Hay v. Hollingsworth

183 P. 582, 42 Cal. App. 238, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 696
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 16, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2631.
StatusPublished

This text of 183 P. 582 (Hay v. Hollingsworth) 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
Hay v. Hollingsworth, 183 P. 582, 42 Cal. App. 238, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 696 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered for defendants on a directed verdict, and also from an order made denying his motion for a new trial.

In December, 1910, defendant Hollingsworth held an agency agreement with the Keating Estate authorizing him, under certain limitations and restrictions, to dispose of real property belonging to that estate. Defendant Marsh had made a conditional arrangement to purchase some of this property. J. 0. Downing desired to purchase fifty acres of the land which Marsh was endeavoring to secure, and he negotiated with Marsh, with the result that he made a deposit of two thousand five hundred dollars, for which a receipt was issued to him by Hollingsworth in the following words:

“Received of J. 0. Downing the sum of twenty-five hundred (2500) dollars, as a deposit and part of the purchase price, an additional fifteen hundred (1500) dollars to be paid on or before December 14th, 1910, also as a deposit and part of the purchase price of the following described real property situate in the county of Los Angeles, state of California: Being the southeast quarter of lot three (3) as shown on map prepared by W. I. Hollingsworth, said map being of the Keating Estate property, containing fifty (50) acres, a little more or less. Full purchase price of said property to be eleven hundred (1100) dollars per acre, terms of sale one-third *240 (Ys) of the purchase price, including the above mentioned deposits, to be paid on or before January 15th, 1911; balance to be paid in three equal annual payments bearing interest at the rate of six (6) per cent net, payable semi-annually. The Heating Estate agrees to give a good and sufficient deed and certificate of title, showing the title to be free and clear of encumbrance, through the Title Guarantee and Trust Company. Said company to give a declaration of trust covering the above points. The said company to reserve the discretionary power to date the transaction and said deferred payments shall become due in one, two and three years from said time. This deposit is taken subject to the approval of the Keating Estate. If title is not good, this deposit to be returned.

“W. I. Hollingsworth & Co.,

“Per W. I. Hollingsworth,

“Agent.”

Marsh and Downing attached their names to this receipt, under the word “approved,” below the signature of Hollingsworth. It will be noted that the deposit was taken upon the express condition that the sale should be approved by “the Keating Estate.” In passing we may pause to remark that it appeared to be the evident intention, judging from the wording of the instrument, that the approval of the Keating Estate should precede the requirement that more money should be paid by Downing under the terms agreed upon. There is no dispute at all under the evidence but that the Keating Estate refused to approve this sale; that Downing was notified to that effect and it was stated to him that he might have back the two thousand five hundred dollars first deposited. Mr. Hollingsworth in the course of his testimony said: “In the latter part of February or the first of March [1911] Mr. Downing called on me in regard to the matter, and I telephoned for Mr. Marsh to come down to my office and he did. I told him we had tendered the balance of our first payment to the Trust Company and had been refused. Mr. Marsh repeated over, I think, again what I said and told him we had made a strong effort to try and get the contract fulfilled, but had failed. Mr. Marsh told Mr. Downing he *241 would be glad to return the two thousand five hundred dollars. Mr. Downing said he didn’t want it. He said he would not take it. I never told Mr. Downing that I had any interest in the purchase which Mr. Marsh was making. I had no interest. I told him Mr. Marsh’s money entirely at the time made the purchase.” At another point in his testimony Mr. Hollingsworth said: “I told Mr. Downing at least two times that he could have his money back at any time he wanted it.” He' said further: “I remember about the 15th of January [1911] we had a talk about the matter. That was the time when he should have completed the first payment, and I said to him, ‘Mr. Downing, I am very much in hopes of carrying this through for you at that time. But you can have your money.’” Without further. stating the evidence, we may again repeat that there was no claim made by either of the defendants that they were ever able to fulfill their contract with Downing. They accepted his deposit of two thousand five hundred dollars conditionally only and the condition never occurred which enabled them to complete the transaction; they notified Downing that they could not complete it. This action was brought in the name of Hay to recover damages for breach of contract by reason of the failure of the defendants to convey. It was alleged that in making the purchase Downing acted as the agent for Hay, Hay being an undisclosed principal. In the prayer of the complaint damages in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars was first asked for upon the theory that, as borne out by some of the allegations in the complaint, the defendants had not acted in good faith in refusing to carry out the deal, but refused because it was of greater interest to them to take that course. The second item of damage for which recovery was asked—the deposit of two thousand five hundred dollars—was predicated upon a statement of the facts of the transaction, together with this allegation found in the complaint: “That the defendants in this action, since the thirteenth day of December, 1910, have retained the said sum of two thousand five hundred dollars paid by the plaintiff to the defendants, and have not at any time offered to return the said sum, or any part thereof, notwithstanding the fact *242 that the said defendants on the twenty-ninth day of March, 1911, refused to carry out any of the terms and conditions of said contract on their part, and the said sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, together with interest thereon from the thirteenth day of December, 1910, is due, owing, and unpaid from the defendants to this plaintiff.” Separate briefs have been filed on behalf of defendants. [1] We think argument is unnecessary to sustain the judgment refusing general damages because of alleged breach of contract to convey the real property. In that particular we think that the evidence was sufficient to authorize the court in concluding that defendants did not act in bad faith in failing to complete the deal, and that the particular sale contemplated under the receipt issued to Downing was refused approval by the Keating Estate. Such being the case, the contract necessarily failed of consummation and Downing’s only right was to recover the two thousand five hundred dollars deposited. We have noted that this money was in words offered back to him and that he announced that he would refuse to accept it.

[2] Defendant Marsh, by his counsel, makes the contention that the complaint was inconsistent, first, in that there was attempted to be alleged a cause of action for breach of contract which necessarily assumed the existence of a contract, and, secondly, a cause of action for the return of the two thousand five hundred dollars, to sustain which the assumption must be indulged that there was no contract.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 582, 42 Cal. App. 238, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hay-v-hollingsworth-calctapp-1919.