Block v. Citizen Trust & Savings Bank

207 P. 283, 57 Cal. App. 518, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 482
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 3668.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 207 P. 283 (Block v. Citizen Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Block v. Citizen Trust & Savings Bank, 207 P. 283, 57 Cal. App. 518, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 482 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

FINLAYSON, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff in an action to recover the purchase price of a certain parcel of land that defendant had agreed to convey to plaintiff, the latter claiming the title to be defective. The true construction of defendant’s contract of sale is the only question involved.

The findings disclose a situation substantially as follows : On September 11, 1913, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract whereby defendant agreed to sell and plaintiff agreed to buy a lot of land in Los Angeles County for the sum of six hundred dollars, payable in certain monthly installments. The agreement contains a clause as follows: “The first party [defendant] upon receiving payment of the full amount, . . . agrees to execute and deliver unto the party of the second part [plaintiff] a good and sufficient deed of grant conveying said land, and to deliver a good and sufficient certificate of title issued by the Title Insurance & Trust Co., showing title to said property vested in the party of the first part [defendant], free from all encumbrances, made, done or suffered by said first party.” Plaintiff, who seems to have been put in possession immediately upon the execution of his contract to purchase, made all the payments required of him under the terms of his contract, including taxes; and on May 10, 1919, he made his final payment, which at that time was five months overdue.

On April 29, 1919, which was shortly prior to plaintiff’s final payment, the Los Angeles County Flood Control District, a political subdivision of this state, commenced in the superior court for Los Angeles County an action of eminent domain to acquire by condemnation an easement in and over certain lands, including an easement in and over the *520 westerly sixty feet of the land which defendant had agreed to convey to plaintiff. Such easement was sought by the flood control district for the purpose of providing and maintaining a fixed and definite channel for certain waters by erecting embankments and walls on the right of way sought to be condemned. The plaintiff here, the vendee, was not a party to that action. His vendor, this defendant, was, however, made a party defendant to the condemnation suit, though its time to answer therein had not expired when this action was tried. On the day when the condemnation suit was commenced, April 29, 1919, a lis pendens was recorded in the office of the county recorder, giving due notice of the pendency of that action. At the date of the trial of the present action the condemnation suit had not been set for trial. Pursuant to the power conferred by section 14 of article I of the constitution as amended on November 5, 1918, an order was made in the condemnation suit on May 14, 1919, authorizing the flood control district to take immediate possession and use of the right of way described in the eminent domain proceedings. Though the flood control district has not as yet taken actual possession of the right of way which it is seeking to obtain over the westerly sixty feet of the land in question here, it has taken constructive possession thereof.

Some time between the 19th and 25th of May, 1919, defendant tendered to plaintiff a deed, duly signed and acknowledged and sufficient as to form, purporting to convey to plaintiff the property in question. At the same time defendant tendered to plaintiff, a certificate of title, issued .and executed by the Title Insurance & Trust Company of Los Angeles on May 19, 1919, certifying that the title to the whole parcel of land is vested in defendant free from all encumbrances except “an action commenced April 29, 1919, and now pending in the superior court, entitled Los Angeles County Flood Control District v. Stephen A. Armstrong, Citizens Trust and Savings Bank, a Corporation, et al., brought to condemn the west sixty (60) feet of said lot for the construction and maintenance of a channel for the flood waters of the Los Angeles, San Gabriel, and other rivers.” The certificate of title further stated that “notice of the pendency of the said action was recorded April 29th, 1919, in book 76, page 19 of notices of actions”; and also *521 that “on May 15, 1919, an order was entered authorizing plaintiff" [the flood control district] to take immediate possession and use of the right of way as described in the complaint [in the condemnation action], the money deposits required by law as security having been made pursuant to the order of the court.”

Though defendant has continued ready and able to make his tender good, plaintiff refuses to accept the offered deed and certificate of title because of the pendency of the condemnation proceedings, the recording of the Us pendens, and the making of the order authorizing the flood control district to take possession of the right of way sought to be condemned.

Whether respondent, the vendee, is entitled to rescind his contract to purchase and recover the purchase money which' he paid to appellant, the vendor, depends upon the construction that should be placed upon appellant’s covenant “to execute and deliver unto the party of the second part [respondent] a good and sufficient deed of grant conveying said land, and to deliver a good and sufficient certificate of title . . . showing title to said property vested in the party of the first part [appellant], free from all encumbrances, made, done or suffered by said first party.”

There are cases which lend color to the view that where condemnation proceedings are commenced after the making of a contract of sale but before the time for its completion by a conveyance, the institution of such proceedings will not affect the vendee’s duty to complete the purchase. The reason given by the courts which adhere to this view is that the purchaser is regarded in equity as'the owner from the time of the making of the contract, and, as such equitable owner, is entitled to the damages which may be awarded in the condemnation proceedings, and the exercise of the right of eminent domain confers upon the plaintiff in the condemnation suit an independent and not a derivative title. (27 R C. L., p. 500; Nixon v. Marr, 190 Fed. 913 [36 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1067, 111 C. C. A. 503]; Clarke v. Long Island Realty Co., 126 App. Div. 282 [110 N. Y. Supp. 697], See, also, Stevenson v. Loehr, 57 Ill. 509 [11 Am. Rep. 36].) Other cases take the view that if the vendor has agreed to convey a good title, free and clear *522 of all encumbrances, the condemnation proceeding, if pending when the time arrives for the execution of a conveyance to the vendee, constitutes an encumbrance or defect in the vendor’s title justifying the purchaser in refusing to complete the purchase and giving him the right to recover the purchase price. (27 R. C. L., p. 500; Kares v. Covell, 180 Mass. 206 [91 Am. St. Rep. 271, 62 N. E. 244]; Cavenaugh v. McLaughlin, 38 Minn. 83 [35 N. W. 576]; Johnston v. Callery, 173 Pa. St. 129 [33 Atl. 1036]; Miller v. Philips & Co., 44 Wash. 226 [87 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
207 P. 283, 57 Cal. App. 518, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/block-v-citizen-trust-savings-bank-calctapp-1922.