Boyd v. Warden

124 P. 841, 163 Cal. 155, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 388
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1912
DocketL.A. No. 2901.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 124 P. 841 (Boyd v. Warden) 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
Boyd v. Warden, 124 P. 841, 163 Cal. 155, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 388 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Plaintiff sued to enforce specific performance of a contract for the conveyance of real property. Defendants appeal from a judgment against them on the ground that it is not supported by the evidence, and they appeal generally from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

The contract was signed by plaintiff and by Julia P. Warden. Defendant C. D. Warden is sued as the husband of the latter. By the terms of the instrument Julia P. Warden agreed, upon full payment of the purchase price of the property described therein, to convey it by a good and sufficient deed of grant, to L. Agnes Boyd, and to furnish a certificate by a certain abstract company showing the title to be vested in said Julia P. Warden. By the contract the vendor acknowledged the receipt of $285 and the vendee agreed to pay ten dollars on the first of each month beginning with November, 1907, until the full sum of $215 should be paid, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable quarterly. Time was made of the essence of the contract which provided that, in the event of failure by the vendee to comply with the terms thereof the vendor should be “released from all obligations in law and equity to convey said property” and the vendee should “forfeit all*right thereto and all money theretofore paid under the contract.” The evidence showed that various amounts of principal and interest were paid by L. Agnes Boyd, seldom upon the exact dates fixed by the contract, but never very long thereafter. These were accepted by the vendor and it was stipulated at the trial that on or about January 4, 1909, all payments due to February 1, 1909, had been made. The amount of the principal then unpaid *157 was sixty dollars. The court found upon conflicting testimony that on or about January 8, 1909, plaintiff wrote defendant a letter requesting that she be permitted to pay the balance of the purchase price sixty dollars (no part of which .was then due under the terms of the contract), and that upon said payment she should receive a deed and certificate as provided by the terms of the agreement. There was a further finding that this offer was bona fide; that defendants gave no notice of their unwillingness to accept it; that not until some time in March, 1909, when plaintiff called at the office of C. P. Warden, the agent of Julia P. Warden, to enquire for her certificate and deed did she learn of the vendor’s unwillingness to accept her offer; that she then and there tendered the whole sum of sixty dollars which was refused; and that she also tendered thirty dollars, the payments for February, March, and April, 1909, which were also refused by the agent of the vendor. The court also found that by mutual agreement of the parties thereto payments under the contract were made at various places, sometimes to the agent of the vendor at the banking establishment in which plaintiff was employed, and that by reason thereof plaintiff relied on the said agent calling at the bank to get the balance due for the property and to deliver the certificate of title and the deed; that plaintiff was at all times ready, able, and willing to make good her offer; and that defendants had acted in bad faith and had practiced fraud and deceit upon plaintiff in seeking to gain advantage under the strict terms of the contract. Among the conclusions of law was one to the effect that defendants by their acts and conduct were estopped from forfeiting and canceling the contract.

Several objections to the rulings of the court with reference to the demurrer to the complaint and the motion to strike out certain parts thereof are made, but they are without merit and no one of them deserves notice except the contention that the complaint does not characterize the consideration to be paid under the contract as adequate and the contract just and reasonable to defendants (citing Fritz v. Mills, 12 Cal. App. 115, [106 Pac. 725]). This court has consistenly upheld the rule set forth in the cited case but it is not necessary that, to conform to the requirements of section 3391 of the Civil Code, there must be averment and finding in haec *158 vería of “adequate consideration.” (Wait v. Kern River Mining etc. Co., 157 Cal. 25, [106 Pac. 98] ; Sunrise Land Co. v. Root, 160 Cal. 97, [116 Pac. 72].) In the complaint in this case there was an averment, found by the court to be true “that the value of said real property at the time of the making of said contract did not exceed the sum of $500.” As the consideration mentioned in the contract was five hundred dollars with interest, and as of that amount four hundred and forty dollars with interest had been paid and the remainder was deposited in court for the vendor, adequacy of consideration was sufficiently alleged and found.

The court on motion struck out a so-called special defense by which defendants alleged that the $285 mentioned in the contract as paid at the date thereof was represented by plaintiff’s conveyance to Julia P. Warden of a lot in Tehama County which did not exceed fifty dollars in value, and that there was a failure of consideration as to $235. The mere statement of this purported defense shows the propriety of the court’s action in striking it out. In the contract itself Julia P. Warden acknowledged the receipt of $285 on account of the purchase price. No court of equity should allow her after many months during which she had accepted plaintiff’s payments under the contract, to endeavor to impeach her own solemn acknowledgment of the payment to her of the $285, unless she fully averred fraud by which she was prevented from knowing the value of the land in Tehama County. There was no such allegation of fraud, and the statement of the attempted defense was wholly insufficient.

Appellants complain of the ruling whereby plaintiff was permitted to testify to the contents of her letter of January 8, 1909, in which she tendered the balance of the purchase price for the property. Their objection to this testimony was based upon the failure to make written demand upon them for the letter, but as its receipt by them was denied under oath, we fail to see how they were injured by the ruling.

Plaintiff testified that she had a certain conversation with the agent of Julia P. Warden during 1908 in which be offered her a discount for an immediate payment to close the purchase of the property and was told by her that she would consider the offer and let him know of her determination. *159 This was admissible ás showing the course of dealing between the parties and as indicating one of plaintiff’s reasons for believing that her offer, made in good faith, was being considered by the vendor. Testimony was given of another conversation between the same persons in which C. P. Warden, the agent of Julia P. Warden, offered, in March, 1909, to give plaintiff a deed upon payment of $125. But this was admissible, not upon the theory that the agent might vary the terms of the contract, but as one of the indications that the contract was not treated by the vendor as being at an end. It was not offered to show the making of a new contract, for plaintiff never contended that any new contract was made, consequently the case of Niles v. Hancock, 140 Cal. 157, [73 Pac. 840], cited by appellants, is not in point.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 P. 841, 163 Cal. 155, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-warden-cal-1912.