California Real Estate Co. v. Walkup

150 P. 385, 27 Cal. App. 441, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1354.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 P. 385 (California Real Estate Co. v. Walkup) 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
California Real Estate Co. v. Walkup, 150 P. 385, 27 Cal. App. 441, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 49 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The appeal is from the judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial in an action to recover six hundred and seventy dollars, alleged to be the balance due of the first payment under a written contract for the sale of certain real property located in Placer County. It is not disputed that the parties executed said contract, nor is it contended that anything therein contained is against public policy. It is not claimed that any element of unfairness or injustice appears upon its face and it is admitted that appellant paid to respondent the sum of fifty dollars only.

There seems to be nothing obscure in the language of said contract and its purport is easily understood. It was dated February 15, 1912, and therein appellant bound himself to pay one thousand eight hundred dollars for a certain forty-acre tract of land, to pay seven hundred and twenty dollars of this on the said fifteenth day of February and the balance on September 1, following, and to make certain enumerated improvements on said land. Appellant further agreed that respondent should act as his agent for the resale of said forty-acre tract and he promised to devote his time, attention, and ability to the sale of another eighteen hundred acre tract of land known as the Pleasant Grove Gardens.

Respondent agreed to convey said forty-acre tract to appellant, free from any encumbrance, upon the payment of said one thousand eight hundred dollars and to pay him a certain commission for any sales of said Pleasant Grove Gardens ac *443 complished by him. The foregoing comprehends all the covenants of said contract and it must be manifest that the first thing to be done under the agreement was for appellant to pay said sum of seven hundred and twenty dollars which he agreed to pay on said February 15. Respondent could not be placed in default until that money was paid or tendered by appellant. That payment was the first condition to be complied with and it was the only requirement for said February 15. Appellant, however, declined to pay more than fifty dollars and we must ascertain, if we can, whether he has justified himself in his refusal to proceed further with his agreement.

It is claimed, in the first place, that “in its origin and essence the transaction here was a contract of service—rather than a contract of sale—under which Walkup, as agent, was to sell the Pleasant Grove Garden tract of 1800 acres in small subdivisions into which it had already been surveyed and platted. ’ ’ In this connection it is urged that the main inducement for the execution of the contract by Walkup was the prospective commissions to be earned by him in said sales and that this consideration failed by reason of the inability of respondent to convey to purchasers the title of said small subdivisions, said respondent not being the owner of said tract but being authorized only to sell it in tracts of not less than three hundred and twenty acres each. By reason of the failure of said main consideration it is claimed that appellant was released from any liability under said contract. It is to be observed, though, that nowhere is it provided in said contract that the land was to be sold in small parcels, although Mr. Walkup testified that prior to the execution of the contract he was told by Mr. Power that “we could subdivide and make sales in small subdivisions, ten, twenty, thirty, eighty or one hundred acres or whatever a man wanted.” If this be considered a material circumstance, however, we must, in support of the conclusion of the lower court, accept the version of Mr. Power. He testified: “Before the execution of these contracts with Mr. Walkup, I showed him the contract of sale which we had. ... I also showed Mr. Walkup another deed from G. A. White to myself transferring the whole of that land previous to February 15th, and also a copy of the assignment of the contract of sale between George A. White and myself to the California Real Estate Company. I showed *444 these papers to him the latter part of December or the first part of January, 1912. I also showed him a certified map. I think the papers and documents enumerated are all that I showed him. ’ ’ It is, therefore, a natural inference that appellant was apprised of that stipulation in the contract between White and Power providing “that the said party of the second part may sell the said land in subdivisions of not less than a half section in each subdivision, provided that no such subdivision of a half section or more shall be sold unless the entire tract herein be sold within the time herein limited; and provided further that any such half section so sold shall be directly contiguous to some portion of said land already sold; and provided further that the first parcel to be sold in subdivisions as aforesaid shall lie at some point on the exterior boundaries of the entire tract of land.” The map to which the witness referred, it is true, showed the tra.ct as platted and divided into 134 small parcels by direction of Dr. White, the owner, but this, of course, could not be understood as controlling or modifying the express contract between "White and Power as aforesaid. Mr. Power further testified: “I told Walkup we were authorized to sell the entire ranch, that we would give him five or ten per cent, depending upon the conditions, for his services in helping to sell the entire ranch. I did not authorize him to sell it in 20-acre pieces or anything like that, but I told him he could sell the 364 acres which we had purchased, in whatever parcels was mutually agreed upon.”

It seems clear from the foregoing that if parol evidence is ' to be regarded at all to supply what it is claimed was omitted from the written contract, there is a sharp and substantial conflict as to whether any such condition contended for was agreed upon and, hence, under the familiar rule, we must resolve the point against appellant.

Moreover, appellant is in no position to avail himself of such claim. If he had made the payment as he agreed to make it, on the fifteenth day of February, and had secured a purchaser for a small parcel of said tract and respondent had been unwilling or unable to convey title to said purchaser, then appellant, upon his theory of said contract, could plausibly maintain that respondent was in default and the basis for rescission might thus have been laid. But Mr. Power testified: “He has never made a definite request asking me *445 to let him sell any land. We never resold the property. He has never made any effort to make any sales of other land in Pleasant Grove Gardens.” Indeed, it is not claimed by appellant that he did anything under the contract except to pay the sum of fifty dollars. His performance of or offer to perform what he promised was a condition precedent to a legal claim of default on the part of respondent. This would not be so if respondent declared its purpose not to carry out its agreement or if it clearly appeared that it was unable to do so, but such is not the situation. Upon the assumption that it was agreed that appellant should sell in small parcels, we must presume that respondent would and could have kept its engagement. We may take it for granted that, if necessary, it would have purchased of the owner the larger parcel of three hundred and twenty acres in order to accommodate the purchaser of any smaller tract.

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Bluebook (online)
150 P. 385, 27 Cal. App. 441, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-real-estate-co-v-walkup-calctapp-1915.