Lynn v. Knob Hill Improvement Co.

169 P. 1009, 177 Cal. 56, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 449
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1917
DocketL. A. No. 4105.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 169 P. 1009 (Lynn v. Knob Hill Improvement Co.) 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
Lynn v. Knob Hill Improvement Co., 169 P. 1009, 177 Cal. 56, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 449 (Cal. 1917).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The default of the defendant for failing to answer or demur to the complaint within the time prescribed by law was duly entered on May 19, 1914. On the following day the defendant served on the plaintiff a notice of motion to be relieved from said default, on the ground that it was taken through his mistake, inadvertence, and excusable neglect. - This motion was denied on October 1, 1914. On October 29, 1914, at the instance of plaintiff, the court entered judgment against said defendant for $678 and costs. The defendant appeals from the judgment, and also from the order denying its motion to set aside the default.

In support of the appeal from the judgment, the defendant claims that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The complaint alleges that on November 15, 1910, the plaintiff and defendant made an agreement in writing, whereby the defendant agreed to sell and convey to the plaintiff certain real property, for the sum of four hundred dollars, of which fifty dollars was then paid, and the balance was to be paid in monthly payments, of ten dollars a month, with interest at seven per cent per annum, payable quarterly, as evidenced by a certain note, a copy of which was incorporated into the contract. The note purports to be signed by the plaintiff, is dated December 15, 1910, and is for the sum of $350, with seven per cent interest from date, payable quarterly, and providing that if the interest was not so paid, the whole sum should immediately become due and payable. It was not declared to be payable upon any date, but merely “after date.” The complaint further alleged that “the following additional payments have been indorsed upon the back of said contract:

December 15, 1910 .......................$ 10.00
December 29, 1910 ...................... 200.00
August 27, 1913 ........................ 140.00
November, 1913 ......................... 10.00”

There is the further allegation that the plaintiff “has always been ready and willing to perform” and “has duly and fully performed all the conditions of the said contract devolv *59 ing upon him to be performed, ’ ’ and has demanded performance thereof by the defendant, but that the defendant refused to comply with the contract or to execute to plaintiff a deed for the property, and that the defendant “never intended to convey said property to plaintiff, but used" said contract for the purpose to cheat and defraud the plaintiff out of the money heretofore paid, as above set out, and then sell and again convey or have said property conveyed to other parties than the plaintiff herein”; and that “said property has increased in value in the sum of two hundred dollars since the breach of said contract by defendants herein,” and that plaintiff has paid out eighteen dollars in taxes on the land, and “has incurred expenses in preparing to enter said land in the sum of fifty dollars. ’ ’

The prayer was for judgment requiring the defendant to execute a deed to the plaintiff and, “ (2), that in case defendants do not so convey said property as aforesaid, that the plaintiff be awarded damages as follows, to wit:

$410.00, for money paid out on said contract, and interest thereon.
18.00, for taxes paid on said real property.
200.00, increase in value of said real estate.
600.00, punitive damages, and
50.00, expenses.
$1278.00, total.”

The judgment was for $678, and it included all of the above sums, except the item of six hundred dollars for punitive damages.

The allegations of the complaint were not sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to judgment for the two hundred dollars alleged to have been the increase in the value of the real estate, or for the fifty dollars for expenses in preparing to enter said land. Section 3306 of the Civil Code declares that the measure of damages for breach of contract to convey real estate is the price paid, and the expenses of examining title, “but adding thereto, in case of bad faith, the difference between the price agreed to be paid and the value of the estate agreed to be conveyed, at the time of the breach, and the expenses properly incurred in preparing to enter upon the land.”

The complaint does not allege the value of the land “at the time of the breach, ’ ’ but alleges only that it has increased *60 in value to the amount of two hundred dollars “since the breach.” The time of the breach is not alleged. There is no presumption that there was an increase in value before the breach. It must be alleged. There is, therefore, no foundation laid by which to compute the measure of damages on this ground, and the complaint fails to. show such damage.

With respect to the expenses aforesaid, the provision of the code is that recovery may be had for the “expenses properly” incurred in preparing to enter the land. There is no allegation that any expenses were properly incurred. The allegation is merely that eighteen dollars was expended in preparing to enter the land. Whether it was properly expended or not does not appear. Upon appeal from a judgment taken by default, the allegations of the complaint must state the facts necessary to entitle the plaintiff to recover the sums included in the judgment. In order to entitle the plaintiff to the expenses, the complaint must allege that the expenses were properly made. It may be that this must be shown by setting forth the things for which the expenses were incurred, so that the propriety of the expenses will appear from the facts, but whether this be so or not, a complaint is insufficient, on appeal, to justify such recovery, where it does not appear that such expenses were properly incurred.

The defendant further claims that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action for specific performance, and in particular, that it does not allege that the plaintiff, before beginning the action, tendered payment in full of the purchase price. The payments alleged to have been indorsed on the contract amount to some seventeen dollars less than the balance of principal and interest due upon the price at the time of the last payment. There is no direct allegation that these sums, or any part thereof, have ever been paid on the contract. There is no specific allegation of a tender of the balance, assuming that the allegations as to payment would be sufficient in the absence of a demurrer, but the general allegation that the plaintiff “has duly and fully performed all the conditions of the said contract devolving upon him to be performed” is a sufficient allegation of the performance of the conditions precedent, and relieves the complaint of this particular defect. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 457.) As a complaint for specific performance it is defective in another particular, which the appellant does not mention. *61

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Bluebook (online)
169 P. 1009, 177 Cal. 56, 1917 Cal. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-knob-hill-improvement-co-cal-1917.