Edwards v. Baker

180 P. 33, 39 Cal. App. 755, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 220
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1902.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 180 P. 33 (Edwards v. Baker) 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
Edwards v. Baker, 180 P. 33, 39 Cal. App. 755, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 220 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HART, J.

The action was based upon three certain promissory notes, each for the sum of $266.66, dated Modesto, September 27, 1910, payable, respectively, on the fifth days of April of 1913, 1914, and 1915, executed by defendant and payable to the order of plaintiffs.

It is deemed proper first to explain that the notes sued on were given by Baker to the plaintiffs as the result of the compromise of a suit brought against the latter by the former, upon a quantum meruit, for the reasonable value of services performed by the plaintiffs in negotiating the sale of certain lands for the defendant to one P. Weisendanger. The following clause was contained in each of the first two notes declared upon: 1 ‘ Said note to be paid only out of the money to be paid by P. Weisendanger or his assigns for purchase price of G. L. Baker ranch and not out of interest." The third note contained a similar clause, with the exception that instead of “G. L. Baker ranch," it referred to “Gilbert ranch." It appeared that this was a mistake of the party who drew up the notes, the defendant’s first name being Gilbert and the intention being to refer to the Baker ranch. It also appeared that the true name of the party mentioned in the pleadings *757 and notes as “P. Weisendanger” was “Theodore Weisendanger, ’ ’ and that the letter “ T, ” in some of the instruments herein mentioned, was so written that it might easily be taken for “P. ” However, no point is made on this fact.

It appears from the evidence that the plaintiffs, real estate brokers, were employed by the defendant Baker to negotiate for him the sale of certain lands embraced within a certain district or territory in Stanislaus County, known as the ‘1 Oak-dale Colony,” and that the plaintiffs procured a purchaser in the person of said Theodore Weisendanger, with whom the defendant, entered into a written contract for the sale of said lands on the twenty-fourth day of March, 1910. Said contract provided for the sale by Baker to Weisendanger of the several parcels or tracts of land therein described for the aggregate sum of forty-eight thousand eight hundred dollars, to be paid in three substantially equal annual installments, beginning “on or before” the fifth day of April, 1913, with interest at the rate of six per cent, payable in advance. The contract provided, in part, as follows:

“First party agrees to deliver deeds to any ten (10) acre tracts any time on receiving sixty-five (65) dollars per acre, such payments to apply on the time payments falling due next in order of time. Second party to receive one-fourth of the crop of 1910, grain in sacks, hay baled both delivered at Oak-dale Warehouse, and to have the benefit of the summer fallowing plowing now done. First party agrees to give T. Weisendanger possession of the ranch on August 1st, 1910. And the party of the second part agrees to pay all state and county taxes or assessments of whatsoever nature which may become due on the premises above described after June, 1910.
“In the event of a failure to comply with the terms hereof, by the party of the second part, the parties of the first part shall be released from all obligation in law or equity to convey said property, and the party of the second part shall forfeit all right thereto. And the parties of the first part, on receiving such payment, at the time and in the manner above mentioned, agree to execute and deliver to the party of the second part, or to his assigns, a good and sufficient deed. ’ ’

Weisendanger took possession of the land under said contract and thereafter entered into contracts with three several parties for the sale of certain subdivisions of the lands to them. It appears that Weisendanger paid the interest on *758 the purchase price of the land down to the date when the first payment on the principal sum fell due, to wit, April 5, 1913. He, however, defaulted in the payment of the said first installment on the principal sum and, on the second day of May, 1913, Baker commenced an action against Weisendanger and others to quiet title to the lands described in the contract between him and Weisendanger and to have said contract declared null and void. Contemporaneously with the filing of the complaint in said action, Baker caused to be recorded in the proper office a lis pendens.

On the twenty-sixth day of May, 1913, Weisendanger made a purported assignment of said contract to the Conservative Investment Company of Los Angeles, a corporation. Said assignment recited that “Theodore Weisendanger hereby sells, assigns, transfers, conveys and sets over unto the Conservative Investment Company of Los Angeles, a corporation, that certain agreement made and entered into the 24th day of March, 1910, by and between Gilbert L. Baker and Mabel Baker, his wife, and Theodore Weisendanger, together with all rights and interests of every kind and character belonging or accruing to said Theodore Weisendanger under and by virtue of said agreement, and the said Conservative Investment Company, of Los Angeles, by its acceptance of these presents, does hereby assume all of the ditches and obligations of said Theodore Weisendanger under and by virtue of said agreement, ’ ’ and the property was then described.

On the second day of June, 1913, Weisendanger interposed a demurrer to the complaint in the action brought by Baker to quiet title and to nullify the effect of the contract referred to and, on the seventeenth day of June, 1913, Baker dismissed said action, the reason for the dismissal not being shown by the record herein.

The evidence discloses that Weisendanger was at one time the owner of nine-tenths of the capital stock of the Conservative Investment Company, above mentioned, but that, after transferring or assigning to said company his contract to purchase the Baker lands, he sold all of said stock to a number of persons who had formed themselves into a syndicate for the purpose of taking over said'stoek and the business of said company. It appears that after said transaction the new owners of said company found, upon looking into its assets, the assignment made by Weisendanger to the company of the con *759 tract for the sale to Weisendanger of the Baker lands. Mr. Rupp, then, the secretary of the Investment Company, testified that the corporation desired to- buy some land in the Oak-dale section of Stanislaus County, and upon finding that the contract between Weisendanger and Baker had been assigned to it, the company, through its representatives, immediately took steps looking to the purchase of the lands involved and described in said contract. An attorney of the company was first sent to Oakdale to look into the proposition and he thereafter reported to the company that when Weisendanger made the purported assignment mentioned he had nothing to assign, his contract with Baker having been forfeited because of his failure to pay the first installment on the purchase price of the lands called for by the said contract. Negotiations were then entered into with Baker by representatives of the Investment Company for the purchase of the lands, and the same wrere consummated by the execution, on June 5, 1913, of a deed by Baker and his wife conveying substantially the same lands described in the Weisendanger contract to the Investment Company.

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Bluebook (online)
180 P. 33, 39 Cal. App. 755, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-baker-calctapp-1919.