Carlsen v. Security Trust & Savings Bank

271 P. 104, 205 Cal. 302, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 528
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1928
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9560.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 271 P. 104 (Carlsen v. Security Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Carlsen v. Security Trust & Savings Bank, 271 P. 104, 205 Cal. 302, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 528 (Cal. 1928).

Opinions

THE COURT.

A petition for a hearing herein of this appeal was granted after a decision thereof by the district court of appeal, second district, second division. It was granted mainly for the reason that a similar petition was granted on the same day in the case of Security Trust & Savings Bank v. Carlsen et al., post, p. 309 [271 Pac. 100], a case which arose out of the same controversy as is involved in the present action. After a further consideration of the opinion rendered in this action by the district court of appeal and written by Mr. Justice Craig and concurred in by the other members of said court, we are satisfied that said opinion correctly disposes of the question considered therein, and we adopt the same as the opinion of this court, which is as follows:

“This is an action for damages against the respondent bank as an escrow depositary, for failure to deliver certain muniments of title admittedly deposited with it in the escrow. For purposes of brevity the Security Trust & Savings Bank is referred to in this opinion as the bank, the Dominguez Land Corporation is termed the corporation, and the California Chemical Company is named the company.
“The facts essential to a presentation of the appeal are that the corporation as owner of certain apparently oil-bear *304 ing land entered into an agreement to sell it to the company. In this connection an escrow was arranged with the First National Bank of Torrence. The company thereafter contracted to transfer its interest in said agreement of purchase to the plaintiff Carlsen. In that behalf an escrow was opened with the bank, respondent herein. As is usual in such cases, escrow instructions were signed by the company and Carlsen. The dispute centers primarily on the construction to be placed upon certain parts of these instructions. After the second escrow had been opened, letters, notices and demands, written and oral, were made by the parties herein mentioned. The instructions called for a certain guaranty of title. Soon after the escrow was begun the corporation filed suit to quiet title against the company, and recorded a lis pendens of the same. Carlsen appeared in said last-named action, assuming to be a ‘John Doe’ who had been made a party defendant therein. He asked affirmatively relief by way of a judgment quieting his title to the premises in question. Under these circumstances the bank did not complete the escrow, but held the documents and money which it had received, and finally after demand therefor had been made by Carlsen, it refused to deliver to him the muniments of title which the escrow instructions, as well as the agreement with the company, contemplated that he should receive upon the close of the escrow. This stand of the bank was based upon the theory that the escrow instructions requiring that a guaranty of title be furnished to the vendee could not be complied with while the suit brought by the corporation was pending.
“Many other facts are recited in the record and in the briefs, but in view of our decision upon the two pivotal points presented, it would only tend to confuse the issues to recount such details, which we deem unessential.
“ Without a waiver of certain provisions of the escrow instructions the bank could not complete the escrow, because under such provisions it was necessary that before doing so it have ‘a guarantee of title showing agreement last above mentioned and assignment of same to me and a good and sufficient grant deed, executed by said California Chemical Co., conveying said property to me.’ The ‘agreement last above mentioned’ is the contract between the corporation and the company, and the instruction from which we *305 have quoted is signed by Carlsen. Appellant contends that by this provision nothing is required except a certificate showing the agreement and its assignment. However, we think this interpretation is too narrow and that both the language used and other stipulations in the agreement, which consist of the escrow instructions and the contract between the company and Carlsen, clearly indicate that it was the intention of the parties that the bank as escrow-holder have in its possession a guaranty in the sense that that term is ordinarily used, and which implies ownership of the property in question, with the title marketable and unencumbered. In the provision above quoted, that part which reads ‘showing agreement last above mentioned and assignment of same to me’ merely indicates that the title is to be brought down to Carlsen, and not to terminate as it often does with a certification that the vendor has title at the time he transfers to the vendee.
“That the parties understood that the vendee was to receive a definite and full title to the land and not merely an assignment of whatever interest the company might have in it is evidenced by the other documents involved in the transaction. In the agreement between the company and Carlsen, it is recited that the company has entered into a contract ‘ covering the sale and purchase of certain real property,’ and that the company ‘agrees to sell’ to Carlsen all of the rights of the company in and to its agreement with the corporation, and to execute the necessary assignment and deed to carry the transfer into effect, so that Carlsen should receive the deed contracted by the corporation to be delivered to the company through the escrow with the First National Bank of Torrence. These references direct us back for further explanation of the understanding of the parties to the agreement between the corporation and the company. That contract provided that the corporation should ‘deliver a certificate of title . . . showing title to said property to be vested in Dominguez Land Corporation free and clear of all encumbrances. ’ When we consider that the contract from which we have last quoted was one of the documents required to be and which was deposited in the escrow, as was also the contract between the company and Carlsen, it is apparent that these instructions must all be read together as forming an entire contract. The corpora *306 tion was required to furnish a certificate of title showing its ownership, free and clear of all encumbrances, the company contracted to transfer that same character of title to Carlsen, and his requirement in the escrow instructions with the defendant escrow-holder requiring guaranty of title, etc., must be construed as calling for a certificate that the seller had title free and clear of all encumbrances; but in addition to this, that a transfer of such title had been made to Carlsen.
"We now proceed to a consideration of the question which both appellant and respondent state to be of the most vital importance in determining this appeal, to-wit, as to whether or not Carlsen waived the requirement as to guaranty of title. As we view the matter, this is not a difficult problem, nor one requiring any extended discussion. It is admitted that the only attempted waiver was an oral statement by Carlsen or his attorney.

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Related

Lee v. Title Insurance & Trust Co.
264 Cal. App. 2d 160 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)
Davis v. Stulman
164 P.2d 787 (California Court of Appeal, 1945)
Palma v. Leslie
45 P.2d 391 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
Security Trust & Savings Bank v. Carlsen
271 P. 100 (California Supreme Court, 1928)

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271 P. 104, 205 Cal. 302, 1928 Cal. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlsen-v-security-trust-savings-bank-cal-1928.