Doryon v. Salant

75 Cal. App. 3d 706, 142 Cal. Rptr. 378, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 2050
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 1977
DocketCiv. 50492
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 75 Cal. App. 3d 706 (Doryon v. Salant) 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
Doryon v. Salant, 75 Cal. App. 3d 706, 142 Cal. Rptr. 378, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 2050 (Cal. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Opinion

KAUS, P. J.

Plaintiffs Dan and Vicky Doryon brought an action for specific performance against Marvin and Cecile Salant. After a court trial, judgment was entered in favor of defendants. 1

Facts

This dispute involves residential property located at 6211 West Fifth Street in Los Angeles. Defendants retained Ginza Realty to sell the house. On August 20, 1974, plaintiffs signed a form “Offer to Purchase & Deposit Receipt” which provided:

*709 Plaintiffs agreed to buy the property for $65,000. They paid Ginza Realty a deposit of $1,000 and agreed to deposit an additional $2,000 “at opening of escrow ... within 5 days from date hereof,” and an additional $10,000 before the close of escrow—a total down payment of $13,000. The offer was “subject to buyer obtaining a 1st trust deed and note for $52,000 payable at $490.97 per month ... for a period of 25 years at 10 1 A percent interest or less.” The parties agreed “to enter into a 60 day escrow and to sign all necessary escrow instructions within 5 days from the date hereof.” The offer also provided: “Time is of the essence of this contract but time for any act required to be done may be extended not longer than thirty days by the undersigned broker.”

On August 27, defendants made a counteroffer which raised the purchase price to $68,500, and provided that the buyers would have “21 working days from opening of escrow to obtain a 1st trust deed and note, . . .” The preprinted counteroffer also provided: “Other Terms: All other terms to remain the same.”

Plaintiffs signed and accepted the counteroffer on August 28, 1974.

The deposit receipt also provided—in the preprinted portion—that Crestview Escrow would handle the escrow. However, on August 29 or 30 when the Ginza agent went to defendants’ house to tell them that the counteroffer had been accepted, defendant Marvin Salant said that he did not want Crestview to handle the escrow, but that he wanted a bank of his choice, which bank he had not decided upon. On September 3, the agent opened an escrow at a branch of the Security Pacific Bank nearest defendant’s house. The Security Bank typed up escrow instructions. The agent brought the instructions to plaintiffs who promptly signed them. These instructions included the provision that $1,000 would be deposited in escrow by Ginza Realty and $2,000 would be deposited “upon signing of these instructions.”

On September 4, 1974, plaintiffs gave the Ginza agent a check for $2,000 payable to Ginza. However, it was not until September 17 that Ginza deposited even $1,000 in escrow. No other amounts were deposited in escrow. Ginza apparently deposited plaintiffs’ $2,000 check in its trust account. The sellers never signed the escrow instructions. On September 17, 1974, plaintiffs obtained a commitment from a savings and loan institution for a $51,000 loan.

On September 19, plaintiffs signed supplemental escrow instructions which recited the terms of the loan commitment and added: “This *710 complies with all requirements of this escrow for Buyer to obtain a new loan and the contingency regarding same as set out [in the] original escrow instructions dated September 3, 1974 is hereby deleted.”

Between September 17 and October 1, the Ginza salesman repeatedly called defendants to ask them to sign the escrow instructions. Defendants stalled. First they wanted to know the exact cost of the termite report. Then there was a further delay because their attorney allegedly had “the papers” and was out of town for several days. Defendants never stated that they would not sign the escrow instructions, but on October 1, their attorney wrote Ginza that they would refuse to do so, because the fair market price of the properly was $71,500 and Ginza had negligently undervalued it.

At trial, defendant Marvin Salant was asked the reason that he did not sign the escrow instructions. His response was: “We thought the price was too low.”

At the end of plaintiffs’ case, defendants moved for judgment under section 631.8 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The sole basis for their motion was that, since Ginza was not a licensed escrow agent, plaintiffs had breached the contract by paying the $2,000 deposit to Ginza, rather than into the escrow. Although the court thought that “if morality were involved here, or good faith or things of that sort, I might be tempted to consider the urgings of the plaintiffs, who I feel are in good faith and desired very much to have this property, and maybe deserve-to get it,” it felt compelled to grant the motion, though not on the ground urged by defendants. The court’s reason as stated from the bench and elaborated in a later written memorandum, was that the plaintiffs’ offer and the defendants’ counteroffer, though accepted by plaintiffs, did not constitute a contract. The court fastened onto the fact that the counteroffer had raised the purchase price from $65,000 to $68,500 leaving, in the court’s view, a gap of $3,500, with no provision on how it would be paid or financed. “It cannot be presumed, in the absence of evidence, that the sellers wanted the added $3,500 to be paid them in cash. It might not, for example, have been in their interest tax-wise to do so. The terms of sale were vital to the sellers as well as to the purchasers, and the form of such payment to them is not spelled out in the documents,...”

Defendants then submitted proposed findings of fact which included a finding that plaintiffs were “neither ready, willing or able purchasers of the real property.” Plaintiffs filed written objections to the proposed *711 findings, pointing out specifically that this finding was not supported by the evidence. No such finding appears in the findings which the court eventually did sign. Those are to the effect that (1) the contract between the parties “lacks essential terms relative to manner of payment of the contract price and does not constitute an enforceable contract in that it cannot be determined from the contract, or from any other evidence, how much of the price was to be in cash, and how much from the first trust deed,” and (2) that plaintiffs had breached the contract because the escrow was opened one day late—September 3 instead of September 2—and no cash was deposited in escrow until September 17.

Discussion

The court’s findings are not supported by the evidence and are contrary to law.

Enforceable Contract

The trial court erred in finding that the purported contract lacked “essential terms relative to the manner of payment of the contract price,...”

In a real property transaction, the “material factors to be ascertained from the written contract are the seller, the buyer, the price to be paid, the time and manner of payment, and the property to be transferred, describing it so it may be identified. [Citations.]” (King v. Stanley (1948) 32 Cal.2d 584, 589 [197 P.2d 321].)

Those factors were satisfied here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Cal. App. 3d 706, 142 Cal. Rptr. 378, 1977 Cal. App. LEXIS 2050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doryon-v-salant-calctapp-1977.