Kossler v. Palm Springs Developments, Ltd.

101 Cal. App. 3d 88, 161 Cal. Rptr. 423, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1378
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1980
DocketCiv. 20798
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 101 Cal. App. 3d 88 (Kossler v. Palm Springs Developments, Ltd.) 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
Kossler v. Palm Springs Developments, Ltd., 101 Cal. App. 3d 88, 161 Cal. Rptr. 423, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1378 (Cal. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Opinion

KAUFMAN, Acting P. J.

Defendant Palm Springs Developments, Ltd., 1 a general contractor, owned real property in the City of Palm *91 Springs which it was developing as a 13-home tract. Plaintiffs George F. Kossler and Jeri L. Kossler, husband and wife, agreed to purchase one of the homes under construction. When construction was purportedly completed, a dispute arose between the parties as to whether or not the house was, in fact, completed in good and workmanlike fashion and in accordance with the floor plan diagram shown plaintiffs. Defendant informed plaintiffs that inasmuch as they were unwilling to accept the house as completed, it was terminating its agreement to sell the property to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs thereupon instituted this action for specific performance and/or damages for breach of contract, and fraud. Defendant cross-complained for quiet title. Trial was to the court. Judgment was for defendant, 2 and plaintiffs appeal.

Facts

Mr. Kossler is an attorney and was considering moving his practice from Orange County to Palm Springs. In November 1976 plaintiffs responded to a newspaper advertisement concerning the homes under construction by defendant. They were shown the property by a real estate broker and given a copy of a floor plan diagram for the four-bedroom, three-bath home they subsequently agreed to purchase. The home was to adjoin the fairway of a public golf course and one wall of the master bathroom was planned to be all glass which would give passing golfers an unobstructed view into the bathroom. The floor plan shown to plaintiffs depicted a grape stake fence around the glass wall of the master bath as well as a medicine cabinet in the master bathroom and another medicine cabinet in a bathroom designated bathroom number two.

On November 7, 1976, plaintiffs deposited $500 toward the purchase of the house which they had been told would be completed by about the third week in December. Thereafter plaintiffs visited the construction site frequently to observe the progress being made in the construction of the house. On January 20, 1977, the parties executed a written contract for the purchase and sale of the property on a California Real Estate Association form. Among the provisions were two of potential significance to this appeal. Provision 5 called for the execution of escrow *92 instructions within 7 days from the seller’s acceptance and for the closing of escrow within 60 days from the seller’s acceptance, “subject to written extensions signed by Buyer and Seller.” Provision 10 read: “Time is of the essence of this contract.”

The next day the parties opened an escrow and executed escrow instructions. Plaintiff deposited in the escrow $4,350. The total sales price was specified to be $86,950. Plaintiffs were to receive a $2,000 credit as a carpeting allowance. These original instructions contemplated that plaintiffs would obtain a conventional first trust deed loan and that a second trust deed would be carried back by defendant at the same rate of interest and amortized over the same period as the first trust deed.

The instructions contained several provisions pertinent to the times for performance and closing. First, the instructions provided that “[p]rior to March 20, 1977,... Buyer, will hand you $78,255.00.. .and any funds and instruments necessary for [buyer] to comply with these instructions, which you [the escrow holder] are to use provided you can have issued through Safeco Title Insurance Company a CTLA standard coverage policy of title insurance” for the described property. Next, at the bottom of the same page, the instructions provided: “I, Seller, agree to the foregoing instructions and prior to the said date will hand you any funds and instruments necessary for me to comply therewith provided you hold the funds and instruments deliverable to me.”

On page 3 of the instructions it was provided: “The entire sum of money paid or advanced by the Purchaser and deposited herein shall be held in escrow until you hold either (1) proper release of the subject property from blanket encumbrance thereon, if any; (2) the Seller or Buyer defaults under the terms of this escrow and there is a determination as to the deposition [j/c] of such monies, or (3) Seller orders the return of such monies of Buyer. [H] The undersigned Buyer understands that a building and/or improvements are to be erected, are under course of constructions [szc], or have recently been completed on the property described.... You are authorized to hold all papers and monies in escrow until the Notice of Completion has been recorded on said lot and the title company will write its title policy eliminating said Notice of Completion. [H] This escrow shall close only upon filing of Notice of Completion in connection with subject property and at such time as Seller is able to deliver to Buyer a policy of title insurance in *93 suring title.. .to be free of Mechanic^]s Liens. Seller shall promptly notify Escrow Holder as to the date of filing of said Notice.”

Under “General Provisions” on page 2 there was the customary instruction “If the conditions of this escrow have not been complied with prior to the date stated on Line 1, or any extension thereof, you are nevertheless to complete the escrow as soon as the conditions, except as to time have been complied with, unless written demand shall have been made upon you not to complete it.”

On February 9, 1977, the original escrow instructions were amended to delete the provisions concerning the first and second deeds of trust and to provide, in essence, that plaintiffs would pay the entire purchase price in cash and the amount to be deposited by buyers on or before March 20, 1977, was changed to $86,950.

Having moved to Palm Springs and rented a condominium, plaintiffs visited the construction site daily after January 20. They made arrangements with the construction superintendent for the installation of upgraded kitchen appliances. They were permitted to trade in the appliances supplied by defendant, purchase upgraded appliances, and deliver them to the jobsite for installation by defendant. Accordingly, plaintiffs purchased a microwave oven, a ceramic-top, self-cleaning oven range unit, a dishwasher and a garbage disposal at a net cost of $1,150.69 over and above the credit received by them for the appliances traded in. Plaintiffs also made special requests with respect to such items as paint and decorating, in which defendant attempted to accommodate them at no additional cost

In addition, plaintiffs testified that they purchased custom-measured carpeting for the house at a cost of $3,835 as well as $1,120 worth of custom-measured shutters and $200 worth of redwood paneling for a bathroom.

On March 11 the house was still not completed and plaintiffs moved their household furniture and furnishings from their residence in Irvine, which was being sold, to a public storage facility in Palm Springs.

On March 14, six days before the closing date mentioned in the purchase contract and escrow instructions, plaintiffs visited the construction site and noted that the medicine chests depicted on the *94

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 Cal. App. 3d 88, 161 Cal. Rptr. 423, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kossler-v-palm-springs-developments-ltd-calctapp-1980.