Laack v. Dimmick

273 P. 50, 95 Cal. App. 456, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 578
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 13, 1928
DocketDocket No. 5813.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 273 P. 50 (Laack v. Dimmick) 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
Laack v. Dimmick, 273 P. 50, 95 Cal. App. 456, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 578 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

CRAIL, J., pro tem.

This is an action to recover a real estate broker’s commission arising out of the sale of real estate. Judgment was entered in favor of both defendants and the plaintiffs appeal.

On February 1, 1923, F. M. Dimmick individually entered into an “exclusive agency contract” with Laack & Williams by which they were employed for thirty days and until the agreement was canceled in writing to negotiate the sale of certain real property located at the northwest corner of Sixth and Westlake, in the city of Los Angeles, which real property the owner agreed to sell to such purchaser as the agents might procure within the time aforesaid, at the price of $100,000 net to the owner. The terms of sale *462 were to be $40,000 in cash, buyer to assume a mortgage of $60,000; and further terms were that the agents were appointed attomeys-in-fact of the owner with full power to execute an agreement of sale with any purchaser obtained within the time aforesaid, binding the owner to sell said property upon the terms aforesaid and to convey same to the purchaser by deed of grant and to furnish, without expense to the purchaser, a guarantee certificate of title showing title in the owner at the time of sale; also, that the agents should be entitled to a commission equivalent to the difference between the purchase price above specified and the price at which the agents might procure a purchaser, which commission the owner agreed to pay the agents when a purchaser was obtained; also, that said commission, at the option of the agents, might be retained by them out of the moneys of the owner coming into their possession on account of the purchase price; and that the title to said property then stood in the name of Lucile M. Dimmick. Later, after it became apparent that the plaintiffs would be unable to sell the property within the time agreed, Mr. Dimmick inserted a figure “5” after the figure “1” in the date of the contract, thereby giving an apparent additional ten days’ life to the agreement, although, as heretofore stated, the agreement was to remain in effect until canceled in writing. The contract was signed “Lucile M. Dimmick, per F. M. Dimmick,” and there was substantial evidence that Mr. Dimmick was not authorized in advance to append her name thereto; but it is the contention of the appellants, both that she ratified the contract and that the circumstances were such that she is estopped from denying her signature to the agreement. These matters will be hereafter discussed in this opinion.

After the execution of the contract the plaintiffs used their best efforts to sell the property, listing and advertising the same and showing it to prospective buyers.

In a few days the plaintiffs interested George A. Eastman in the property, and thereafter persuaded C. G. Becker to join him in the purchase of it. The contract of purchase was entered into on March 16, 1923, signed by the plaintiffs on behalf of the owner and by C. G. Becker as purchaser, and was designated a “sales deposit receipt.” It complied in all respects with the terms upon which the *463 plaintiffs were authorized to sell the property, unless it were with respect to an escrow and with respect to the time within which the escrow was to be completed. These two matters will be taken up later. Eastman and Becker paid to Laack & Williams $2,500 as part payment on the purchase price; but the transaction was handled in Becker’s name, although E'astman in fact was interested in the purchase. On the same day Laack & Williams mailed a letter addressed to both of the defendants and included a check for $1,000 payable to them. The check was dated March 16th and was cashed March 20th. It was payable to the order of both defendants and had on its face a notation “Deposit and part payment of Becker offer on northwest corner Sixth and Westlake.’’ The letter which accompanied the check was addressed to both of the defendants. In it they were advised of the sale to Becker, and their attention was called to the fact that the sale was made under the exclusive agency contract given plaintiffs, dated February 15, 1923, and they were notified that the terms of the sale were those embodied in said exclusive agency contract; they were also advised that the necessary instructions to the title company, together with the necessary papers, would be submitted to them on the following day, and were told that the instructions provided that the escrow must be closed in the usual thirty days provided by the title company; they were also told that the $1,000 check was inclosed as deposit and part payment of the purchase price. On March 23, 1923, C. G. Becker assigned all his right, title, and interest in the contract of purchase to Eastman upon the payment to him of $1,250. On March 27th Laack & Williams gave written escrow instructions to the Title Insurance & Trust Company, and on the same day C. G. Becker, as purchaser, gave his instructions to the title company.

Two days later, March 29, 1923, defendant Dimmick and attorneys on behalf of both defendants called at the office of plaintiff Ralph O. Williams. At that conference Mr. Dimmick tendered a deed executed by both of the defendants conveying the property described in the exclusive agency contract and in" the sales deposit receipt to C. G. Becker. At the same time a certificate of title to the property, “brought down to date,’’ was tendered to the plaintiffs. Defendants did not introduce this certificate in evidence and *464 it is not in the record. Later in the conference said Williams was served with a written notice addressed to Laack & Williams of the cancellation of the agency contract. This notice was signed by both defendants, and at the same conference Mr. Dimmick offered to return the $1,000. The next day, ■ March 30, 1923, plaintiffs addressed a letter to both defendants inclosing escrow instructions dated March 27, 1923, for their signatures, and respondents received this letter on the day it was mailed. On April 12, 1923, the full amount of money necessary to complete the deal, $46,-250, was deposited with the title company, as escrow-holder, to complete the purchase, and on the same day the plaintiffs wrote the defendants a letter in which they advised them that on that day the purchasers had placed with the title company the necessary cash to complete the sale under the contract and demanded that the respondent immediately place in said escrow, of which they had theretofore been advised, the deed and certificate of title. Six days after the money was so deposited the attorneys for the defendants wrote a letter to the plaintiffs, reminding them that Mr. Dimmick had tendered a deed to the property described in plaintiffs’ letter of April 12th, and had given them ample time to make good on the purchase price thereof. In the same letter they also referred to the purchaser as a dummy purchaser and refused to go ahead with the deal. It will be noted that at this time all of the money was in escrow and the refusal is in a letter in which there is a reference to appellants’ letter of April 12th, in which the Dimmicks were notified that the money had been deposited with the title company. On May 8, 1923, Becker and Eastman, tendered performance on their part through escrow, and finally, on May 23d, upon Dimmicks’ refusal to probeed, the escrow was closed and all moneys withdrawn.

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Bluebook (online)
273 P. 50, 95 Cal. App. 456, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laack-v-dimmick-calctapp-1928.