Bush v. Vernon

286 P.2d 903, 135 Cal. App. 2d 33, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1325
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 15, 1955
DocketCiv. 16367
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 P.2d 903 (Bush v. Vernon) 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
Bush v. Vernon, 286 P.2d 903, 135 Cal. App. 2d 33, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1325 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

By the first cause of action in his amended complaint, plaintiff, William N. Bush, charged defendant Paul Vernon and his mother, Ethel Vernon, with breach of a contract to purchase a sublease for $5,000, and in a second cause of action charged the failure to pay $1,500 in rent. Judgment was entered in favor of defendants and plaintiff appeals.

The case is primarily a factual one. Plaintiff owned a leasehold interest in a hotel in San Francisco. Ethel Vernon desired to purchase that interest. In September of 1952 her son Paul, on her behalf, began to negotiate with plaintiff for such purpose. These negotiations resulted in a written agreement signed by plaintiff, and by Paul as the representative of his mother, for the sale of the leasehold interest for $5,000. The purchase price was to be paid through an order of Paul Vernon on funds held by the Kern County Title Company for Mrs. Vernon. This contract was undated, but required that the $5,000 be paid before October 17, 1952, and also provided that Mrs. Vernon could take possession October 1, 1952. It expressly stated that the “Deal subject to approval of Lessor. ’ ’

Paul Vernon executed an order on the title company on September 30,1952, and delivered it to plaintiff. When plaintiff presented it for collection on October 9, 1952, it was returned to him unpaid because Mrs. Vernon had rescinded it. Paul testified that the order was rescinded because the attorney for the lessor refused on behalf of the lessor to consent to the assignment unless Mrs. Vernon deposited $3,000 as security, which she was not willing to do. The attorney, who had full authority to act for the lessor, suggested a sublease instead of an assignment. Thereafter, this attorney drafted a sublease, dated October 31, 1952, which contains the signa *35 ture of plaintiff as lessor, and the signatures of both defendants as sublessees. As part of this transaction the attorney for the lessor drafted a consent to the sublease, to be delivered to the parties in the event that plaintiff deposited with the attorney $1,500 in cash as security for the original lease. This $1,500 was never deposited with the attorney, so that this consent to the sublease was never delivered.

Plaintiff admitted that this sublease was intended as a substitute for the originally contemplated assignment, and that the parties mutually agreed to abandon the assignment transaction.

The sublease provided that Mrs. Vernon was to take possession November 1, 1952. She actually took possession on November 4,1952. In October or November, 1952, an “Escrow Agreement and Agreement of Sale” was prepared, bearing a date of “-November, 1952,” by and between Ethel Vernon and plaintiff, and a named escrow holder, whereby plaintiff agreed to sell the leasehold to Mrs. Vernon for $3,500 payable by an order on the Kern County Title Company. Whether this agreement was signed or delivered by Bush, and whether it was signed by the escrow holder, are facts in dispute. The escrow holder was to prepare a ‘ ‘ Notice of Intended Sale,” and record and publish it. The escrow holder was to pay the claims of the creditors of plaintiff. The plaintiff, however, testified that this was intended to be a cash transaction ; that he did not proceed to go through escrow; that he did not contact the escrow holder, although, admittedly, part of the proceeds of the escrow were to furnish the $1,500 security necessary to secure the consent of the lessor to the sublease.

Plaintiff admitted that there were “approximately a couple of thousand dollars” in outstanding bills against the hotel, and that in a prior transaction with the defendants involving a hotel lease, claims for unpaid bills exceeded the proceeds from the sale by a substantial amount. Plaintiff also admitted that he told the broker in the transaction: “I can’t sign that agreement, I can’t have an escrow in that deal, $3500 wouldn’t be a drop in the bucket against the claims filed.” In a deposition plaintiff admitted that he had “refused to some extent” to go through escrow, and at the trial conceded that he had never got in touch with the escrow holder, nor deposited any papers with him. He conceded that he reduced the price from $5,000 to $3,500 because he needed money badly to pay his creditors.

*36 Paul Vernon testified that he deposited the $3,500 order with the escrow holder, but that plaintiff never signed or delivered a copy of the escrow agreement.

On December 9, 1952, Mrs. Vernon quit the premises because the consent to the sublease had not been received and she felt, quite properly, that she was in possession illegally. Mrs. Vernon paid no rent for the period she was in possession —November 4, 1952, to December 9, 1952—but she did pay some of the outstanding bills. Paul Vernon offered plaintiff $300 as rent, the amount he computed was due after proration, but “he told me to hang on to it until the whole thing was complete.” Plaintiff admitted that between November 1 and 4, 1952, he collected $307.81 as rent which he did not turn over to defendants. Plaintiff resumed possession on December 9, 1952, and kept it until January 31, 1953, when he ceased to be the lessee.

Both Paul and Mrs. Vernon testified that Paul at all times was acting solely as agent for Mrs. Vernon, and plaintiff admitted that he had never been told that Paul was to be a partner in the enterprise, or had any interest therein.

On these facts the trial court found a mutual abandonment and rescission of the original assignment of September, 1952, based upon the fact that the lessor refused to consent to such assignment; that Mrs. Vernon took possession in November, 1952, under an oral contract under which plaintiff undertook to secure and deliver a written consent of the lessor to a sublease ; that because of the failure to secure and deliver such a written consent, and because of plaintiff’s refusal to perform the terms and conditions of the oral agreement, that is, his refusal to consent to the recordation and publication of the intended notice of sale, defendant Ethel Vernon relinquished possession on December 9, 1952, and plaintiff retook possession. The court concluded that Paul acted solely on behalf of his mother in the transactions, that the assignment was mutually rescinded, and the sublease was of no effect. Based on these findings and conclusions judgment was entered for defendants.

There can be no doubt that the finding that the original agreement for the sale of the lease and providing for its assignment was abandoned and mutually rescinded because the lessor refused to consent to such assignment, is amply supported by the evidence. In fact, appellant admitted that this was true. Of course, an executory written bilateral contract may be rescinded by mutual consent of the parties. *37 Such consent need not be in writing but may be oral or may be manifested by conduct. (Treadwell v. Nickel, 194 Cal. 243 [228 P. 25]; San Roque Properties, Inc. v. Pierce, 18 Cal.App.2d 379 [63 P.2d 1198].) Moreover, the assignment of the lease expressly provided “Deal subject to approval of Lessor.” The evidence demonstrates that this condition precedent was not performed, so that the agreement never became effective.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 P.2d 903, 135 Cal. App. 2d 33, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-vernon-calctapp-1955.