Empire Investment Co. v. Mort

147 P. 960, 169 Cal. 732, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 563
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1915
DocketSac. Nos. 2175 and 2176.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 147 P. 960 (Empire Investment Co. v. Mort) 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
Empire Investment Co. v. Mort, 147 P. 960, 169 Cal. 732, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 563 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

The Empire Investment Company, in September, 1910, entered into a contract with defendants whereby plaintiff agreed to sell and defendants to buy a tract of land in Kings County for something more than twenty-three thousand dollars, payable in annual installments. The first payment was due on November 1, 1911, but was not met by defendants, and plaintiff having elected to declare the contract forfeited and so to notify defendants, brought suit to recover possession of the tract and for damages for retention, alleging in its complaint that it was the owner in fee of the property. Defendants answered and upon issues thus joined and upon others, arising by reason of a pleading in the nature of a cross-complaint and an amendment to the answer (both of which defendants were permitted to file after the cause had come on for trial before the court and jury), the ease was tried and judgment was given in favor of defendants. From this judgment plaintiff appealed during the preparation of the statement on motion for a new trial. Subsequently the motion for a new trial was granted and from the court’s order in that behalf defendants have appealed. Both appeals are by stipulation heard together.

By the contract of sale and purchase, which admittedly was made by the parties hereto, it was provided, among other things, that Messrs. Mort and Wagy should take and occupy the premises until they should make default; that they should pay all taxes and all dues for water; that time was of the essence of the agreement; and that failure by the vendees to perform any of the covenants would, at the option of the vendor, terminate the contract and the interest of the vendees *735 and give the Empire Investment Company the right to reenter and take possession of the land. These provisions of the agreement and others were set forth in plaintiff’s amended complaint, and in addition to the allegation that no part of the purchase price had been tendered or received, it was averred that defendants had failed to settle the water rent and had, in fact, paid nothing under the contract; that upon their refusal, upon request of performance of the terms of that agreement, plaintiff had demanded possession of the land and notified defendants that it elected to terminate the agreement. The prayer was for the usual relief in such eases.

In their answer as originally filed defendants denied plaintiff’s title to a part of the land in dispute and to the water-rights attached thereto and alleged that by plaintiff’s fraud they had been prevented from learning such facts until long after the suit had been instituted; denied that plaintiff was entitled to possession of the land; admitted their own possession thereof; and denied, that the water company had furnished water, as agreed, for the land or that they owed for water used on the premises. As a separate defense it was alleged that in June, 1911, plaintiff, by the blowing up of a certain levee, had caused the waters of the river to overflow the planted crops of defendants, thus preventing them from making the payments stipulated in the contract and damaging them in a large sum of money.

When the case came on for trial the court permitted the filing of an amended answer, setting up substantially all of the matters pleaded in the original answer, but introducing for the first time a counterclaim against plaintiff for the alleged damages suffered by defendants because of the overflow of the water.

On motion, the parts of the answer denying plaintiff’s title to the land in controversy were stricken out on the ground that defendants were estopped from disputing such title. The court ruled that it would be taken as an admitted fact in the case that plaintiff owned the property described in the complaint.

Plaintiff thereupon offered evidence on the issue of the rental value of the premises after the default of defendants, and upon the matter of the furnishing of water to defendants *736 by the water company referred to in the complaint and the failure of defendants to pay for such water.

During the trial defendants sought unsuccessfully to introduce evidence of a certain oral agreement made by the parties at the time the written contract was executed; but subsequently by amendment to the answer they were allowed to plead it and in the trial to offer testimony in support of such oral agreement. The alleged verbal contract was, in brief, that if Messrs. Wagy and Mort would sign the written instrument which was then presented to them, the Empire Investment Company would complete the levee along the west line of the land now in question in the suit, being the east bank of Kings River; would repair the weak places in the levee; would bring it up to grade; and would construct and complete a levee along the south line of the property.

Plaintiff insists that, even upon the assumption of the absence of error from the court’s ruling permitting the amendments and the testimony in support of them, defendants have no standing in their attack upon the order granting a new trial, for the reason that the facts forming the basis of the answer were all disputed. For example, defendants introduced testimony tending to show that one Howard Odale blew up the levee, thus causing a great and destructive flow of water over their crops and that Odale was the agent of plaintiff, acting within the scope of his employment. Plaintiff denied Odale’s agency; and also the existence of any oral agreement binding it to repair any levees or to keep them in repair. These denials were all supported by testimony in conflict with that which defendants offered. One of the grounds upon which the court granted the motion for a new trial was insufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. We may not disturb such an order where there was a conflict of evidence upon material issues unless we may say that a verdict in favor of the moving party would not have found sufficient legal support in the evidence adduced at the trial. (Wendling Lumber Co. v. Glenwood Lumber Co., 153 Cal. 416, [95 Pac. 1029] ; Gordon v. Roberts, 162 Cal. 509, [123 Pac. 288].) And this is the rule even in a ease in which, as in this one, the judge who made the order did not preside at the trial. There was direct testimony that Odale was not employed by plaintiff at all, but was a servant of the Empire Water Company. Defendants introduced testimony of cir *737 cumstances tending to show that Odale was the ostensible agent of plaintiff, but the existence of many of these circumstances was denied by plaintiff’s witnesses. Both defendants gave testimony regarding the oral agreement, but they were flatly contradicted by plaintiff’s witnesses. There was ample evidence in the record to have given support to a verdict in favor of plaintiff if such evidence had been accepted as true. Therefore under the pleadings, as they stood, the order should be affirmed.

As the case may be tried again we shall discuss some of the errors of law specified. Plaintiff contends that the action was one in ejectment and not on the contract. It is insisted that when defendants failed to perform the conditions of the contract plaintiff immediately became entitled to possession of the land and might maintain ejectment to obtain such possession. Defendants may not hold the premises and withhold the purchase price. Undoubtedly that is the rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 P. 960, 169 Cal. 732, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empire-investment-co-v-mort-cal-1915.