Born v. Castle

134 P. 347, 22 Cal. App. 282, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 355
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1265.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 134 P. 347 (Born v. Castle) 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
Born v. Castle, 134 P. 347, 22 Cal. App. 282, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 355 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an action to recover the sum of two "thousand dollars paid as a deposit on account of the purchase of real property.

The appeal is by plaintiff from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The circumstances attending the negotiations for the sale of the property and the payment of the deposit are as follows:

Baldwin & Howell, real estate dealers in San Francisco, at no time mentioned in this ease had any agreement in writing to sell the property described in the complaint. David *284 Hirschler, an employee of Baldwin & Howell, called on the defendants for the purpose of getting such an authorization, but his request was refused. He was told, however, that the first real estate agent who would come to the defendants with a Iona fide offer at a named price would get the property for sale. This was on the twelfth day of March, 1906. Thereafter, on the same day, Edward M. Long, another employee of Baldwin & Howell, called upon Geo. F. Lyons, the agent of the plaintiff, with a view to effecting a sale of the defendants’ property to the plaintiff, with the result that a form of contract was then drawn up, under the terms of which the plaintiff was to purchase the property for a certain amount, and on account of which he was to pay a deposit of one thousand dollars. The writing also provided that the plaintiff was to have sixty days to examine the title to the property, and further set forth the circumstances under which the deposit of one thousand dollars was either to be forfeited or returned. Time was made of the essence of the contract, and it also included a provision that it was made subject to the approval of the owner of the property. Lyons, for his principal, the plaintiff, paid the deposit of one thousand dollars and executed the contract. On the same day this writing so executed was presented to the defendants, but they refused to approve it; and thereupon caused a new agreement of sale to be prepared, differing from the one described in that it required the purchaser to make a deposit of two thousand dollars instead of one thousand dollars, and shortened the time to examine title from sixty to thirty days. This writing was signed and approved by the defendants, but through some oversight it was not presented to the plaintiff for his approval, and he did not see it or know of its existence until the time of the trial, over four years later. However, on the day on which these writings were drawn up, Long, representing Baldwin & Howell, informed the plaintiff that the owners demanded an additional one thousand dollars deposit. Plaintiff acceded to this demand, and was allowed to believe that the original contract with the one exception just noted had been approved by the owner. The result is of course that neither contract was signed by both parties, and both were under a misapprehension as to the terms to which the other had agreed.

*285 On the 18th day of April, 1906, a great fire destroyed all the record titles to real property in San Francisco, where the property here involved is situated. Subsequently, after the expiration of the thirty days provided in the second agreement of sale but within the time fixed in the first one (taking into account certain holidays declared by the governor of the state following said conflagration.), the plaintiff rejected the title upon the ground that there was no public record o‘f the' property described in the complaint. It is admitted that the record of title to the property was not restored within the sixty days provided by the form of contract executed by plaintiff for curing defects in the title.

Upon demand the defendants refused to return the deposit, the alleged defects of title not having been reported within the thirty days allowed by the form of contract executed by the defendants, whereupon this action to recover the same was commenced.

If the contract upon which plaintiff sues had been, as plaintiff clearly supposed it was, executed by the defendants, the public records having been destroyed, he would have been entitled as he claims to the return of the deposit. (Hooe v. O’Callaghan, 10 Cal. App. 567, [103 Pac. 175]; Title etc. Restoration Co. v. Kerrigan, 150 Cal. 289, [119 Am. St. Rep. 199, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 682, 88 Pac. 356]; Crim v. Umbsen, 155 Cal. 697, [132 Am. St. Rep. 127, 103 Pac. 178]; Easton v. Montgomery, 90 Cal. 307, [25 Am. St. Rep. 123, 27 Pac. 280]; Allen v. Glole etc. Milling Co., 156 Cal. 286, [104.Pac. 305]; Reed v. Sefton, 11 Cal. App. 88, [103 Pac. 1095].) And plaintiff asserts that whatever may be said as to the existence of the agency of Baldwin & Howell prior to the time their employee took the contract to the defendants for approval, it cannot be questioned that from the time Baldwin & Howell procured from the defendants the second form of contract, signed by them, they were the agents of the defendants for the purpose of consummating the proposed sale. If this is true, the neglect of such agents to communicate to the plaintiff all the changes proposed by the defendants to the form of contract submitted to them is chargeable as the neglect of the defendants; and that the plaintiff, having .been allowed to believe that the original contract had been accepted save with regard to the amount of the deposit,' and upon that *286 theory having made the deposit, the defendants are estopped from now asserting that the contract under which plaintiff supposed he was acting had never been executed or approved by them. However this may be, the conclusion we have reached upon another point presented by the plaintiff renders it unnecessary for us to decide whether he may under the circumstances invoke the principle of estoppel.

As before stated, it was not until some time during the trial of the action that the plaintiff learned that the contract upon which he had brought suit had not been accepted or approved by the defendants. The evidence showing this was introduced by the defendants. Thereupon and before the submission of the case plaintiff asked leave .of the court to file an amended complaint conforming to this proof, which leave the court refused to grant on the ground that it would substantially change the cause of action.

This we think was error. The proposed amended complaint sets up in detail the facts of the case as shown by evidence introduced by defendants, and the circumstance that plaintiff knew nothing about the mutual mistake concerning the execution of the contracts until the trial of the action. As to amendments at the trial, generally speaking, great liberality is indulged if the defendant is not prejudiced thereby and the ends of justice will be' subserved, and provided always that the issues to be decided are not wholly changed. This is especially true where the evidence has been received without objection and the amendment is made to conform thereto, (Pomeroy’s Code Pleadings, 4th ed., sec. 457; 1 Sutherland’s Code Pleading, etc., sec. 792), or where the filing of the amended complaint will save a claim from the. bar of the statute of limitations. (2 Abbott on Trial Briefs, 2d ed., p. 1842; 1 Ency.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P. 347, 22 Cal. App. 282, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/born-v-castle-calctapp-1913.