailey who was the representative of Title Insurance in Ventura. Hoffman’s contract with the Santa Ana office was handled by Mr. Lassiter, chief escrow officer.

Escrow instructions were signed by Andover and Mr. Hoffman and delivered into the escrow. A deed which conformed to the instructions was prepared by Lassiter and was sent to Bailey. It was Hoffman’s intention to except from his deed one-eighth of the mineral rights and Bailey was aware of this fact. He noted the omission and added the exception. Hoffman and his attorney had overlooked the fact that the instructions that had been signed did not provide for the exception of one-eighth of the mineral rights. February 6, 1964, an amendment to the instructions was prepared by Bailey to call for a deed containing the exception.

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Bluebook (online)
264 Cal. App. 2d 87, 70 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 2052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andover-land-co-v-hoffman-calctapp-1968.