Bennett v. Steinman

190 P.2d 987, 84 Cal. App. 2d 494, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1224
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1948
DocketCiv. 16020
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 190 P.2d 987 (Bennett v. Steinman) 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
Bennett v. Steinman, 190 P.2d 987, 84 Cal. App. 2d 494, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1224 (Cal. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

SHINN, Acting P. J.

This is an appeal by defendants from a judgment requiring them to convey to plaintiffs a parcel of real property for a consideration of $8,500, pursuant to a written contract between the parties.

The agreement was in the form of escrow instructions to Broadway State Bank, dated December 10, 1945, which were duly executed by plaintiffs and defendants, respectively the buyers and the sellers. Under plaintiffs’ instructions the purchase money was to be used by the bank “provided within 30 days you can cause to be issued, a Pol. of Title Ins. by T. I. & T. Co.” showing title vested in the buyers free of encumbrances except second half taxes and personal property tax against former owners, conditions, restrictions, reservations and rights of way of record, and the purchase was contingent upon the buyers being able to borrow $5,000 on the property. The sellers’ instructions approved the foregoing conditions, stated that defendants would furnish a deed to be delivered on payment of $8,500, from which the bank was instructed to pay Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company its demand for the release of an existing trust deed upon which there remained unpaid $2,800. There was a provision in the instructions, agreed to by both parties, that if the escrow could not be closed within 30 days the escrow holder nevertheless was *496 to complete the same as soon as the conditions had been complied with, unless either the buyers or sellers should have made written demand for the return of the money or the instruments deposited by them.

Plaintiffs, the buyers, were required (1) to pay into escrow $8,500, and (2) to execute whatever documents might be required in connection with the proposed loan of $5,000. Defendants, the sellers, were required to hand in their deed and to procure a reconveyance of the trust deed which secured the Pacific Mutual loan. The instructions were later amended by joint action of the parties. The amendment recited that time had been lost by the “Federal Housing” in getting access to the property for inspection in connection with the proposed $5,000 loan and provided that the “escrow time limit” was extended to February 10, 1946, and that $2,000 should be paid out of the escrow to defendants on account of the purchase which was to be returned to plaintiffs or secured if plaintiffs were unable to obtain a $5,000 loan on the property.

Plaintiffs were successful in negotiating the new loan with Pacific Mutual, and they caused to be placed in the escrow $8,500, consisting partly of their own funds and partly of funds of Pacific Mutual, consisting of the difference between $2,800 still unpaid on defendants’ loan and the $5,000 new loan being made to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs also executed their promissory note and trust deed for $5,000 with Pacific Mutual as payee and beneficiary, and Pacific Mutual executed a request for reconveyance addressed to the trustee under defendants’ trust deed. Defendants placed in escrow their deed. The bank, as escrow holder, according to custom, forwarded to Pacific Mutual plaintiffs’ note for $5,000 and forwarded to Title Insurance & Trust Company defendants’ deed and plaintiffs’ trust deed, securing the $5,000 note, and also a request for reconveyance under defendants’ trust deed with instructions to record the same with the deed and new trust deed when title could be shown in plaintiffs. Defendants’ trust deed and note which were being paid off also were sent to the title company. All of these documents were in order and were forwarded on February 8, 1-946. Due to February 10 falling on Sunday, the time for completion of the escrow expired February 11. The documents were not filed by the title company on February 11, or at all. On that date defendants gave written notice that the' escrow was cancelled, demanded and received the return of their deed, and plaintiffs’ *497 money was refunded to them. It is therefore clear that the only document that had not been executed prior to February 11 was the reconveyance of defendants’ property as had been requested in writing by Pacific Mutual. The trustee under this deed of trust, as executed in 1942, was Title Guarantee & Trust Company. The note and trust deed were sent to Title Insurance & Trust Company for cancellation, and we assume that the parties understood that Title Guarantee & Trust Company is now one and the same with Title Insurance & Trust Company.

It would thus appear that plaintiffs, as the buyers, had within the specified time done and performed all that was required of them by their agreement of purchase and that defendants had done all that was required of them except to see to it that a reconveyance was executed and made available for recording in order that they might furnish title free and clear of the encumbrance of their trust deed. They had obtained from Pacific Mutual a request for reconveyance but they had not caused to be placed in the escrow the reconveyance itself. Naturally, there was no necessity that this document be delivered into the escrow, since Title Insurance & Trust Company was to act as the recording agent and would have been expected to execute and record the reconveyance as trustee. Under these circumstances the title company was the only one called upon or which could act in the execution of the reconveyance and the recordation of the instruments which would have completed a transfer of title.

The bank was the agent of both parties in acting as escrow holder for consummation of the transaction pursuant to the agreement and instructions of the parties. The law on this point is well settled. When plaintiffs’ money and defendants’ deed were deposited in the escrow the bank became the agent of both parties with respect to the money and the deed. (Shreeves v. Pearson, 194 Cal. 699, 707 [230 P. 448] ; 10 Cal. Jur. p. 587.) This dual agency would exist until the conditions of the escrow had been fully met, although if that event had occurred, the escrow holder would have become agent or trustee of the buyers alone with respect to the deed, and of the sellers with respect to the money. (Orloff v. Metropolitan Trust Company, 17 Cal.2d 484 [110 P.2d 396] ; Crum v. City of Los Angeles, 110 Cal.App. 508, 515 [294 P. 430].)

When defendants approved plaintiffs’ instructions which called for a clear title, with specified exceptions, they assumed an obligation, to pay their trust deed note and to pro *498 cure a reconveyance of the property by the trustee. The escrow holder could not close the escrow until this condition had been met, and consequently continued to act for both parties in its capacity as agent. It appointed the title company as its agent to do the recording necessary to enable it to issue a policy showing title in plaintiffs. The title company, in the mere matter of recording the reconveyance, the deed and the new trust deed, was the agent of the escrow holder and consequently in this respect was acting in the interests of both the buyers and the sellers. The responsibility for any delay in recording the instruments rested no more upon the buyers than upon the sellers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 P.2d 987, 84 Cal. App. 2d 494, 1948 Cal. App. LEXIS 1224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-steinman-calctapp-1948.