Dunne v. Colomb

221 P. 912, 192 Cal. 740, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 396
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1923
DocketS. F. No. 10403.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 221 P. 912 (Dunne v. Colomb) 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
Dunne v. Colomb, 221 P. 912, 192 Cal. 740, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 396 (Cal. 1923).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This cause is before us after decision by the district court of appeal. The judgment of the superior court in favor of the plaintiff was by that court reversed. *742 A further consideration of the questions involved satisfies us of the correctness of the conclusion reached by that court, and we adopt in large part its opinion as expressing our views, which part we quote.

“This appeal is by the defendants from a judgment against them for $6,875, commission upon the sale of real property owned by defendants. The plaintiff recovered over $4,000 of the amount of the judgment as a commission directly due to him for producing a purchaser for the property of defendants and the balance upon an assignment to him of a commission alleged to have been due to Frank Mooradian upon the same transaction.

“By the terms of the written contract between the parties introduced in evidence, the commissions to Mooradian and Dunne were not to be payable until the purchaser paid in full the purchase price for the property. The evidence showed, without conflict, that the purchase price was never paid. Plaintiff contended at the trial and secured his judgment upon the theory that the contract for the purchase and sale of the property upon which the commission was to be paid was abandoned by mutual consent of the parties and another contract substituted therefor; that with this second contract plaintiff is not concerned, but is entitled to his commission because the defendant, by agreeing to abandon the first contract, was himself the cause of the purchaser’s failure to perform the same.

“ With all due deference to the rule invoked by respondent and applicable where a conclusion as to facts has been arrived at by a jury upon conflicting evidence, we are unable to find in the record evidence sustaining his theory of the case. The contract between the owners of the property and the brokers was introduced in evidence. It provided that certain commissions were to be paid to said brokers if a contemplated purchaser, one Hagopian, should enter into a contract for the purchase of the land on conditions and terms satisfactory to the vendors and if said Hagopian should pay in full the purchase price and considerations for said property. It was admitted by the vendors that Hagopian entered into a contract satisfactory and acceptable to them, by which he agreed to purchase the land for $175,000. The defendant Colomb was called as a witness for the plaintiff and testified that Hagopian paid $10,000 *743 as a first payment under such contract and the unpaid balance was to bear interest at seven per cent. This contract was signed on May 29, 1920. By its terms Hagopian was to pay the balance of the principal, $165,000, on December 1, 1920. The witness Colomb stated that Hagopian was unable to do this and was in default upon his contract; that, thereupon, the vendors notified Hagopian that his contract was forfeited. The vendors then went upon the property and operated it throughout the month of December, 1920. About December 20, 1920, the vendors and Hagopian again negotiated for the purchase and sale of this property. The result of these negotiations was that a contract was executed sometime after the middle of January, 1921, and antedated January 1, 1921, by which Hagopian agreed to purchase the property for $175,000 and to pay eight per cent upon the unpaid balance and to give as security for the performance of his obligations thereunder a deed of trust upon another ranch owned by him.

“With the positive testimony in the record, standing uncontradicted, that Hagopian was in default under his contract on December 1, 1920, and that notice of cancellation was served upon him and that the vendors, thereupon, entered into possession of the property and later, together with Hagopian, served notice upon the bank that held the papers in escrow that the contract was forfeited by Hagopian and all rights thereunder were at an end, we do not see any basis for the argument of the respondent that the performance of the contract by the purchaser was prevented by the vendors. Apart from this positive testimony of the vendor, the inference from the written documents themselves seems to support appellants’ contention. It is incredible that Hagopian would have agreed to abandon his contract of May 29, 1920, under which he had paid $10,000, and under which he was obligated to pay only seven per cent interest upon the unpaid balance and was obligated to deposit no collateral as security, and enter into another contract by which he was forced to pay $175,000 with no credit for the $10,000 already paid, and to pay eight per cent interest upon the unpaid balance and also to give a deed of trust upon other property as security, unless he had forfeited his rights under the more advantageous contract. The positive evidence of Colomb, called as a witness by plaintiff, not only stands uncontra *744 dieted that Hagopian forfeited his contract by noncompliance with its terms, but such testimony is corroborated by the action of Hagopian in acceding to the terms of a new contract regarding the same property, much less advantageous to him than the contract of May 29, 1920. Why should not the first contract have been retained by Hagopian if it had not been forfeited ?

“ We find no real conflict in the evidence upon this question of forfeiture of Hagopian’s rights under the contract. Respondent admits that the testimony of his witness Colomb is that Hagopian forfeited his contract, but seeks to establish a conflict in the evidence so as to sustain the findings by pointing out that the testimony of Colomb was that, although the contract had been forfeited and canceled on December 1, 1920, for noncompliance with its terms, nevertheless, Hagopian paid interest upon the balance due thereunder until January 1, 1921, and that the second contract was antedated January 1, 1921, so that the defendants did not lose any interest. Respondent infers from this that the first contract was in effect until the second contract became effective and that one was merely substituted for the other. It is true the statement above recited regarding the payment of interest appears in the record, but it does not stand unexplained therein. It cannot be taken apart from the explanation which the witness had a right to make and which he did make. He stated that after the forfeiture of the contract by Hagopian, the vendors took possession of the land and worked upon it until the time when the property was turned over to Hagopian under the second contract. As they received nothing for their time and labor during the period they were occupying the property, and as the property received the benefit of such labor, the vendors insisted as a condition of entering upon the second contract with Hagopian that he should pay a sum equivalent to interest on the value of the ranch to compensate them for their trouble and loss of time in looking after the property during the period when there was no contract in existence between the parties. This is a reasonable explanation; it stands uncontradicted in the record, and it must be taken in connection with the statement that interest was paid for the month of December. So taken, it creates no conflict, even *745 by possible inference, with the positive evidence of the cancellation of the contract.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 P. 912, 192 Cal. 740, 1923 Cal. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunne-v-colomb-cal-1923.