Cook v. La Vina Land Co.

39 P.2d 458, 3 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1132
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1934
DocketCiv. 5110
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 P.2d 458 (Cook v. La Vina Land 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
Cook v. La Vina Land Co., 39 P.2d 458, 3 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1132 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

DEIRUP, J., pro tem.

This action was brought by respondent to recover from the appellant the sum of $5,250, *24 payments on account of seven contracts for the sale and purchase of land. A portion of that sum, $3,500, was a credit given for respondent’s equity in a house and lot; the rest had been paid in cash. The action is based upon quantum meruit. It was alleged in the complaint and found by the court that a map which was exhibited to plaintiff, from which the description of the property sold was taken, had not been filed for record and that therefore the original contracts were void; and that although a map was filed subsequently and new contracts in which the property was described according to the recorded map were executed thereafter, they, too, were void as being merely continuations of the former ones. It was further alleged and found that the property which was described in the final contracts was not the same property as that described in the original contracts by reference to the same tract numbers as shown on the original plat. The court gave judgment to the respondent for the sum prayed for.

Appellant had subdivided a large tract of land. Its plan was to plant vineyards on the land as sold and care for them for a period of time. For that purpose it reserved in its contracts of sale such easements as were desirable and also retained the right of possession for three years, and it agreed to transfer with the land a proportionate number of shares of stock in a mutual water company, so that the purchasers would be entitled to definite amounts of water for the irrigation of their vineyards.

Pursuant to the plan to sell the tracts the La Vina Investment Company, a corporation subsidiary of -the appellant, entered into a contract with Emmett Kadletz, whereby it granted to Kadletz for a period of one year “an option, but not an exclusive option, to buy such portion of the parcels of land hereinabove described and referred to, as may be unsold at the time this option is exercised, of (at) the price marked upon each parcel on the sales map of said parcels on file in the office of the Seller, less $500.00, it being understood and agreed between the parties hereto, however, that in the event the Buyer resells any of the said parcels within the period of one year from the exercising of this option, then in that event said parcels shall be sold only according to the prices shown on the parcels as marked on said map”. The contract provided for install *25 ment payment^ and contained the further agreement that the buyer “wilil and does at all times assume the responsibility and liability arising from any agreement or representation he or his iigents may make on any transaction, wherein he resells any of the parcels upon which he exercises this option”.

The property was exhibited to respondent by Kadletz and Rae, who was a;u officer of appellant corporation. He attended conferences at appellant’s office and was handed a plat of the property. No plat had been filed for record, but respondent believed that the one which was given him was a copy of a recorded plat. Two prior contracts were canceled or transferred by appellant in order to make available for respondent seven tracts in one parcel. As directed by appellant, respondent conveyed to Kadletz a house and lot, his equity being agreed to be $3,500. It was shown at the trial that appellant was indebted to Kadletz in more than that amount. Respondent paid to appellant the sum of $70 (being $10 on account of the purchase of each parcel) and, as directed by appellant, executed with Kadletz seven “preliminary” contracts of purchase, each of which recited that a deposit of $510 had been made and provided for monthly payments of $10 until $675 should be paid. The respondent agreed that he would then, at the option of the appellant, execute a formal sales contract with appellant, containing terms set out on the reverse of the preliminary agreement. Those terms provided for the planting of a vineyard by appellant, for the care of the vineyard by appellant for three years as a matter of right, and thereafter, at the option of the buyer, for the cultivation of the vineyard by appellant on a share basis; also for a supply of water for irrigation, and for necessary rights of way. It was agreed in the preliminary sales agreement that it was “not binding on the La Vina Land Co.”; that the seller “or his representative is solely responsible for any representation made to the buyer other than those set forth in the formal agreement of sale”; and that the “Owner reserves the right to describe the property designated in the formal sales contract and deed by either metes and bounds or lot number and block number”.

Respondent made installment payments, not to Kadletz, but to the appellant. After he had paid $675 on each of the seven contracts he executed new agreements with the *26 appellant, all as contemplated by the original contracts, and made some further payments. Before .the final contracts were executed, but without the knowledge of the respondent, the appellant had filed a plat for record, from which the descriptions were taken; but a . comparison of that plat with the one given to the respondent at the time of the original transaction showed a difference in the size and location of the lots covered by the agreements. This fact was not, however, known to respondent.

Appellant contends that the sale of the land was made by Kadletz; that he was not an agent of appellant; and that, therefore, if there was any illegality in the sale, it is Kadletz, and not the appellant, who is liable therefor. In support of that contention appellant cites the case of Robinson v. Easton, Eldridge & Co., 93 Cal. 80 [28 Pac. 796, 797, 27 Am. St. Rep. 167], In that case the Supreme Court had under consideration a contract by which the defendants were authorized “within five days from date hereof, and until this authority is canceled in writing by us, to sell for the sum of $10,000” certain property, and the owner agreed to pay “a commission of' all over said sum of $10,000, net, for which they may sell said property with our consent. ...” It was held that the relationship created was not one of mere agency but was that of vendor and purchaser, the court saying:

“The relation of the defendant to the plaintiffs was not that of a mere agent. While its authority to sell the land was derived from the plaintiffs, yet the sale was to be made for its own account and benefit, as well as for that of the plaintiffs. Although the authority to sell was not so coupled with an interest as to create in the defendant an interest in the land, or to prevent the plaintiffs from revoking the authority, yet by the terms of the authorization the defendant acquired such a right to a portion of the proceeds of sale as to enable it to make a contract of sale upon terms of its own choosing . . . The relation thus created between them was rather that of a vendor and purchaser under a contract of sale than one of principal and agent. ...”

In Smith v. Blodget, 187 Cal. 235 [201 Pac. 584], the Supreme Court construed the following instrument: “This agreement witnesseth that we herewith give to Frank H. Smith, Jr., an option on our land ... to handle & sell *27

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 P.2d 458, 3 Cal. App. 2d 21, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-la-vina-land-co-calctapp-1934.