Goodrich v. Turney

186 P. 806, 44 Cal. App. 516, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 593
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2030.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 186 P. 806 (Goodrich v. Turney) 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
Goodrich v. Turney, 186 P. 806, 44 Cal. App. 516, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 593 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HART, J.

The action was brought to recover a broker’s commission of five hundred dollars for the exchange of real properties. From a judgment in favor of plaintiff for that amount, defendant appeals.

Defendant and his wife were the owners, as tenants in common, of two lots, consisting of forty acres, in Fairmead Colony No. 3, in the county of Madera. About one year before the contract in suit was executed, defendant signed a “listing card,” in which he authorized plaintiff to sell or trade his real and personal property (describing it) for the sum of ten thousand dollars, stating that he would trade for “small orchard about 10 a. about same price, or small acg. in town of San Jose.” Some months later, one R. T. Padget listed with plaintiff for sale or trade certain property in the city of San Jose and six acres of country property, “for the sum of $15,000.00 or any other price that I may agree upon,” and stating that he wanted a “valley ranch.” On the real property of defendant there was a mortgage of three thousand dollars, while on Padget’s property there was a mortgage of $4,250. Plaintiff called to defendant’s attention the Padget property and drove him and his wife to San Jose to look at it. Defendant said he would trade if $1,250 of the Padget mortgage were paid, to make the equities, in his opinion, of equal value. Plaintiff thereupon filled in a blank form of contract, read it to defendant and his wife, and defendant signed it. Said contract read, in part, as follows: “This agreement entered into this 4th day of Jan. 1918, Witnesseth, that the undersigned, the owner of the first piece of property, situate, lying and being near Fairmead [describing the property as ‘Lots No. 423 and 424 of the Fairmead Colony Tract’], now belonging to M. Turney, which the undersigned agree to exchange for the second piece of property [describing Padget’s property], together with $1250.00 cash or bank mtg. on 1st described *518 property. The terms of such exchange are to be as follows: . . . The undersigned will execute and deliver a good and sufficient conveyance to the first described piece of property by grant, bargain and sale deed or contract to owner of second piece of property, subject to an incumbrance in the amount of $3,000.00,” and also subject to certain road reservations, “for a like conveyance of the second piece of property by the owner thereof, subject to an incumbrance in the amount of $3,000.00.” Taxes on each piece of property were to be paid by the present - owner and an abstract or certificate of title to be furnished by Turney. The San Joaquin Valley Land Company was authorized to ■act as Turney’s agent, and in case it secured an acceptance of the exchange agreement within twenty days, Turney agreed to pay five per cent commission on the listed price of ten thousand dollars.

About one week after the execution of said agreement, Padget went to Madera and examined the Turney properties and thereafter executed to plaintiff an instrument, by the terms of which he accepted said agreement of exchange and agreed to furnish a deed or contract conveying title to his property to Turney. Both instruments contained a clause agreeing that plaintiff might act as agent for each of the parties.

Defendant furnished to plaintiff a certificate of title covering the former’s property. Arrangements were made to have Turney execute a deed, and the abstracts and deeds of Padget were left with W. H. Larew, defendant’s attorney. On January 25, 1918, Mr. Larew wrote to plaintiff, making certain suggestions about the Padget abstracts of title, and stating that he could not examine them and give a written opinion as to title in less than ten days. On January 30, 1918, Mr. Larew wrote to plaintiff: “Mr. M. Turney of Pairmead requests me to write and say that he has decided to go no further with the proposed land trade.”

Defendant, in his answer, alleged that he was a married man; that he was the owner of an undivided one-half interest “in Lots 423 and 424 of Pairmead Colony Tract No. 3, in Madera County, as a tenant in common with” his wife, Lydia A. Turney; “that the property described is community property; that it stood of record in the names of the defendant and L. A. Turney, his wife, at the time the *519 defendant signed. That there are eight Fairmead Colony-tracts in Madera County, numbered from No. 1 to No. 8, inclusive; . . . that no sufficient description of any property is contained in the paper signed 'by defendant and alleged by the plaintiff to be an offer to R. T. Padget, and that the terms of the alleged offer are unintelligible.”

As a second defense, defendant alleged that he was induced to sign said contract through fraud and misrepresentation and that plaintiff plied him with liquor at the time he signed so that he was incompetent to transact business. Among the misrepresentations set forth were that plaintiff said that the Padget property was worth eleven thousand dollars, when in fact it was worth but seven thousand dollars, and was in the hands of another 'broker for sale for the last-named sum, and that the Padget land was subject to flood and overflow.

The court, upon sufficient evidence, found that the above affirmative allegations of the answer were untrue.

[1] Nothing could be clearer than that the plaintiff, having secured an acceptance of the offer of the defendant to make an exchange of his property for that of the Padgets, earned the commission which the defendant agreed to pay it for that service, and that it is entitled to be paid the same. But the defendant contends that the written offer is void under section 172a of the Civil Code [Stats. 1917, p. 829], because, the property which the defendant agreed to exchange for that of the Padgets being community property, it was necessary, to make the agreement valid, that the defendant’s wife should also have signed said -written offer. Said section provides, among other things, that “the husband has the management and control of the community real property, but the wife must join with him in executing any instrument by which such community real property or any interest therein is leased for a longer period than one year, or is sold, conveyed, or encumbered. ...”

It is doubtful whether the instrument by and in which the defendant offered to exchange his property comes within the language or purview of said section, since it does not involve a lease or a sale of the real property, but only an offer to exchange such property for other property; but, assuming that it does, that does not make the writing absolutely void, but voidable only at the instance of the wife. But, as far *520 as is concerned the right of the plaintiff to the stipulated compensation for securing an acceptance of the offer, it is wholly immaterial whether the property was or was not community, or, if community, whether the defendant’s wife signed the written offer. Indeed, the defendant’s title to the property might be so defective that he could not have given a clear title thereto if the exchange had been consummated, and still the plaintiff would be entitled to the commission agreed upon. There was no agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant that the plaintiff’s right to the commissions was to depend upon whether the defendant could make a legal conveyance of his property to the Padgets or whether the title was good or defective, or whether the exchange was actually consummated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 P. 806, 44 Cal. App. 516, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodrich-v-turney-calctapp-1919.