Keelan v. Belmont Co.

165 P.2d 930, 73 Cal. App. 2d 6, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 798
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1946
DocketCiv. 14945
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 165 P.2d 930 (Keelan v. Belmont Co.) 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
Keelan v. Belmont Co., 165 P.2d 930, 73 Cal. App. 2d 6, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 798 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

Plaintiff seeks the return to him of $10,000 held in escrow by the defendant title company as a partial payment of purchase price on an uncompleted purchase of real and personal property. The defendant Armour, as trustee, was the owner of an occupied, 90-unit apartment hotel, together with certain furniture, fixtures and equipment therein contained. Defendant Belmont Company was a realty broker, acting as selling agent for the owner. On April 27, 1944, an agreement was executed in the form of a “Deposit Receipt,” in which said Belmont Company acknowledged receipt from plaintiff Keelan of a cashier’s check for $10,000 made payable *8 to Title Insurance & Trust Company. The stated purchase price of the apartment hotel was $336,000, said $10,000 being a deposit on account thereof, the balance payable within 30 days from date of the agreement, which provided (among other things) as follows:

“This offer is subject to: Approval of rent statement; O. P. A. statements to conform to reported rent statement; satisfactory termite report; inspection of building by purchaser and associates; approval of inventory and equipment. . . .
“In connection therewith it is hereby agreed:
“(1st) That should the purchaser fail to pay the balance of the purchase price, or fail to complete the purchase, as herein provided, the amounts paid hereon may, at the option of the seller, be retained as the consideration for the execution of this agreement by the seller.
“(2nd) . . . That should the title of said property prove defective or unmerchantable and should the seller be unable to perfect the same within a reasonable time from date hereof all amounts paid hereon shall be returned to the purchaser unless the purchaser elects to accept the title in said condition.
“ (3rd) That should the improvements on said premises be destroyed or materially damaged prior to delivery of Deed or Agreement of Sale to supersede this Deposit Receipt, all amounts then paid hereon shall be returned to the purchaser unless the purchaser elects to complete the purchase regardless of the then condition of the improvements. . . .
“ (5th) That the deposit and all other payments called for herein, if made with other than lawful money of the United States of America, may be converted into cash immediately, unless otherwise provided for herein, and held subject to the terms of this Deposit Receipt.
“ (6th) That the essence of this Agreement is time and the undersigned real estate agent may, without notice, extend the time for an additional period of thirty days should said agent deem the extension advisable.”

Plaintiff Keelan signed the agreement to purchase the property on the terms and conditions therein stated; defendant Armour, as trustee, signed the agreement to sell on the terms and conditions stated and in addition agreed to pay the Belmont Company a broker’s commission in the sum of $8,650, “or one-Half of the deposit should same be forfeited by pur *9 chaser, provided said amount shall not exceed the full amount of said commission. ’ ’

On the following day, i.e., April 28, 1944, the buyer and seller opened an escrow with the Title Insurance & Trust Company, when the usual escrow instructions were executed. No mention was made therein with respect to the retention by the seller or the forfeiture by the buyer of the $10,000 deposit, but consummation of the transaction was made “contingent upon buyer’s approval of rent statement, OPA statements, termite report, approval of inventory and equipment.”

Plaintiff failed to deposit the remainder of the purchase price within the time provided and defendant Armour, as seller, cancelled the escrow and subsequently entered into a contract for the sale of said property to another party. Plaintiff having made a demand for the return of the deposit, instituted the instant action to recover the same, “on the theory that he is entitled to its return because he got nothing for it.”

Defendant Armour by way of counterclaim alleged the failure of plaintiff to pay the balance of the purchase price and claimed the deposit “as consideration for the execution of said agreement” for the sale of the apartment hotel, as provided by the deposit receipt.

The trial court found “That the defendant and cross-defendant, Donald C. Armour, as Trustee, fulfilled all of the terms and conditions of the agreement of sale attached to plaintiff’s complaint and marked Exhibit ‘A,’ and fulfilled the escrow instructions on his part to be performed. That the plaintiff and cross-defendant at no time objected to any of the furniture, furnishings or equipment or the items on the inventory submitted, but made every effort to sell the said property at a profit to himself, and that he did approve, by his actions and conduct, all of said items on said inventory and the equipment, furniture and furnishings, and that he failed to perform his part of the escrow instructions within the time provided and as extended, to-wit, July 1st, 1944....

“Wherefore,. . . the Court makes the following Conclusions of Law: I. That the plaintiff failed to pay the balance of the purchase price and failed to complete the purchase of the said property within the time limits of the escrow, and that under the terms of the agreement . . . the defendant, Donald C. Armour, as Trustee, is entitled to retain the said sum of $10,000.00 as a consideration for the execution of said agree *10 ment. II. That by reason of the agreement . . . one-half of said deposit belongs to the said Donald C. Armour, as Trustee, and that the defendant and cross-defendant Title Insurance & Trust Company is directed to pay one-half of the said escrow deposit to the defendant and cross-defendant Donald C. Armour, as Trustee, and one-half thereof to the defendant and cross-complainant, Belmont Company. ...”

From the judgment which followed, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal, urging as grounds for a reversal thereof, the following:

“I. The provision in the printed portion of the deposit-receipt, upon which the forfeiture was adjudged, assumes ‘to fix the amount of damages for an anticipated breach of contract’ and is therefore, ‘void,’ under section 1670 of the Civil Code.
“II. The ‘deposit-receipt’ constituted a mere offer.
“III. The ‘deposit-receipt’ was superseded.
“IV. No support for the finding that Keelan approved the inventory and equipment ‘by his actions and conduct.’ ”
“Executory contracts for the sale of land frequently contain a provision to the effect that in case of breach by the purchaser his interest or rights under the contract shall be forfeited. Such forfeiture may take place automatically, without notice or other affirmative act on the part of the vendor, if it is expressly provided that time is of the essence of the agreement and that failure of the purchaser to perform shall operate as a forfeiture of all his rights, leaving installments of the price previously paid in the possession of the vendor.

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Bluebook (online)
165 P.2d 930, 73 Cal. App. 2d 6, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keelan-v-belmont-co-calctapp-1946.