Hill v. Den

53 P. 642, 121 Cal. 42, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 849
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1898
DocketL. A. No. 392
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 53 P. 642 (Hill v. Den) 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
Hill v. Den, 53 P. 642, 121 Cal. 42, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 849 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

BELCHER, C.

This is an action to recover the alleged reasonable value of certain services performed by plaintiff’s wife, Maria Angustias Hill, for defendant. The defendant had judgment, and the plaintiff appeals on the judgment-roll.

[43]*43The facts of the case, as disclosed by the findings of the court or admitted by the pleadings, are as follows: On or about the eighteenth day of April, 1894, defendant requested Mrs. Hill, plaintiff’s wife, to come to his, defendant’s, house, and take care of him and do the necessary work about and in the house, and agreed that he would support and maintain her while she so remained, and when he should get married he would deed to her and her husband a home during their lives, designating certain realty in the city of Santa Barbara as the property to be so conveyed.

Under said promise Mrs. Hill and her husband went to defendant’s house and remained there until defendant got married on December 30, 1895, and while so remaining did the work and services there to be performed under said promise and agreement; and her services were worth fifty dollars per month while she remained in his service, to wit, from April 18, 1894, to December 30, 1895.

After defendant’s marriage he placed Mrs. Hill and husband in possession of the premises agreed upon between him and her, where they remained peaceably and without interference from defendant, or any one acting under him or as his successor, until after plaintiff commenced this action, when, defendant having given them no deed of the premises, they voluntarily surrendered the possession thereof.

After plaintiff and his wife entered into possession of said property, and before the commencement of this action, defendant conveyed to his wife, in consideration of love and affection, all the real property which he possessed in Santa Barbara county, the deed being dated, acknowledged, and recorded on January 34, 1896, and there has been no reconveyance to defendant of the whole or any part of the property so conveyed.

Defendant has not failed to fulfill his promise and carry cut his contract except as before stated, and the execution of the deed by defendant to his wife as shown by the pleadings did not prevent him from carrying out his contract.

After the execution by defendant of the deed to his wife, plaintiff’s wife demanded of defendant a deed, and he replied that his wife knew all about his arrangement with her, Mrs. Hill, and they would fix it up, and that Thomas McHulta, his attorney, had the deed.

[44]*44Heither plaintiff nor his wife has received from defendant or his wife any deed of the said premises, but defendant’s wife has neglected and refused to convey said propérty to plaintiff and his wife for life or at all. ... ■ .

neither plaintiff nor his wife .made any improvements or expended any money on said property during their occupancy thereof. •

The action was commenced August 4, 1896. On September^, 1896, plaintiff filed amendments to his complaint, in which he alleged “that plaintiff hereby offers to restore possession of said land to defendant, and hereby, for himself and his said wife, relinquishes, waives, and abáhdons all right, title, claim, and equity of either or both in and to said land on account of said verbal contract or a part performance thereof.” And on the same day he filed a supplemental complaint, in which he- alleged “that since the commencement of said action, to wit, on the sixth-day of August, 1896, plaintiff and his said wife, Maria Angustias Hill, have quit and surrendered the possession of the premises .described and referred to in the complaint.” ■ •

There is and can be no dispute upon the proposition that.an oral contract for the sale of real property or of an interest therein is invalid trader the statute of frauds. (Code Civ. Proc., sec; 1973.) But such a contract may nevertheless be executed by.the parties to it, and its specific performance may be compelled by a court of equity in case there has been a part performance thereof. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1972.)

Here it appears that Mrs. Hill had performed, by the services rendered, her part of the contract in full, and that there was a part performance of the contract by defendant when he placed Mr. and Mrs. Hill in possession and gave them full control of the property. It is clear, therefore, that plaintiff might have de¿ manded a specific performance of the contract and had his demand enforced by the courts, as against both defendant and his wife, since when defendant executed the deed to his wife the Hills were in possession of the property, and she must therefore be deemed to have taken the deed with notice of their rights.

But whether an action for specific performance was plaintiff’s only remedy need not be considered. In Fuller v. Reed, 38 Cal. 99, the following language is found in the opinion on page 110:

[45]*45“If money has been paid or services rendered in the performance of the conditions- of a. void' contract by one party thereto, and the''other party fails'to voluntarily perform on his part, the injured party has. no remedy at law upon the contract; he may, however, under such circumstances, disaffirm such contract, and maintain his action át law to recover back money so paid, or the value of services so rendered.”

Conceding that the law is thus correctly declared, still the question remains: Can the plaintiff maintain this action, he and hié.wife having been in the full and undisturbed possession of the property, and having made no offer to surrender the possession or restore the same at the time the action was commenced?

' In Browne on the Statute of Frauds, section 121, the law is stated as follows: “When the purchaser under a verbal contract for land has been put in possession, and has made payments on account of the price, it is plain that he cannot recover the money Without'surrendering or offering to surrender the possession.” Anil in Wood on Frauds, page 435, it is said: “In all cases where a person has gone into the possession of land under a , ~rbal contract which the other party refuses to perform, before he ban maintain an action for the purchase money V: him, or

In Abbott v. Draper, 4 Denio, 51, the court, by Bronson, C. J., said: “Although the statut-i/declares a parol contract for -the sale of lands void, it does"not make it illegal. It is not a corruptor wicked agreement nor does it violate any principle of public policy. Parties are at liberty to act under such contracts if they think proper. Many such have been carried into complete effect by payment of the price and' conveyance of the land. Part performance does not take the case out of the statute, so that the contract can be enforced in a court of law. But when the vendee has received the possession and paid a part of the price, the contract is not so utterly void that he can recover back the money just as though there had never been an agreement. If he can recover at all so long as the vendor is not in the wrong, he must, at the least, first restore the possession, and demand the repayment of the money. It is impossible to maintain that-he can retain the possession and yet recall the monev.”

[46]*46The decisions of this court are in line with the authorities above cited. In Haynes v. White, 55 Cal. 38, the vendee was put in possession of the land and paid, part of the purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P. 642, 121 Cal. 42, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-den-cal-1898.