Calhoun v. Downs

297 P. 548, 211 Cal. 766, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 760
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1931
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9679.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 297 P. 548 (Calhoun v. Downs) 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
Calhoun v. Downs, 297 P. 548, 211 Cal. 766, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 760 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing the action after an order sustaining demurrers to the amended complaint without leave to amend.

*767 It is alleged in said amended complaint that the defendants, George Downs and Lola Downs, who are husband and wife, were the owners of certain real property described therein and situated in the county of San Diego, and that while such owners they listed said real property with the plaintiff, a duly licensed and commissioned real estate broker, and employed plaintiff to sell said real property for the sum of $10,000, agreeing to pay plaintiff the usual broker’s commission of five per cent for making sales of real estate in said county in case the plaintiff should make a sale of said real property, or the sum of $500; that in pursuance of said agreement plaintiff' procured the defendant, George P. Ahlborn, as a purchaser of said real property, who was ready, able and willing to buy the same for the sum of $10,000, and that on the thirteenth day of April, 1926, Downs and wife entered into an agreement with the defendant Ahlborn whereby they agreed to sell and Ahlborn agreed to buy said real property for the sum of $10,000, and to pay to plaintiff a commission of $500, but in reducing said agreement to writing by the mutual mistake of plaintiff and defendants the figures “500” after the dollar sign and the words, “F. G. Calhoun” after, the word, “to” in the last line of said agreement were omitted therefrom, so that said last line reads as follows, “I agree to pay a commission of $-to-”.

It is further alleged in said amended complaint that thereafter and on the first day of June, 1926, the defendants without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff entered into a second written agreement whereby Downs and wife agreed to sell and Ahlborn agreed to buy the same real property for the sum of $9,500. This latter agreement contained no provision for the payment of any real estate commission, but did contain the following paragraph upon that subject, “It is hereby mutually agreed that any commission which may be claimed by any firm or individual because of the sale of the herein described property is to be paid by the party of the second part and the party of the second part hereby guarantees the parties of the first part against any loss whatsoever through any such claim, deed not to be delivered to the party of the second part until the parties of the first part have been satisfied that no claim for commission will be made”.

*768 The amended complaint contains other allegations hut it is not necessary to refer to any of them except those averring that the sum of $500 was the reasonable value of the services rendered by plaintiff in effecting said sale, and that said sum had not been paid. Plaintiff asked for a' reformation of the agreement of- April 13', 1926, by the insertion of “500” after the dollar sign and the words, “F. G. Calhoun” after the word, “to” in the last line of said agreement, and for judgment of $500 against the defendants and each of them, together with interest from the date of said agreement. The defendants Downs and wife appeared separately from their co-defendant Ahlborn, each filing a general demurrer to the amended complaint. These demurrers were sustained and the plaintiff has appealed.

The position of the trial court, and that taken by the respondents on this appeal, is that a contract to pay a real estate commission, being one which is required under the statute of frauds to be in writing, if it fails to contain all the essential elements of such a contract, cannot be reformed so as to include any of the elements omitted therefrom for by so doing the court makes a new contract for the parties which is not in writing but which is based upon oral evidence. In their briefs the respondents state that this is a question of first impression in so far as the appellate courts of this state are concerned, and in this statement the appellant agrees. Numerous authorities are cited by the respective parties from other jurisdictions bearing upon this question from which it appears that the courts of these jurisdictions are not in entire harmony in their decisions as to the power of the courts in this respect.

It will not be necessary for us to review these authorities for the reason that since the filing of the briefs of the parties hereto, this court has passed upon practically the identical question and has decided the same adversely to the contention of the respondents. We refer to the case of Oatman v. Niemeyer, 207 Cal. 424 [278 Pac. 1043]. In that case one Garrison had employed the plaintiff to care for him, nurse him, and keep house for him until his death, and in consideration thereof agreed to give to plaintiff all of his property, both real and personal. Plaintiff performed her part of said agreement, and a few weeks before his death *769 Garrison sent for a justice of the peace and directed him to prepare the necessary papers which would invest the plaintiff with all of his property. Thereupon the justice of the peace prepared a deed and the same was executed by Garrison and delivered to the plaintiff. Garrison died some two weeks thereafter and it was then discovered that although the deed purported to grant to plaintiff “all the certain lot, piece or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the city of Wheatland, county of Tuba, state of California, and bounded and particularly described as follows, to'-wit:” no description of the property sought to be conveyed appeared in said deed. An action was brought by the plaintiff against the administrator of the estate of Garrison to reform said deed and to quiet plaintiff’s title to a certain tract of land owned by Garrison and situated in said city of Wheatland, and being the only real property owned by him, in said city. It was alleged in the complaint in said action, and the trial court so found, that it was the intention of Garrison to convey by said deed said tract of land, but by the mistake of the person who prepared it, the description of said land was omitted therefrom. The trial court by its judgment reformed the deed and quieted plaintiff’s title to said real property. On appeal this court affirmed said judgment. The case was given most careful and thorough consideration by this court. In its decision in department it held that the deed was void and that the reformation thereof would amount to the making of a new contract and is, therefore, never granted. A petition for a hearing in bank was granted, and in our opinion, in which all members of the court were in accord, we held that the trial court properly admitted oral evidence of the contract and the description of the property and rightly granted reformation of the instrument and quieted the grantee’s title to the property. We quote from the concluding paragraph of our opinion as follows:

“There can, of course, be no question but that the deed was void in law, that is, that it failed wholly as conveyance of property since no property was described. But the contention that, for that reason, it cannot be reformed fails to distinguish between a contract which is void for some fundamental reason and an instrument or writing which is void because of mistake in its preparation. If the contract itself *770

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 548, 211 Cal. 766, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-v-downs-cal-1931.