Graddon v. Knight

222 P.2d 329, 99 Cal. App. 2d 700, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1765
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 1950
DocketCiv. No. 14257 First Dist., Div
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 222 P.2d 329 (Graddon v. Knight) 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
Graddon v. Knight, 222 P.2d 329, 99 Cal. App. 2d 700, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1765 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

DOOLING, J.

In June 1949 the plaintiffs Graddon, husband and wife, desiring to construct a residence procured for that purpose a so-called G.I. loan from the intervener, The Anglo California National Bank, hereinafter called the bank. To secure the loan the plaintiffs executed a deed of trust with intervener, Anglo Safe Deposit Company, named as trustee. The Graddons entered into a contract with defendant Knight for the construction of such residence. When the residence was largely completed it was destroyed by fire.

The Graddons filed a complaint against Knight and certain of his employees charging that the fire was caused by the negligence of, and violation of a county ordinance by, Knight’s employees. Knight filed a cross-complaint against the Grad-dons charging a breach of the Graddons’ contract with Knight to keep the building insured against loss by fire during construction payable to Knight as his interest might appear.

The bank and its trustee filed a complaint in intervention in which they sought a recovery against Knight and his employees for the damages suffered by them, based on similar allegations of negligence and violation of ordinance to those in the Graddons’ complaint. The Graddons and Knight each filed cross-complaints against the interveners counting on their alleged duty under the deed of trust to procure and maintain fire insurance on the uncompleted building for the *702 protection of the interests of the Graddons as parties to the deed of trust and of Knight as a third party beneficiary. Finally the interveners cross-complained against the Grad-dons alleging their substitution of a cost plus contract with Knight without the knowledge or consent of the interveners for the flat price contract upon which the loan was based.

Upon this complicated set of pleadings the case was tried before a jury resulting in verdicts and judgments in favor of the Graddons and Knight on their cross-complaints against the bank for money judgments based on the bank’s failure to procure and maintain fire insurance; a verdict and judgment in favor of defendants Knight and his employees against the plaintiffs Graddon on the Graddons ’ complaint; a verdict and judgment in favor of cross-defendants Graddon on Knight’s cross-complaint against them; and a verdict and judgment in favor of Knight and the Graddons on the bank’s cross-complaint against them. No verdict or judgment was returned or entered expressly adjudicating the bank's original complaint in intervention.

The Graddons appeal from the judgment against them and in favor of Knight and his employees on the Graddons’ complaint, and the interveners appeal generally from all of the judgments.

We shall first consider the

Money Judgments Against the Bank

The deed of trust was executed on a printed form in use by the bank. Paragraph Third of the printed deed of trust provides:

“The Trustor (the Graddons) agrees at all times during the continuation of these trusts to keep the buildings and improvements ... on said property, insured against loss or damage by fire ... to the amount of their full insurable value (or less in the discretion of Beneficiary) . . . with loss made payable to Beneficiary. ...”

A Paragraph Twenty-third was added in typewriting reading in part:

“This deed of trust ... is made in accordance with and subject to the provisions of the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944, as amended in 1945, and the Rules and Regulations of the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs issued pursuant thereto. ...”

Section 36.4326 of Regulations, Administrator (of Veterans’ Affairs), Feb. 27, 1946 (5 Code of Fed. Reg. 5953 (Supp. 1946)) provides:

*703 “Hazard Insurance. The holder shall require insurance policies to be procured and maintained in an amount sufficient to protect the security against the risks or hazards to which it may be subjected to the extent customary in the locality. All monies received under such policies covering payment of insured losses shall be applied to restoration of the security or to the loan balance. ’ ’

Pursuant to, and in explanation of, this regulation the Veterans Administration issued a bulletin or notice reading:

The obligation upon the lender ... to see that insurance in sufficient amount and types to protect the security against risks and hazards to the extent customary in the locality is procured and maintained, is clearly set forth in Section 36.4326.”

It was proved that it was customary in the locality to procure and maintain fire insurance on a building under construction, and it was the claim of the Graddons and Knight that by Paragraph Twenty-third read in connection with section 36.4326 of the regulations above quoted the contract duty was assumed by the bank to procure and maintain such insurance.

The court, on the theory that Paragraph Third under which the Graddons agreed to keep the building insured against fire was inconsistent with Paragraph Twenty-third which incorporated section 36.4326 of the regulations thereby creating an ambiguity, allowed oral testimony to aid in the construction of those provisions. It is the theory of the Graddons and Knight that, at least in the light of this oral testimony, the jury was entitled to find that the bank had assumed the obligation itself to procure and maintain fire insurance on the building. At the request of Knight the jury was instructed:

“If you find that the bank and Graddon executed a deed of trust and that this deed of trust provided that the bank was to procure insurance against loss by fire . . . and that the bank and Graddon expressly intended and agreed in the deed of trust that the insurance . . . was to be for the benefit of Graddon and the contractor Knight, and that the bank and Graddon did not rescind the deed of trust . . . and if you find that the bank did not procure or maintain insurance against loss by fire 1 . . then cross-complainant Knight is entitled to recover against the bank. ...”

Thus the Graddons and Knight both relied on the theory that under the deed of trust the bank had bound itself to the *704 Graddons that the bank would procure and maintain such insurance and that the failure to do so was a breach of its contract with the Graddons.

We agree with the bank that under the plain and unambiguous terms of the deed of trust the Graddons assumed the duty to procure and maintain such insurance and the bank did not promise the Graddons that the bank would itself procure or maintain it.

Under Paragraph Third the Graddons clearly and unequivocally agreed that the Graddons were “to keep the buildings and improvements . . . insured against loss or damage by fire. ...” Under section 36.4326 : “ The holder shall require insurance policies to be procured and maintained. ...” “Require” is a transitive verb meaning “To demand; to claim as by right and authority; to exact” and its synonyms are “claim, necessitate, ask, enjoin, compel, force.” (Webster’s New Internat. Diet., 2d ed., Unabridged.)

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Brown v. Department of Veterans Affairs
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226 P.2d 636 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 P.2d 329, 99 Cal. App. 2d 700, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graddon-v-knight-calctapp-1950.