Burke v. Bours

32 P. 980, 98 Cal. 171, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 881
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1893
Docket18087
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 32 P. 980 (Burke v. Bours) 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
Burke v. Bours, 32 P. 980, 98 Cal. 171, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 881 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Harrisok,

this action was here upon the last appeal (92 Cal. 108), the facts before the court were that Bours had been employed by Faulkner, Bell & Co., who were agents of Arguello, to make a sale of the land, and had reported to them a sale thereof for the sum of four thousand five hundred dollars, sending at the same time a form of a deed to be executed by Arguello, without, however, inserting the amount of the consideration, or the name of the grantee; that Arguello filled in the amount of the consideration, and executed the deed without inserting the name of any grantee; that when Bours received the deed, lie caused his own name to be inserted therein as grantee, and sent his check for the amount of the purchase-money to Faulkner, Bell & Co., who accounted for the same to Arguello. The judgment of the court below was reversed upon the grounds that Bours was to be regarded as the agent of Arguello for making a sale of the land, and could not, as such agent, make a sale to- himself. After the cause went down another trial was had, and in addition to the facts found upon the preceding trial, the court found that when Bours sent the deed to Faulkner, Bell & Co. for execution, he had negotiated a sale of the property to one Ahumaja for the sum of four thousand five hundred dollars, but that when he received the deed, after it had been signed by Arguello, Ahumaja refused to consummate the purchase; that thereupon Bours had his own name inserted as the grantee in the deed, and wrote to Faulkner, Bell & Co., informing them of his failure to complete the sale, and “ that he had had his own name inserted in said deed as grantee, and that if this was agreeable to Mr. Arguello, he would take said property and pay the said sum of four thousand five hundred dollars therefor, and that if it was not agreeable to Mr. Arguello, he .would return the said deed to him”; that a few days thereafter he received a letter from Faulkner, Bell & Co. inclosing one from Arguello, in which Arguello stated “ that he was satisfied with Mr. Bours as the purchaser of said property, and that he was glad he had purchased it, and all that he (Arguello) wanted was to receive his [175]*175money”; that upon the receipt of this letter Bours caused the deed, which he had in the mean time kept in his possession, to be placed of record, and immediately remitted the four thousand five hundred dollars to Faulkner, Bell & Co., and entered into possession of the property, and has since remained in possession of the whole thereof; that upon the receipt of the money by Faulkner, Bell & Co., they informed Arguello that they had received from Bours the sum of four thousand five hundred dollars as the proceeds of said property, and had placed the same to his credit, and that Arguello immediately acknowledged the receipt of such information. The court also finds “that the said Jose B. Arguello, prior to the payment of the said purchase-money by the said Bours, had full knowledge and notice that said B. W. Bours’ name had been inserted in said deed as the grantee therein named after the signing thereof; and at the time of the receipt of said purchase price said Arguello had full knowledge and notice that said Bours was the grantee named in said deed, and had full knowledge and notice of all the facts and circumstances surrounding the said transaction.” Judgment was thereupon rendered in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs have appealed therefrom, bringing up the evidence in a bill of exceptions, and specifying therein that it is insufficient to sustain certain of the findings. There was, however, testimony before the court below supporting the above findings, and the decision of that court, both upon' the weight of this testimony, as well as upon the credibility of the witnesses, cannot be reviewed here.

The decision of this court upon the former appeal was based upon the fact that it then appeared that Bours was the agent of Arguello for the purpose of making a sale of the land, and that the purchase by him was made without the knowledge of Arguello that he was such purchaser, and upon the well-established principle of law that when these facts were brought to the knowledge of the principal he had the right to have the sale set-aside at his option, irrespective of any question of fraud or unfairness or advantage. It was said in the opinion at that hearing, “ while a trustee may purchase the trust property where he deals openly with his beneficiary in the sale, and the transaction is in all respects fair and just, and the consideration full [176]*176and adequate, yet that is not this case. Neither does the evidence disclose that Arguello ratified and confirmed the sale to Bours after a full knowledge of all the facts. Aside from the fact that Bours sent his personal check to Faulkner, Bell & Co. for the amount of the purchase price, there is nothing in the record to indicate that Arguello had any knowledge whatever that Bours was the purchaser.....Having decided

that defendant occupied such relations towards Arguello that he would not be allowed to become a purchaser of this real estate, unless the sale was made with the full knowledge and consent of Arguello, or ratified and confirmed by him after a full knowledge of all the facts, neither of which conditions existed in this case, it necessarily follows that he is not the vendee under an executed contract of sale, and possesses no equity sufficient to defeat plaintiff’s rights to a recovery of the possession of this tract of land.”

The conditions under which the judgment of this court was then rendered do not now exist. It now appears not only that Bours dealt openly with Arguello in the sale, and that the transaction was fair and just, and the consideration full and adequate, but it also appears that “ the sale was made with the full knowledge and consent of Arguello.” These circumstances take the case out of the principles announced at the former hearing, and show a complete defense to a recovery by the plaintiffs. There is no inhibition upon a purchase by an agent from his principal, “ where the facts are fully disclosed, and the agent acts in good faith, taking no advantage of his situation. The principal may, if he sees fit, deal with the agent as with any other person.” (Mecham on Agency, sec. 466; Rochester v. Levering, 104 Ind. 562.) The agent has the same right to deal directly with his principal as has a stranger. The rule which prevents the agent from purchasing the property which he is authorized to sell for his principal, is based upon the maxim that no man can serve two masters, and that an agent shall not unite in his own person his individual with his representative character, or place himself in a position where his personal interest will be in conflict with his duty to his principal. When, however, the agent deals with his principal " at arm’s-length, and after a full disclosure of all that he knows with respect to the property” [177]*177(Murphy v. O'Shea, 2 Jones & L. 425), or when the principal ratifies the purchase from himself with full knowledge of the circumstances connected with the transaction, he can thereafter avoid the sale only upon the same grounds as if the purchase had been made by a stranger. The powers of an agent in dealing with the property of his principal are limited in the same manner as those of a trustee.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Whitaker v. Brainard
298 P. 1042 (California Court of Appeal, 1931)
Petray v. First National Bank
267 P. 711 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Salisbury v. Yawger
195 P. 682 (California Supreme Court, 1921)
Catlett v. Bloyd
99 S.E. 81 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1919)
Williams v. Lockwood
166 P. 587 (California Supreme Court, 1917)
Sumner v. Jones
22 Haw. 391 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1914)
Neighbor v. Pacific Realty Ass'n
124 P. 523 (Utah Supreme Court, 1912)
Tenbusch Realty Co. v. Vorce
19 Ohio C.C. Dec. 145 (Cuyahoga Circuit Court, 1906)
Pomeroy v. Wimer
78 N.E. 233 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1906)
Campbell v. Beard
50 S.E. 747 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 P. 980, 98 Cal. 171, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-bours-cal-1893.