Lawrence Block Co. v. Palston

266 P.2d 856, 123 Cal. App. 2d 300, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1181
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 1954
DocketCiv. 19194
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 266 P.2d 856 (Lawrence Block Co. v. Palston) 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
Lawrence Block Co. v. Palston, 266 P.2d 856, 123 Cal. App. 2d 300, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1181 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

VALLEE, J.

Appeal by defendant from an adverse judgment in an action to recover a broker’s commission.

In October, 1950, defendant was the owner of a parcel of realty improved with an apartment building in Los Angeles. The property was encumbered with a first deed of trust in the then approximate amount of $49,000. According to the terms of the note secured by the deed of trust, it could not be paid in full until April 1, 1952, without the consent of the beneficiary, Mrs. Mae E. Blenkiron. Defendant decided to sell the property and listed it exclusively with Harold E. Phelps and Associates, a firm of real estate brokers. The property was listed for sale at $150,000.

In January, 1951, during the time the exclusive listing with Phelps was in effect, a salesman from the Phelps office, Walter H. Nichols, brought a salesman from plaintiff’s office, H. B. Sawtell, to see defendant. Sawtell was introduced as an associate of Nichols. Plaintiff had no independent listing of the property, but was working in cooperation with the Phelps office in an effort to find a buyer. Sawtell submitted a written offer of $137,500, made by Aaron Neidorf to defendant. She refused the offer and asked that a larger offer be obtained.

*303 On January 27, 1951, Sawtell, in the company of Nichols, brought another written offer from Neidorf to defendant in the amount of $142,500. It was typed on a printed form prepared by plaintiff. When presented to defendant, the offer had been signed by Neidorf. The instrument was also signed by plaintiff, as agent of defendant, acknowledging receipt of $1,000 paid by Neidorf on account of the purchase price. The instrument provided, in part, that the unpaid purchase price ($141,500) would be paid as follows:

“ $ . . .

33,541.64 Cash on demand of escrow

60,000.00 First Deed of Trust payable $474.60 per month including 5% int. to be secured by Seller and assumed by Buyer.”

The offer was discussed by Sawtell, Nichols and defendant for approximately an hour before defendant signed the document. During that time, the language in the offer “to be secured by Seller” was stricken out in ink, and the phrase “and subject to Seller securing a” was inserted in ink immediately after the statement of cash to be paid on demand of escrow. Defendant initialed the changes made. Thus, as modified, the provision relative to the payment of the purchase price reads as follows:

“ [$] 1,000.00 Check as shown above as deposit'

7,958.36 First Trust Deed covering premises at 2207 Hareourt St. L.A. to be assigned to seller named herein.

33,541.64 Cash on demand of escrow.

And Subject to Seller Securing a

60.000. 00 First Deed of Trust payable $474.60 per

month including 5% int. to-bc-socurod-by SeHea? and assumed by Buyer.

40.000. 00 Second Deed of Trust in favor of the

Seller payable $316.40 or more per month including 5% interest.

$142,500.00”

The agreement also provided that the purchase price included “furniture and furnishings now on the premises as evidenced by an inventory to be furnished by the Seller and approved by the Buyer.” Following the paragraph setting forth the terms of the purchase price and under the heading “Subject to:” there were the typewritten state *304 ments: “O.P.A. Rent statements to be approved by Buyer”; “Subject to buyer’s inspection and approval of all apartments.” Defendant affixed her signature to the offer, as seller, beneath a number of printed lines comprising a part of the form reading:

“We accept and confirm agent’s authority to accept said payment on account of the purchase price and agree to sell said property to above buyer on the terms and conditions above stated. For services heretofore rendered we also agree to pay Lawrence Block Co., Inc. (5%) Five per cent of above specified sales price and a reasonable sum as attorney fees if suit be commenced to collect the same. If above sale is not completed upon fault of buyer and not seller and payments have been made on account of the purchase price then agent’s commission shall be one-half of payments made on account of the purchase price including deposits made with agent, to seller and in escrow, but not exceeding said (5%) Five per cent. Agent is authorized to retain deposits made with agent in payment on account of said commission.

“If sale is not completed upon fault of seller, with or without deposits made, the agent’s commission shall be as first above provided.”

The parties did not proceed to escrow.

Defendant testified that “right away,” the same day, she telephoned Mrs. Blenkiron’s secretary and requested that Mrs. Blenkiron increase the deed of trust to $60,000. The secretary talked it over with Mrs. Blenkiron. They told defendant that at that time they couldn’t raise the “mortgage” to that amount. Defendant so informed the brokers. In a conversation at defendant’s home the next day, January 28, 1951, Sawtell and Nichols informed her, and agreed, that the deal was off if she “couldn’t raise the $60,000.”— that there was “no deal,” “absolutely no deal.” This evidence is uncontradicted.

Several days later, defendant received through H. B. Phelps and Associates an offer for the property from another party. In the meantime, Sawtell talked to Neidorf, and on February 1, 1951, he presented another written offer by Neidorf to defendant which she did not accept because she had already accepted the later offer made through Phelps.

Plaintiff, thereafter, filed this action against Mrs. Palston based upon the agreement of January 27, 1951, claiming a commission of $7,125. (5 per cent of $142,500.) Plaintiff claims that its commission was earned when it obtained the *305 agreement dated January 27th. Defendant alleged in her answer that the sale to Aaron Neidorf was made contingent upon her obtaining a $60,000 first deed of trust, payable at $474.60 per month, including 5 per cent interest, which was to be assumed by the buyer.

The court did not permit defendant to testify to any part of the discussion preceding her signing of the offer and the making of the changes therein, ruling that any discussion prior to the making of this contract was merged in the written agreement.

The court found: defendant employed plaintiff as a real estate broker to obtain, and plaintiff did obtain, an agreement dated January 27, 1951; the agreement was executed by Neidorf as buyer and defendant as seller; the promise in the agreement made by defendant to pay plaintiff the commission was not subject to the condition that the sale of the property be completed; the promise to pay plaintiff the commission was not subject to the provision “subject to Seller securing a $60,000 first trust deed”; the promise was made unconditionally; and defendant, in the agreement of January 27, 1951, confirmed that she had employed and authorized plaintiff as a real estate broker to perform the service of obtaining said agreement signed by the buyer; and plaintiff did obtain the agreement. Judgment was for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
266 P.2d 856, 123 Cal. App. 2d 300, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-block-co-v-palston-calctapp-1954.