Armstrong v. Sacramento Valley Realty Co.

198 P. 217, 52 Cal. App. 110, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 28, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2227.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 198 P. 217 (Armstrong v. Sacramento Valley Realty Co.) 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
Armstrong v. Sacramento Valley Realty Co., 198 P. 217, 52 Cal. App. 110, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 108 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

PREWETT, P. J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and respondent and against the appellants in an action brought ^gainst them to enforce the terms of a contract dated on April 27, 1917. Though the record in the case is somewhat voluminous, the actual matters in dispute may he brought down to a very narrow compass.

On December 6, 1910, the respondent and other persons owned 1,251 shares of the capital stock of ArmstrongQuatman Co., a corporation, and the appellant Mrs. Quatman owned the remaining 1,249 shares. On said day said corporation entered into a contract with the appellant Sacramento Valley Realty Co., a corporation, whereby Armstrong-Quatman Co. sold to the latter corporation certain tracts of land situated in the counties of Glenn and Colusa for the agreed price of $25,000, payable in small installments.

The appellants C. L. Donohoe, A. H. Quatman, and H. J. Barceloux were stockholders in the Sacramento Valley Realty Co., and they made themselves parties to said contract of December 6, 1910. Divers differences having arisen among the parties, the respondent commenced an action against the parties to the contract. In this action Mrs. Quatman became an intervener, asserting by way of intervention that she had an interest in the proceeds of the sale as owner of 1,249 shares of stock. Judgment went against all the 0 defendants therein and the intervener and they all appealed the case to the supreme court. The action of that tribunal is reported in 179 Cal. 648, [178 Pac. 516].

*113 1. While that appeal was pending the parties got together on the terms of a proposed compromise. These terms were embodied in a lengthy agreement dated April 27, 1917, which agreement constitutes the foundation of the present action. It will be seen that Mrs. Quatman, claiming, as she did, practically one-half the proceeds of sale to arise from the earlier contract, was vitally interested in the outcome of the compromise agreement. This compromise agreement provided substantially that the various suits pending between the parties, some twenty in all, should be dismissed; that the appellants herein should pay to the respondent the sum of $5,000 in cash and a further sum of $12,796.01 in lands at a certain value to be ascertained by means of an appraisement. It is out of the provisions for this appraisement that most of the points on this appeal arise. The agreement provides that each side should select fifteen names of proposed appraisers, placing the names in sealed envelopes and that if three names were found to be common to both lists, these three should be the appraisers. No specific provision was inserted in the agreement for the selection of an alternate in case one of the three should refuse to act, although it was provided that if three names were not found to be common, then additional lists of fifteen names should be prepared until the requisite number was thus obtained. Three names were found to be common to both lists, but one of the three appraisers refused to act. The agreement provides that such additional lists should be prepared on two days’ notice in writing, and no such written notice was given. However, the stakeholder went to the representative of the appellants and demanded the selection of additional lists, but the appellants declined to submit them on the ground or claim that the agreement made no provision for additional lists in such case. This amounted to a waiver of a written -notice, since such claim demonstrated that a more formal notice would have been' unavailing. The respondent promptly prepared his additional list. The appellants contended and on this appeal contend that the omission of the agreement to make specific provision for supplying the place of an appraiser who refused to act rendered the entire agreement incapable of performance and consequently null and void. No claim was made by any of the appellants prior to the commencement of this suit, so far as the record *114 informs us, that the agreement was inequitable, unjust, or unconscionable, nor that the money agreed to be paid was not justly due. It is a case where the litigants withhold both the land and the money and refuse to submit a list of appraisers on the plea that it is not so nominated in the agreement.

All the appellants make the point that the complaint does not show that they received adequate consideration for their undertaking and that as to them it is equitable and just. While the appellants devote much space in their hriefs to this point, it is sufficient to say that the complaint contains a direct statement or averment that they did receive an adequate consideration, and, moreover, contains in its many allegations an affirmative showing that the appellants and each of them received an adequate consideration and that as to them the agreement is just. No more is required. No more could be stated.

The appellant Letitia Beretta Quatman makes the further point that, while the complaint may show that the agreement is equitable and just and founded on an adequate consideration as to the other appellants, yet as to her it fails to do so. But she was a party to this litigation—the very controversy that resulted in the compromise agreement. She had intervened in the principal suit and had appealed from an adverse judgment therein. The compromise of the litigation in which she had so vital an interest was not only a valuable but an adequate consideration for her obligation, and it matters not whether her obligation was primarily her own or was entered into in behalf of some of her co-obligors. In this view of the matter, the complaint shows that the consideration for her obligation was adequate. It does not seem to be seriously disputed that such consideration may be sufficiently shown by the general allegations of the complaint ; but any doubt on the subject is fully settled by the following extract from a late opinion: “It is not necessary, however, that the complaint for specific enforcement should declare, in the very words of the code, that there was an adequate consideration for the contract and that it was just and reasonable. . . . The proper mode of pleading is to set forth the facts from which the court may conclude that the contract is supported by an adequate consideration and is, *115 as to the defendant, fair and just.” (Magee v. Magee, 174 Cal. 276, [162 Pac. 1023].)

2. The appellants insist that the agreement is void "for the reason that C. L. Donohoe contracts therein that he will procure the consent of his wife to the execution of certain conveyances therein provided to be made. But, first, such a provision does not render a contract void, although it might be a contract that could not be specifically enforced (see. 3390, Civ. Code), and, secondly, in this case the appellant Donohoe has entered into no such stipulation. There is a provision in the agreement that a conveyance from her would be sufficient. It is in no way unlawful for a party to agree to convey lands which at the time of contract are owned by another. In such case it is presumed that the contracting party is advised that he can at the proper moment procure the title or procure the holder thereof to make or join in the proper conveyance; but in any view that is his own affair. He is none the less answerable for his breach, even though he may have placed himself in a position where he cannot comply with the terms of his contract.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P. 217, 52 Cal. App. 110, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-sacramento-valley-realty-co-calctapp-1921.