Craig v. White

202 P. 648, 187 Cal. 489, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 382
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9332.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 202 P. 648 (Craig v. White) 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
Craig v. White, 202 P. 648, 187 Cal. 489, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 382 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

*491 SLOANE, J.

The plaintiff in this action brought suit to recover the sum of $20,797.17, paid to defendant as part of the purchase price of real estate under a contract which was rescinded by plaintiff, the purchaser, because of failure of title in the defendant, the vendor.

Judgment was for plaintiff and defendant appeals.

The finding of the trial court that the defendant had no title to the land at any time and failed to convey title upon demand and tender of full performance of the contract by plaintiff is amply supported by the evidence.

The original contract of purchase and sale called for a conveyance of all of the defendant’s “holdings on the shore of Clear Lake in Lake County, Calif., being about 350 acres and embracing about 13 miles of lake shore land.”

[1] The evidence disclosed that the lands referred to consisted of a strip of waterfront along the borders of the lake lying between the meander line as established by the United States survey and the actual water line of the lake.

According to the calls of the United States field-notes, it is shown that this meander line does not conform to the actual waterline of the lake, but that the meander line is a sufficient distance from the actual border of the lake to inclose between such line and the water line of the lake the quantity of land called for by the contract between plaintiff and defendant.

Defendant’s claim of title was evidenced by patents from the state of California purporting to convey by courses and distances the land between the meander line and the lake “under an act of the legislature of the state of California entitled an act regulating the sale of the lands uncovered by the recession or drainage of the waters of inland lakes and unsegregated swamp and overflow lands, and validating sales and surveys heretofore made,” approved March 24, 1893.

These conveyances were made on the theory that the meander line as marked by the United States survey constituted the actual boundary between the uplands belonging to the government and the state lands included within the borders of the lake. Prior to the issuance of state patents to the defendant, United States patents had *492 been duly issued to settlers on the government uplands hordering on this part of the lake, which patents, under the established rule governing such transfers, conveyed title to the patentees, to the actual margin of the lake. (Civ. Code, sec. 830; Lamprey v. State, 52 Minn. 181, [38 Am. St. Rep. 541, 18 L. R. A. 670, 53 N. W. 1139]; Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371, [35 L. Ed. 428, 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 808, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes].)

It also was shown in evidence that there had been no recession or drainage of the waters of the lake and that there had been, therefore, no additional land uncovered below the original water line to which defendant’s state patents could attach. The title, therefore, to all the land covered by the contract between plaintiff and defendant was vested in other parties under the United States patents. There was, moreover, introduced in evidence the judgment-roll in an action by a grantee under the government patents, in which action both the plaintiff and defendant here were made defendants, wherein a judgment had been given and had become final, quieting title in the claimants under the government title, and wherein it was found “that said defendants Richard White and Joseph Craig have not, nor has either of them any estate, right, title, or interest whatever in or to any of said lands or premises,” referring to lands described in the complaint. This description covered all lands bordering on the lake included within eleven of the thirteen miles of lake front in controversy here. We think this judgment-roll.was properly admitted in evidence.

. Neither of the parties to this action were ever in possession of the land contracted for. There was, if not a complete failure of consideration for the money paid to defendant under this contract, such an approximation to a complete failure as to justify a rescission by plaintiff and the recovery of the money paid, unless defendant was justified to raise the question of failure of title by waiver or laches.

The instrument setting out the terms of the contract for the sale of this land, dated July 16, 1906, and signed by the defendant, acknowledged the receipt of one hundred dollars from the plaintiff, on account of purchase price of the land, and provided that " said Craig is to have until and including the 2d day of August, 1906, to examine title to *493 property, and shall have to that date to pay an additional sum of $1500.00, and to have a deed placed in escrow to be delivered to him, his heirs "or assigns, upon condition that he or they shall pay to me or my heirs or assigns the additional sum of $14,400,” payable in designated annual installments. It was also specified that, “should the title of said undersigned prove unsatisfactory to said Craig,” that he, the said Craig, “may on or before August 2, 1906, have return of said $100, and cancel this contract.”

On the date specified, August 2, 1906, plaintiff, by his attorney, notified defendant that he was ready and willing to make the. one thousand five hundred dollar payment, accepted the terms of the contract and demanded that the deed to the premises be executed and placed in escrow as therein provided.

The deed was prepared, signed, and acknowledged by defendant, and, after its inspection by plaintiff, placed in escrow with a trust company under an escrow agreement which set out the terms and conditions for the deferred payments, and directed the delivery of deed to plaintiff when the payments were completed.

The deferred payments were thereafter met substantially as required by the contract, or as extended by agreement. It is questioned by appellant that some of the extensions were authorized, but- the payments were accepted without protest, and no default on the part of plaintiff can be predicated upon such delays as occurred. Prior to the falling due of the last installment, defendant's claim of title was called in question by the suit of the holder of title under the governmental patents. Plaintiff thereafter and within the period allowed by his contract tendered payment of the balance due upon condition that the defendant convey to him a good title to the land in question. This was not done, and this suit was brought for the recovery of the purchase money already paid.

[2] The main contention of appellant, and the real point at issue on this appeal, is as to whether or not the election of plaintiff to affirm the contract and consummate the deal, after the period of seventeen days given to examine title and exercise his option to purchase, constituted such an acceptance of whatever title defendant might have, irrespective of its validity, as to estop him from pleading a failure of *494 consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P. 648, 187 Cal. 489, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-white-cal-1921.