Central Pacific Railroad v. Mudd

59 Cal. 585
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7,966
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 59 Cal. 585 (Central Pacific Railroad v. Mudd) 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
Central Pacific Railroad v. Mudd, 59 Cal. 585 (Cal. 1881).

Opinion

McKinstry, J.:

Ejectment. Plaintiff and defendant Mudd entered into written agreements by which plaintiff agreed to sell to defendant certain lands, defendant to pay the purchase price in installments of principal and interest. There was a stipulation in the contract in these words: “And if the said party of the second part (defendant herein) shall fail to punctually make any of said payments of interest or principal, or shall fail to strictly comply with any of the stipulations of this contract, then the said party of the first part, its successors or assigns, shall have the right to enter upon and take possession of the said premises, with all the improvements thereon.”

The complaint alleges plaintiff’s ownership and seisin in fee of the lands, and sets out the contracts in full; avers the entry of defendant Mudd in pursuance of the contracts; that there became due and owing (at times mentioned) certain interest, etc., no part of which has been paid, and that plaintiff demanded payment, which said defendant refused. That thereafter plaintiff demanded possession of defendants, which was also refused, and is still refused, etc., defendants withholding the possession. That the other defendants are in possession with defendant Mudd and under him.

The prayer is: First, for the restitution of the tracts of land and premises; second, for two hundred and eighty dollars, rents, etc. (or mesne profits).

To the complaint defendants demurred, on the grounds: First, that said complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; second, that several causes of action are improperly united. The Superior Court sustained the demurrer, and, the plaintiff declining to amend, judgment was rendered and entered for defendants. From which plaintiff has appealed.

The action is an action at law for the recovery of the pos[588]*588session, and the sole question is, whether the facts alleged show plaintiff to be entitled to the possession, as against defendants.

The complaint alleges that defendant Mudd entered under and in pursuance of the contract. The question considered in Gaven v. Hagen, 15 Cal. 208 (whether where a contract for sale and purchase of lands is silent as to possession the vendee has a right to take and hold possession prior to conveyance), is not involved in the present inquiry. The decision in Willis v. Wozencraft, 22 id. 618, was put, on petition for rehearing, upon the ground that the contract there relied on by the vendee provided for possession by the purchaser, and did not provide that, on failure to comply with its conditions, his right to the possession should cease. Whatever may be said of Willis v. Wozencraft, it is not like the case now before us. The Court there said: “ But it is now urged that this right of possession (in the purchaser) extends only to the time when the purchase money became due, and if the money was not then paid the right of possession in the vendee ceased, and the same reverted to the vendor. Buck are not the terms of the contract, nor is such the proper equitable construction of it. There are no words in the agreement thus limiting the right of possession vested in the vendee.” And in the same case (22 id. 615): “The right to a conveyance was dependent upon the payment of the purchase money, but the right of possession was, under the agreement, immediate and continuous, and not dependent upon such payment.”

In the case at bar there is a distinct stipulation in the contract, that upon failure on the part of defendant to make payment of principal, or interest, in accordance with the terms of the agreement, plaintiff shall have the right to enter, etc. Miller v. Steen (30 Cal. 403), cited by respondents, turned upon the construction of a peculiar contract relating to personal property. It was not there held that the vendor had no right to take possession, upon default of the purchaser, but was held (under the language of the contract there considered) that if the vendor did so take possession, the vendee retained the right to retake it, upon payment of the full purchase price; and if anything more than such [589]*589termination of the possession for the time being was intended by the parties in the stipulation they had adopted, it might perhaps have been to authorize the vendor to rescind; a power which could be exercised only on his paying back what he had received—thus restoring the status quo.

It may be well here to observe, with reference to the case before us, that the effect of overruling the demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint may not necessarily be to deprive the defendant Mudd of all his rights under the contract. He may, perhaps, under proper cross-complaint, be able to show that he is entitled to specific performance.

In Bohall v. Diller, 41 Cal. 535, it was said: “The plaintiff having stated the contract of sale, and alleged that under it he placed the defendant in possession of the premises, it became necessary for him, if he desired to recover the possession, to show that the contract was rescinded. When a vendee has so failed to perform the contract that the vendor may elect to treat the contract as rescinded, it is incumbent on the vendor, in order to work that result, to restore to the vendee whatever he has paid, on the contract.” The language quoted is to be taken in connection with the facts of the particular case. The action was brought to recover the possession of the premises and for judgment for the amount of deferred payments which defendant (vendee) had failed to pay, with interest, as damages, etc. It is perfectly obvious that plaintiff in Bohall v. Diller was not entitled to recover both the possession and the balance of the purchase price. Yet such seems to have been the judgment accorded to him in the lower Court; a judgment which was properly reversed in the Supreme Court. Again, the transcript in Bohall v. Diller did not show that the contract, by its terms, provided for reentry by the vendor in case of default by the vendee, and, therefore, plaintiff was not entitled to recover the possession, if Willis v. Wozencraft declares the law. On the other hand, it was added by the Court, if plaintiff therein claimed that the action, Bohall v. Diller, was based upon a rescission of the contract, the contract had not been rescinded, because no attempt had been made to restore the money already paid. The general language employed in the first sentence of the citation from the opinion in Bohall v. Diller, is to be read in [590]*590view of the questions therein involved, and, in effect, as laying down the rule that if a vendor relies upon his right to rescind, based upon a breach of the contract by the vendee, he must show that he has in fact rescinded, or sought to rescind, by restoring what he has received. Plaintiff and vendor was told—even if it be supposed you had a right to rescind, you cannot assert the right, because you have not attempted to place the vendee in statu quo. In the case before us plaintiff has not sought to rescind the contract.

It was said in Keller v. Lewis (53 Cal. 118), the vendor is not bound to wait indefinitely after the failure of the purchaser to comply with the terms of his agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Cal. 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-pacific-railroad-v-mudd-cal-1881.