Cole v. Merchants' Trust Co.

166 P. 871, 34 Cal. App. 82
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 2233.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 P. 871 (Cole v. Merchants' Trust Co.) 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
Cole v. Merchants' Trust Co., 166 P. 871, 34 Cal. App. 82 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

WORKS, J., pro tem.

These are appeals from the judgment and from an order denying motions for a new trial.

By an agreement in writing, of date February 1, 1905, the respondent granted to the defendant Armitage and others, for the period of eighteen months, an exclusive agency for the sale of a certain tract of land. At a later date the rights of all the grantees of the agency were lodged in Armitage by assignment. For that reason, as well as for convenience, the contract will be referred to as if it had been entered into, on the one part, by Armitage alone. The instrument provided, among other things, that Cole should forthwith subdivide the property; that he should subscribe a certain map delineating the subdivision and dedicate to public use all streets and alleys shown on it; that he should grade and gravel certain streets and sidewalks in the tract; that he should execute and deliver contracts for the conveyance of lots upon sales being made by Armitage; and that he should execute and deliver to purchasers deeds to lots upon the payment to him of $250 for each and every lot to be conveyed. Armitage was to forthwith advertise the lots for sale, maintain a sales office on or near them, and otherwise use due diligence to complete the sale of all the lots during the life of the agreement; was to pay all cost of subdividing the lots, of filing and recording the map, and of all certificates of title to the lots; was not to sell any lot for less than $250, nor upon time at a less rate than $25 at the time of sale and ten dollars per month, with interest at seven per cent after one year from date of sale; and was to be compensated “for lots sold, all of the price for which each lot is sold in excess of the rate of $1,000 per acre for the land, subject to this agreement, added to the cost of improvements to be made under this agreement. There were 27.64 acres in the tract. It was provided that the compensation just mentioned “shall be as follows:

“Ten per cent (10%) of the selling price of each lot out of the first moneys paid in on such sale. And after the first party shall have received two'hundred and fifty dollars ($250) and interest, if any, on the sale of a lot, then the second *84 parties shall be paid the balance received on such lot, and finally, any amount received in excess of the sum of twenty-seven thousand six hundred and forty dollars ($27,640) and the actual cost of the improvements upon said tract, should any excess have been received by the first party.
“When the first party shall have received the full sum of twenty-seven thousand six hundred and forty dollars ($27,640), together with the costs of improvements on said land, and interest paid in on deferred payments, he shall transfer in due form to the second parties, aU unpaid contracts, mortgages and obligations received on sale of lots; and duly convey to them all. lots in said tract not theretofore sold and conveyed. All interest, if any, on deferred payments for lots shall inure to the benefit of the first party.”

The contract concluded with the following paragraph:

“Time is of the essence of this agreement, and upon the failure of the second parties to keep the covenants on their part herein contained, this agreement shall, at the option of the first party, become null and void and all right of said second parties shall end.”

The parties proceeded to operate under this agreement, and by about April 4, 1906, Armitage had found purchasers for ninety-six lots. Twenty-three of these had been sold for cash and deeds conveying them had been delivered by Cole. The remaining seventy-three lots were sold upon contracts for differing amounts. The avails of these transactions had been segregated between the parties under the terms of the agreement and there yet remained due Cole, pursuant to those terms, the sum of $19,948.30. On April 4, 1906, Cole and Armitage made a new arrangement of their affairs under the contract, in the form of a trust agreement to which the appellant Trust Company was a party. The agreement recited that the Trust Company had received and accepted the seventy-three contracts and also deeds to the unsold lots. The company obligated itself to receive moneys payable on the contracts of sale and to deliver deeds to the purchasers as balances due on contracts were paid; to pay first to Armitage ten per cent of the selling price under each contract as collections came in, except in the ease of contracts on which he had already received ten per cent, or a portion thereof, and on the latter to pay the balance to total ten per cent; to pay to Cole the remainder collected on each contract until, together *85 with certain other payments, he received the sum of $19,-948.30; to execute contracts of sale on lots thereafter sold, upon the order of either Cole or Armitage, provided that sales made by Cole should not be for less than figures fixed by a certain schedule attached to the trust instrument; to pay to Armitage ten per cent upon the purchase price under contracts of sale so executed by it; to pay to Cole the remainder collected by it on such contracts until from such collection and from amounts paid to him on old contracts, under the provision above noted, he received the sum of $19,948.30 already mentioned; to pay to Armitage, after the payment to Cole of that sum, all further collections under all contracts of sale and also to execute to him deeds to all the lots then unsold; to pay to Cole all interest collected on all contracts of sale until the principal sum of $19,948.30 was fully paid him, the interest to be no part of that sum; to use such part of collections as might be necessary to make improvements determined by Armitage to be required on the property and to pay off liens, including taxes, such payments not to be considered as payments to Cole; and to pay off a certain mortgage and charge the amount against Cole’s nineteen thousand dollars. The trust agreement ended with a provision to the effect that it was “intended to carry out the contract” of February 1, 1905, “as modified by extending the life of said contract to February 1, 1907, and by directing the payment to C. Cole of all money arising out of the sale of lots above ten per cent until he shall be fully paid, as directed.”

The action was commenced by Cole, as late as February 6, 1913, against the appellant Trust Company alone for a termination of the trust arrangement, his theory being that, through the failure of Armitage to finally carry out the agreements between them, time being of their essence, he had become the sole beneficiary under the trust. The appellant de Jersey, an assignee of 'Armitage, filed a complaint in intervention upon the claim that Armitage’s beneficial interest in the trust had not terminated, and Armitage himself was later brought in as a party defendant. The judgment declared the trust terminated and directed the appellant Trust Company to reconvey to Cole the property yet remaining in its hands.

The provision in the original contract that time was of its essence was not disturbed by the terms of the trust agreement. The period of eighteen months, fixed in the contract, was by *86

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Related

People v. Williams
46 P.2d 796 (California Court of Appeal, 1935)
Cole v. Merchants Trust Co.
202 P. 488 (California Court of Appeal, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P. 871, 34 Cal. App. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-merchants-trust-co-calctapp-1917.