Longway v. Newbery

91 P.2d 110, 13 Cal. 2d 603, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 283
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1939
DocketL. A. 15892
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 110 (Longway v. Newbery) 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
Longway v. Newbery, 91 P.2d 110, 13 Cal. 2d 603, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 283 (Cal. 1939).

Opinion

THE COURT.

A hearing was granted in this court after decision by the District Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District, in order to give further consideration to the question relating to. the liability, if any, of the defendant, Cad M. Newbery, and also to the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support certain of the findings made by the trial court.

From a judgment in favor of the defendants in an action for rescission, the plaintiff has appealed.

There was no substantial conflict in the evidence. The uncontradicted facts surrounding the purchase of two lots by *606 plaintiff wére as follows -. That he was a resident of the state of Michigan and, during a visit to California in November, 1926, he purchased two lots in an unimproved tract of land located near the town of San Fernando, in Los Angeles County; that he visited the tract on November 22d; and that at that time and place he discussed the terms of purchase of the lots with the sales agents Johnson, Langmo and a Mrs. Ward, who told plaintiff that improvements, consisting of the installation of cement pavements, cement sidewalks and curbs, gas, water and electricity, would be made in connection with each lot, at no cost to the purchaser.

The record shows that the tract of land was owned by one C. W. Newbery, but that the legal title thereto was held in trust (No. S-7334) by the defendant Title Insurance and Trust Company, as trustee, under a subdivision trust wherein said Newbery was the beneficiary. By the terms of section two of the trust it was provided that after payment of trustee fees and expenses, and of commissions to sales agents for the sale of the lots, a certain percentage of the proceeds received therefrom was to be placed in an “Improvement Fund” and that the distribution of moneys to the “improvement fund” should continue until the trustee was furnished with evidence of the installation of all the improvements intended to be made to the real property covered thereby, and of the payment in full of all costs and expenses thereof. The record further shows that prior to the sale to plaintiff, and pursuant to its powers under the trust, the trust company employed the Howard Marr Organization, Inc., a realty firm, as its selling agent for the tract of land, and that sales agents Johnson, Langmo and Mrs. Ward, who dealt directly with plaintiff concerning the terms of the sale of the lots, were the employees of the realty company. It further appears that in the agency agreement made between the trust company and the realty company for the sale of the lots in the tract, it was provided that the realty company should have “the general care and custody of the above described property with authority to solicit and obtain purchasers thferefor and to arrange the prices and terms of sale”. (Emphasis added.) It also was provided in the agency agreement that “all of the acts, however, of said agent shall be subject to the approval and confirmation of said principal”.

*607 At the time plaintiff purchased the lots, on November 22, 1926, he paid to the trust company, through its sales agents, the sum of $4,270, being the full purchase price of the two lots which had been described to him as was indicated on an unrecorded (blue print) map as lots 11A and 11B, and received therefor a written receipt for the purchase price of each lot, in which each lot was referred to as being a part of tract No. 9179 of a recorded plat. The receipts also contained the following statements: ‘ Trust No. S-7334 provides for the installation of the following improvements: sidewalks, curbs, streets, electricity, gas and water at no cost to purchaser”.

The record also shows that a week after plaintiff had purchased the lots, and on November 29, 1926, C. W. Newbery assigned and transferred his entire beneficial interest in the said trust to the trust company as security for the performance by said Newbery of the obligations undertaken by him, as set forth in the trust, to install the improvements, “subject, however, to all terms and conditions of said . . . trust”. It also was provided therein that upon the default of said Newbery in the erection and completion of the improvements he would pay to the trust company such amount of money as would enable the trustee to effect the construction of the improvements.

Thereafter the trust company sent to plaintiff in Detroit two deeds dated November 26, 1926, labeled respectively, on the outside of each, as “Lot 11 A” and “Lot 11B”; but in the body of the deed labeled “Lot 11A”, the property was described as the northeasterly twenty-five feet of lot 11, tract 9179, sheets 1 and 2, as per map recorded, etc., and the property covered by the deed labeled “Lot 11B” was referred to' in the body thereof as all of lot 11 in tract No. 9179, except the northeasterly twenty-five feet thereof, etc.

Some few months after his return to Detroit, plaintiff learned that the improvements to the property were not being installed. He wrote to the trust company and to said Newbery with regard thereto, and thereafter various letters relating to the installation of the improvements were exchanged between plaintiff and the trust company, on the one hand, and between C. W. Newbery and plaintiff, on the other, until the death of said Newbery in May, 1933, and thereafter the correspondence was carried on between his widow, Cad M. *608 Newbery, and plaintiff. The letters disclosed that plaintiff had been charged with the payment of an assessment, which had been levied against the property of the City of Los Angeles for a street bond covering Sayre Avenue, upon which street.plaintiff’s two lots abutted, and that plaintiff had paid the same. The correspondence also referred to the proposal to charge plaintiff the sum of $591.28 (payable over a period of years) asserted to be his proportionate share of charges assessed against the tract of land by the City of Los Angeles in connection with the installation by the city of a water system for that district. The correspondence further shows that although plaintiff paid certain moneys in connection with the water assessment, he protested the payment of the same for the reason, asserted by him, that at the time he purchased the lots, it was understood that installation of the improvements would be “at no cost to” him. Several letters were exchanged regarding the charges for the installation of water, and it appears that, up to the time the action was brought, in July, 1934, negotiations were being had with a view to refunding moneys paid by plaintiff for such charges. Plaintiff testified that at or shortly prior to that time he learned that, except for the installation of sidewalks, no improvements had been made on the tract.

Appellant contends that he is entitled to rescind the contract and recover his money because of the alleged false representations made by defendants, or their agents, that they would install the improvements, and their subsequent failure to do so; and also that he was entitled to the return of his money in that the offer for sale and the sale of the lots were made by reference to an unrecorded map, as prohibited by . Statutes of 1907, page 290, as that statute read at the time of the sale here involved.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 110, 13 Cal. 2d 603, 1939 Cal. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longway-v-newbery-cal-1939.