Farrington v. McClellan

146 P. 1051, 26 Cal. App. 375, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 243
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1256.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 P. 1051 (Farrington v. McClellan) 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
Farrington v. McClellan, 146 P. 1051, 26 Cal. App. 375, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 243 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HART, J.

The controversy here arises out of certain agreements alleged in the complaint to have been entered into between the plaintiffs and the defendants whereby the latter agreed to pay the former certain compensation for negotiating the sale of certain real property situated in the city of Stockton.

Judgment was awarded the plaintiffs as against the defendant and appellant, F. E. McClellan, in the sum of three hundred and fifty dollars (the amount sued for), with interest thereon from the first day of February, 1913. Furthermore, in accordance with the prayer of the complaint based upon averments thereof that the contract declared upon contained a misdescription of the property involved, the court adjudged and decreed that said contract be so reformed as that the same be described therein according to its true description.

The complaint alleges that, on the eleventh day of November, 1912, the appellant, F. E. McClellan, executed and delivered to the plaintiffs a writing whereby the latter were invested with authority to sell or procure for him a purchaser of the property referred to in the complaint for the sum of three thousand nine hundred dollars, net, and in cash, within sixty days from the date of said writing, “and thereafter until notice in writing be given the said Farrington & Hubbard of the withdrawal of said property, and if a sale of said property shall be negotiated during that time, I promise to pay the said Farrington & Hubbard a commission of any amount above $3,900.00.”

It is further alleged that, after the date of said instrument, “and within the time therein provided, and in pursuance of the terms thereof, the plaintiffs procured a purchaser, *377 to wit, Stockton Grove, No. 118, U. A. O. Druids, ready, willing, and able to purchase the said property for the sum of four thousand two hundred and fifty dollars”; that the plaintiffs negotiated a sale of said property with the said purchaser and thereafter the said purchaser entered into a written agreement with the defendants to purchase the said real property for the sum of four thousand two hundred fifty dollars, and thereupon tendered to the defendants the said sum of money, “and the said sum is now in possession and under the control of said defendants”; that, on the nineteenth day of December, 1912, another writing or agreement, purporting to have been executed and signed by both F. E. and Minnie McClellan, the defendants, was delivered to the plaintiffs, and which reads as follows: “In consideration of commission earned by A. L. Farrington and F. B. Hubbard, composing the real estate firm of Farrington & Hubbard, in the sale of our property consisting of Lot Number 8, in Block Number 33, east of Center Street, in Stockton, California, we, or either of us, agree to pay to the said Farrington & Hubbard out of the final payment for said property, which is due and payable February 1st, 1913, by Stockton Grove, No. 118, U. A. O. Druids, the sum of $350.00.’’

Both the above-mentioned writings are set out in the complaint in haec verba.

A demurrer to the complaint, interposed by both defendants, having been overruled, the latter filed separate answers in which they specifically denied the averments of the complaint and set up certain special defenses. In her answer, by way of a special defense, the defendant, Minnie McClellan, alleged that, when the agreements above referred to were made, she was an invalid, that she was often required to take opiates, for relief from the great physical pain from which she was suffering, with the result that, during the period of time covering the negotiations and transactions mentioned in the complaint, she was incapable of understanding business transactions of any kind, and that she had no knowledge of the agreements set out in the complaint or of any matters appertaining thereto until the 24th day of December, 1912, when the transaction involved here was explained to her, “to the. effect, that the alleged agreements had been signed by her husband for her, subject to her approval, and that she then *378 and there refused to ratify said proposed agreements or either of them, or to he hound by any of the provisions thereof.”

The special defense interposed by the appellant involves the charge that the plaintiff, Farrington, obtained the contract of December 19, 1912, “by means of threats, misrepresentation, fraud, concealment and unfair practices,” the nature of which is described with considerable particularity in the answer but which it is believed to be unnecessary to explain here, since there is no serious claim that there is evidence which supports that charge.

The facts of the transaction upon which the action is founded as the same were developed by the evidence from which the court evidently made its findings are, substantially: On the eleventh day of November, 1912, the plaintiff, Farrington, and the appellant met on - one of the streets in the city of Stockton'and there held a conversation in the course of which the appellant asked the said plaintiff (who was then, with the plaintiff Hubbard, engaged in the buying and selling of real estate in said city) if he could not sell the property referred to in the complaint. After some discussion, the appellant said he would take three thousand nine hundred dollars, net, for said property and agreed that the plaintiffs might retain, as their compensation for selling or procuring a purchaser of the property, all that they might receive for the same in excess of that sum. Farrington thereupon prepared a written contract embracing the terms stated and, as seen, giving the plaintiffs sixty days, or thereafter until notice of the termination of the contract was given them by the appellant, within which to make the sale. It appears that the lot was erroneously, and doubtless inadvertently, given to Farrington by the appellant as “No. six” in the block in which it is situated, whereas it was, in fact, lot No. eight, in said block, and that this error was not discovered until after the execution of the contract of November 11, 1912, authorizing the plaintiffs to sell the property upon the terms above specified. Parenthetically, it may be said that no question could arise as to the particular lot to which the agreement was intended to relate, since it does not seem to be disputed that the lot which it was the understanding that the plaintiffs were given authority to sell was the one upon which the appellant’s blacksmith shop stood and that that was the lot to which the transaction referred.

*379 After the making of the said agreement, the plaintiffs advertised the property for sale in a Stockton newspaper at the sum of four thousand two hundred and fifty dollars and also made other personal efforts to sell it. Within sixty days from the date of the authorization granted to the plaintiffs to sell the property, they negotiated the sale of the same to a fraternal organization in the city of Stockton, known and designated as Stockton Grove, No. 18, U. A. O. Druids, for the sum of four thousand two hundred and fifty dollars. The trustees of the Druids deposited with the plaintiffs the sum of two hundred dollars as the initial payment on the purchase price and the plaintiffs thereupon reported the sale to the appellant and tendered him the sum so deposited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P. 1051, 26 Cal. App. 375, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrington-v-mcclellan-calctapp-1915.