Durst v. Jolly

169 P. 449, 35 Cal. App. 184, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 360
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1730.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 169 P. 449 (Durst v. Jolly) 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
Durst v. Jolly, 169 P. 449, 35 Cal. App. 184, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 360 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HART, J.

The complaint was filed in January, 1915, and is in the usual form of an action to quiet title, the lands involved being ranch property in the counties of Yuba and Placer.

The defendants, A. Jolly, Raphael Jolly, and Mrs. Minnie Jolly, filed an answer in which they admitted that plaintiffs were the owners of the lands in question but denied that they (plaintiffs) were entitled to the possession thereof. Defendants A. Jolly and Raphael Jolly admitted “that they assert a claim and interest in and to said lands, and to the possession thereof, . . . but they deny that Mrs. Minnie Jolly . . . has or claims any interest whatever in or to said described lands, except as residing thereon with her husband, A. Jolly.”

By way of cross-complaint, the defendants, A. Jolly and . Raphael Jolly, alleged: “That, on and prior to about the first day of September, 1913, the said defendants were and had *185 been residing upon and cultivating and farming and raising hops on and under a lease from year to year for the plaintiffs a large portion .of the lands described in the complaint; that, on or about said first day of September, 1913, the plaintiffs were desirous of leasing to these two defendants the lands described in the complaint, to be farmed and cultivated by defendants as hop lands and to be farmed as such, for the term of five years, and after considerable negotiations the plaintiffs drew up and submitted to the defendants a memoranda of lease containing the terms and conditions of the lease to be executed and delivered to the defendants within a reasonable time thereafter, a copy of the said memoranda of lease is hereunto annexed and made a part hereof, and marked Exhibit ‘A.’ ” The said memoranda were not signed by either of the parties.

It is next alleged that defendants “accepted the terms and conditions of said proposed lease”; that it was understood and agreed that a lease, in accordance with the terms of said “memoranda of lease,” should be drawn and executed by plaintiffs; that in the meantime defendants were to enter, into possession of said lands, the same as if said lease had been executed and delivered; that defendants went into possession of said lands and began the farming and cultivation thereof according to the terms of said “memoranda of lease,” believing a lease would be executed to them for the term of five years from the month of September, 1913, to the 1st of October, 1918; that, relying on said “memoranda of lease,” defendants began farming said lands and planted the same in hops, expended large sums of money in putting a certain levee in proper condition, in clearing about twenty acres of land, boring a well, the purchase of wagons and mules, etc.

„ It is alleged that,' about the fifteenth day of December, 1913, plaintiffs presented to and asked defendants to sign a lease, but that defendants refused so to do “because the said lease was altogether different and much more onerous than the one agreed upon, as set out in said Exhibit ‘A,’ and plaintiffs promised and agreed to change the same, and told defendants to go right ahead the same as had been agreed upon for the term of five years, that the matter would be fixed out thereafter as originally agreed upon”; that, relying upon said understanding,' defendants continued to work said lands as required by the terms of said Exhibit “A,” “and at the *186 end of the year in September, 1914, had done so at a loss of more than $250, besides the performance of their own labor up to said date.” It is further alleged that, relying upon said understanding and with the consent of plaintiffs, defendants, in September and October, 1914, did a large amount of work on said ranch preparing the same for cultivation in the season of 1915, at a cost to them of more than two thousand one hundred dollars.

The prayer of the cross-complaint is “that plaintiffs be required to execute and deliver to said defendants a lease of the lands described in the complaint for a term of five years in accordance with and containing the terms and conditions set out and contained in the memoranda of lease, Exhibit ‘A.’ ”

Exhibit “A,” attached to the complaint, covers four typewritten pages, and, in terse sentences, specifies what each of the parties to the proposed lease was expected to do.

To said cross-complaint and to said Exhibit “A” plaintiffs filed a demurrer on general grounds and also specifying that certain designated portions thereof were ambiguous, uncertain, and unintelligible. The judge presiding at the hearing of the demurrer in the court below filed a written opinion which, among «other matters, contained the following: “An inspection of the memoranda prepared and set forth as Exhibit ‘A’ in the complaint shows that the minds of the parties never met in many of the terms to be contained in the lease. These terms were left for after consideration and agreement between the parties. . . . The cross-complaint seems to be full and well pleaded. I cannot see how it will be possible for defendants to state the matters therein stated, or to supply any allegation that would render the pleading unobjectionable. Therefore the demurrer is sustained without leave to amend.”

On the 28th of June, 1915, the cause coming on regularly for trial, plaintiffs moved for judgment upon the pleadings in accordance with the prayer of plaintiffs’ complaint. The motion was granted and judgment was entered quieting plaintiffs’ title to the premises described in the complaint and decreeing that they were entitled to the possession thereof. The appeal is by defendants from said judgment.

The demurrer to the cross-complaint was properly sustained, and, since_ the relief demanded by that pleading de *187 pended entirely on the “memoranda of lease,” it is manifest that no cause of action for such relief could he stated by the plaintiffs, hence the order refusing leave to amend was proper.

As seen, the learned trial judge, who heard and disposed of the demurrer to the cross-complaint, filed a written opinion setting forth his reasons for sustaining the demurrer. Said opinion is printed in the transcript on appeal. One of the reasons advanced by him in said opinion for holding that the cross-complaint failed to state a cause of action for the relief demanded by that pleading was that it appeared from the “memoranda of lease” referred to in said complaint that the agreement or lease to be executed by the parties was to be reduced to writing, and that, since the instrument just named was signed by neither of the parties and the proposed lease was not executed or put in writing and signed by the parties, there was no completed contract or agreement which was binding upon either of the parties, thus bringing the case as made by the cross-complaint within the doctrine enunciated in the following cases: Fuller v. Reed, 38 Cal. 100, Spinney v. Downing, 108 Cal. 666, [41 Pac. 797], Ambler v. Whipple, 20 Wall. (U. S.) 546, [22 L. Bd. 403], Morrill v. Tehama etc. Co., 10 Nev.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P. 449, 35 Cal. App. 184, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durst-v-jolly-calctapp-1917.