Jackson v. Torrence

23 P. 695, 83 Cal. 521, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 720
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1890
DocketNos. 13133 and 13175
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 23 P. 695 (Jackson v. Torrence) 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
Jackson v. Torrence, 23 P. 695, 83 Cal. 521, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 720 (Cal. 1890).

Opinion

Beatty, C. J.

The defendants are husband and wife, and the suit is to compel specific performance of the following agreement:—■

“ For and in consideration of the sum of five hundred dollars to us in hand paid by C. F. Thomas and George H. Jackson, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, wre, the undersigned, do hereby agree that on the first day of February, 1886, we will execute and deliver to said C. F. Thomas and George H. Jackson, or their assignees, a good and sufficient deed to all that real property in the town of Woodland, county of Yolo, and state of California, known as the Capital Hotel property, bounded on the north by Otto Schluer, east by Galbraith, south by Main Street, and west by First Street, together with all and singular the furniture, fixtures, buses, harness, and all the personal property belonging to said hotel, ■whether enumerated or not, except one piano, sewing-machine, feather bed, two chairs, and on that day to give to said C. F. Thomas and George H. Jackson possession of the same. The said property to be clear of all taxes, assessments, commissions, liens, or encumbrances whatsoever, provided always, and this agreement is upon the express condition, that the said C. F. Thomas and George H. Jackson, or their assigns, shall on that day pay to us the further sum of nineteen thousand five hundred dollars ($19,500), and if the said C. F. Thomas and George H. Jackson, or their assigns, shall fail or neglect to pay the said sum on that day, then and in that case we agree to return to them the said sum of five hundred dollars, without interest, on said day, and after the said sum is so returned, this agreement to be void.
“Dated Woodland, January 8, 1886.
“ M. H. Torrence.
“Esther Torrence.”

[524]*524The superior court found that the wife and the community owned separate interests in the premises, and made a decree compelling a conveyance by the husband of the community interest, upon payment of its estimated proportion of the agreed price, but refused a decree as to the interest of the wife, upon the ground that she, not having acknowledged her. execution of the contract to sell, was not bound by it.

The husband, in case No. 13133, appeals from the decree compelling him to convey, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. The plaintiffs, in case No. 13175, appeal from so much of the decree as adjudges the wife to be the owner of a separate interest in the premises, and denies them any relief as against her.

Both appeals have been submitted, and will be considered together.

The facts upon which the controversy depends are as follows:—

The Capital Hotel, referred to in the contract, is a three-story building situated on lot 1, in block 2, of the town of Woodland. This lot is a rectangle, and fronts (south) sixty feet on Main Street, and (west) one hundred and fifty feet on First Street. It is bounded on the north by the lot of Schluer, and on the east by the lot of Galbraith. But although it is a single lot, and covered by one building, it was not all acquired by the defendants at the same time, and is subdivided in a very unusual manner.

In December, 1880, and subsequent to the marriage of the defendants, John Smith, by grant, bargain, and sale deed, conveyed all said lot to Esther Torrence, saving and excepting the first story of the building standing on the east twenty feet of the south sixty feet of said lot, known as Dickinson's saloon.

Subsequently, on September 5, 1881, David Burns, by grant, bargain, and sale deed, conveyed to M. H. [525]*525Torrence and liis wife, Esther Torrence, the east twenty feet of the south sixty feet of said lot. Neither of these deeds contained any expression as to how the granted premises should be held by the grantees, but the first recited a consideration of ten thousand dollars, paid by Esther Torrence, and the second a consideration of three thousand five hundred dollars, paid by M. H. and Esther Torrence. Both deeds were recorded in Yolo County long before the date of the contract with the plaintiffs, above set out.

There was some conflict in the evidence as to whose money paid for the property, but the court found that of the ten thousand dollars paid for the parcel first described, three thousand two hundred dollars (eight twenty-fifths) was of the separate property of the wife, and the balance was of the community funds. As to the second parcel, —the saloon,—it was found that the entire purchase price was paid out of the community funds.

As a conclusion from these findings, it was held that the wife owned, as her separate estate, eight twenty-fifths of the hotel property, including the two upper stories over the saloon, with the furniture, buses, etc., and that the balance belonged to the community. It was found that the saloon property was worth four thousand dollars, and the hotel property sixteen thousand dollars.

The husband, in support of his appeal from the order denying his motion for a new trial, assails these, among other findings of the superior court, but as they are attacked upon the ground that they are injurious to his wife in awarding her a smaller separate interest in the property than she was rightfully entitled to, and as she has not appealed, it is doubtful if he could be heard to make the objection. At all events, it will be assumed for the present that the wife and the community owned the property in the respective proportions as found by the superior court.

Such being the case, on the sixth day of January, [526]*5261886, they entered into the following written agreement with one W. M. Coward:—

“Woodland, January 6, 1886.
“ W. M. Coward is hereb}’- employed exclusively to sell our hotel, complete, with furniture and bus and harness, situated on the northeast corner of Main and First streets, Woodland, California, on or before three months from date. Price, $20,000. Cash, -. Secured by mortgage on the property, $-. Interest on deferred payments, — per cent per annum. Tenta of credit,-. Agent’s commission, 2-¡- per cent. I hereby agree to advertise the above property, and use all diligence in effecting a sale of the same. “M. IT. Torrence.
“ Esther Torrence.”
“W. M. Coward.
“Indorsed: Property reserved, piano, two chairs, plush covered, one sewing-machine, one feather bed.”

On the following day Coward notified them that he had made a sale of the property for twenty thousand dollars to the plaintiffs, and that he had received five hundred dollars on account of the purchase. The parties were brought together and discussed some details as to time of giving possession, division of accruing rents, etc., whereupon plaintiffs drew up, or proeúred to be prepared, the contract above set out, which was left with the defendants for their examination. On the following morning—The day it bears the date—They delivered the contract to the plaintiffs, signed but not acknowledged.

Mrs. Torrence was never asked by either of the plaintiffs to acknowledge her execution of the contract, and it would seem that.none of the parties at that time supposed an acknowledgment was necessary in order to make it binding upon her.

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Bluebook (online)
23 P. 695, 83 Cal. 521, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-torrence-cal-1890.