Antonelle v. Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Co.

73 P. 966, 140 Cal. 309, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 594
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1903
DocketS.F. No. 2689.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 73 P. 966 (Antonelle v. Kennedy & Shaw Lumber 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
Antonelle v. Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Co., 73 P. 966, 140 Cal. 309, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 594 (Cal. 1903).

Opinions

LORIGAN, J.

In January, 1891, plaintiff was the owner of 'two certificates of deposit aggregating thirty-four thousand dollars, issued by the People’s Home Savings Bank in favor of, and held by, one B. O. Carr. The Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company, defendant, having brought suit against the firm of Antonelle & Doe, intervener, caused an attachment to issue and levied it upon certain real property of plaintiff, and garnisheed said certificates and the funds represented thereby in the hands of said Carr, on the claim that said land and money were the property of said J. S. Antonelle, husband of said plaintiff, and one of the interveners herein. The plaintiff, for the purpose of releasing her property fiom the attachment, entered into an agreement—executing it as Mrs. J. S. Antonelle—with said Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company, the essential parts of which for the purpose of this decision, and after the preliminary recitals therein, are: “Therefore, it is hereby covenanted and agreed, that the said Mrs. J. S. Antonelle will, and she does hereby, relinquish and release to the said Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company, all her right, title, interest and claim in, and to, the sum of $15,000 of said money, and direct the said Carr to pay the same over to the said Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company, to he applied by the said company upon its claim against the firm of An *314 tonelle & Doe, for the collection of which claim the said action has been brought. In consideration of the said relinquishment of the payment of said sum of $15,000 and the keeping of the covenants herein contained by the said Mrs. J. S. Antonelle, the said Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company does hereby covenant and agree, to credit the said sum of $15,000, when so paid upon said claim. . . . And furthermore, the said Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company does hereby promise, and agree to continue the prosecution of its suit for the collection of certain funds due from the board of state harbor commissioners and from the board of city hall commissioners, and when said funds have been collected, to apply from the proceeds thereof, enough money to discharge, in full, the amount ascertained to be due and unpaid from the said Antonelle & Doe to the said Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company, either by final judgment in, or compromise of, the aforesaid suit entitled Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Co. v. J. S. Antonelle et ah, together with all accrued interest and costs. . . . and thereafter, to pay over to the said Mrs. J. S. Antonelle the remainder of said funds; provided that the said Mrs. J. S. Antonelle shall, before that time, have obtained and delivered to the said Kennedy & Shaw Lumber Company the written consent thereto of J. S. Antonelle, a member of said firm of Antonelle & Doe.”

Upon the execution of this agreement fifteen thousand dollars of the plaintiff’s said money was paid over to the lumber company as agreed, but instead of crediting it on the claim in the suit against Antonelle & Doe, and taking judgment against this latter firm for the balance due only, it gave no such credit, but proceeded with its suit, and, some twenty days after this fifteen thousand dollars was paid, had judgment entered up against said firm for the full amount of its .claim and interest, amounting, to $36,713.74. If it had applied this fifteen thousand dollars as a credit on its claim when it was received, and taken judgment for the balance remaining unpaid, the amount, of the judgment would have been but $20,488.69.

After the entry of such judgment the lumber company collected the amounts from the city hall and harbor commissioners, mentioned in the contract between plaintiff and the *315 lumber company, aggregating $29,365.42. If the lumber company had taken judgment as above indicated, against said firm of Antonelle & Doe for but $20,488.69, the application on such judgment of a sufficient amount received from the said commissioners to have discharged it, would have left a balance in the possession of the lumber company of $8,454.44, which, under the contract, would have been payable to the plaintiff, and to recover which amount this action is now brought, and from a judgment in her favor against the lumber company and the interveners, both the company and the interveners appeal.

The merits of each appeal will be separately considered, and taking up that of the lumber company first, the only points which it makes, aside from challenging some of the findings and insisting on errors of law, are,—1. That as a condition to her right to maintain this action against the company, the plaintiff should have alleged and proved, the obtaining and delivery to it, of the stipulated written consent of J. S. Antonelle; and 2. That the contract to pay over to plaintiff this money, is illegal and void, because it is a promise to turn over to plaintiff the property of a third party—Antonelle & Doe. It may be mentioned in passing that at the time this contract was entered into between the plaintiff and the said company, a suit for divorce between the plaintiff and her husband, J. S. Antonelle, was pending, and prior to the trial of this present action a decree of divorce had been entered. It is also a fact that plaintiff did not obtain, or deliver, to the company the said written consent of Antonelle, he having refused to execute it.

Now, to return to the merits of the appeal. Assuming that the stipulation on the part of the plaintiff to obtain Antonelle’s consent was a condition precedent, it is well settled that such conditions are not favored by the law, and are to be strictly construed against one seeking to avail himself of them. (Front-Street R. R. Co. v. Butter, 50 Cal. 577; Deacon v. Blodgett, 111 Cal. 418.) More particularly does this follow, when a strict construction of such condition would work a forfeiture; a result which the law will always endeavor to prevent.

Equally is it true, that a party will not be permitted to *316 ¡I insist on the performance of a condition precedent when, by r his own act, or a departure from the terms of the contract, it is found he has prevented the performance of such condition. (1 Wharton on Contracts, secs. 312-603; Hawley v. Keeler, 53 N. Y. 121; Houghton v. Steele, 58 Cal. 421.) In the light of these principles, let us see what was agreed to be done by the parties, because, if plaintiff’s right of recovery is to be measured by a compliance with the terms of the contract as a condition precedent, she has a right to equally insist, that all conditions which were to be performed by the lumber company, preliminary to her necessity of obtaining Antonelle’s consent, should be also strictly performed. The same standard of measurement should be applied to the company that it holds out to the plaintiff, especially as it is urging a strict construction of the contract, and insists thereby on retaining money to which it has, itself, neither moral, nor meritorious legal claim.

Examining the contract then, the plaintiff was to obtain and deliver to the lumber company Antonelle’s written consent that the “remainder” of a particular fund be paid to her.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P. 966, 140 Cal. 309, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonelle-v-kennedy-shaw-lumber-co-cal-1903.