Mayers v. Alexander

167 P.2d 818, 73 Cal. App. 2d 752, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 903
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 1946
DocketCiv. 14958
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 167 P.2d 818 (Mayers v. Alexander) 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
Mayers v. Alexander, 167 P.2d 818, 73 Cal. App. 2d 752, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 903 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

This action was commenced by plaintiffs to specifically enforce an alleged agreement to sell certain real property, together with the furniture contained in the house upon said premises, located at 3830 Motor Avenue in the city of Los Angeles. Prom an adverse judgment plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The factual background which gave rise to this litigation, as reflected by the pleadings and the evidence adduced at the trial, may be thus epitomized: Plaintiffs and Lida M. Gertsen, now deceased, were next-door neighbors. During the summer of 1943 Mrs. Gertsen discussed the sale of the property with plaintiff Mr. Mayers. At that time the premises were occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shirk as tenants of Mrs. Gertsen. On or about August 27, 1943, after an inspection of the premises and some conversation with Mrs. Gertsen, the plaintiff Mr. Mayers prepared on the typewriter an original and one copy of an agreement relating to the sale of the property, including some of the furnishings, the original of which document was signed by plaintiff Mr. Mayers and by *755 Mrs. Gertsen. This agreement (received in evidence at the trial as plaintiffs’ Exhibit 3) reads as follows:

“Preliminary agreement between Mrs. Gertsen and Mr. Mayers
“3830 Motor av to be purchased for the sum of $5000 inclusive of furniture, except for certain personal articles. CASH PAYMENT to be $1500 (Fifteen hundred)
“Interest on balance of outstanding purchase price to be at 5% (five per cent)
“Minimum payment per calendar month to be $50 (dollars) This is to include interest and capital.
“Mr. Mayers however promises to pay $50 per month off on the capital as long as he is able to do so plus the interest “Possession to be given on or about the 15th October “Mrs. Gertsen will arrange to have the house guaranteed against termites, arrange clearance escrow, etc.
“1st payment November 1943.”

Contemporaneously with the execution of this agreement Mr. Mayers gave to Mrs. Gertsen a check for $250, which he testified was “as a down payment.” Some three or four days later, when Mrs. Gertsen advised plaintiff Mr. Mayers of her desire to have his wife’s signature on the contract, Mr. Mayers prepared and delivered to Mrs. Gertsen another writing, signed by himself, his wife and Mrs. Gertsen. This memorandum agreement (introduced in evidence at the trial as plaintiffs’ Exhibit 4) was as follows:

•“Agreement for sale of real estate.
“We, Colin Mayers and Ida N. Mayers agree to purchase from Lida M. Gertsen, a widow, all of lot seven and the North Westerly twenty five feet of lot eight of the Fellows tract, as per map of said tract—book 10—page 92—Los Angeles records of maps for the sum of five thousand dollars.

“Payment to be as follows:

“$250 on the signing of this agreement “1250 on Mrs. L. M. Gertsen giving possession of the property to the buyers; and thereafter:
“$50 per month—first payment to be the 1st of the month after a full month has elapsed from taking possession.
“Interest to be at the rate of 5% per annum, until the full balance of the purchase price has been paid. ’ ’

Upon the execution of this agreement, according to the testimony of plaintiff Mr. Mayers, Mrs. Gertsen “told me she would go and see Mr. Nelson, a real estate man a few doors *756 away from where she was living. ... I told Mrs. Gertsen to go and see Mr. Nelson, have him to copy out the formal agreement from the memorandum we had all signed. ...” On the day following, Mrs. Gertsen advised Mr. Mayers that she had seen Mr. Nelson and she exhibited to him two copies of an agreement prepared by Mr. Nelson. After reading the documents, plaintiff Mr. Mayers advised Mrs. Gertsen that there was one word contained in the agreement which he would like Mr. Nelson to explain and requested Mrs. Gertsen to accompany him to Nelson’s office, which she did. Arriving there, Mrs. Gertsen and Mr. Mayers had a discussion with Mr. Nelson relative to the terms of the agreement which the latter had prepared. This document was entitled “Agreement for sale of real estate, ’ ’ under the terms of which plaintiffs agreed to purchase and Lida M. Gertsen agreed to sell the property here in question for the sum of $5,000, of which $1,500 was to be paid upon execution and delivery of the agreement, and the balance was to be paid in monthly installments of $50 with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum until the entire purchase price had been paid, the interest to be included in the aforesaid monthly payments. This instrument, dated September 2, 1943, was never signed by any of the parties named therein. Because other people were waiting in Mr. Nelson’s office, plaintiff Mr. Mayers suggested that he, his wife and Mrs. Gertsen return at another time, whereupon they all departed. After leaving Mr. Nelson’s office the parties had a discussion regarding some papers received by Mrs. Gertsen from the OPA relating to the time when possession of the property could be obtained by the Mayers. Mr. Mayers prepared a notice to quit dated September 1, 1943, addressed to the tenants in possession of Mrs. Gertsen’s property, which instrument she signed, and the same was served upon the tenants. Subsequently, on October 14, another notice to quit was prepared by Mr. Mayers, signed by Mrs. Gertsen, and served upon the tenants. According to the testimony of Mrs. Gertsen, read at the trial from her deposition, a few days prior to October 18, 1943, she told plaintiff Mr. Mayers that the OPA had advised her that in order to gain possession of the house she would be required to occupy the same herself, and that there would be a penalty if she sold the property before the expiration of six months after taking of such possession. She further testified that she told the Mayers “I couldn’t sell because it was against the law”; that she would return the *757 $250 paid on account of the transaction, which she did according to her testimony on October 18, 1943, at which time she received from plaintiff Mr. Mayers a receipt reading: “Received from Mrs. Lida M. Gertsen the sum of $250/00 Two Hundred fifty dollars. Colin Mayers. Oct. 18th 1943.” Plaintiff Mr. Mayers admitted writing the receipt, except that he did not recall inserting “18th” therein.

Some days after the return of the $250, Mr. Mayers prepared a letter to the OPA, setting forth the condition of Mrs. Gertsen’s health and asking if she could sell the property. Mrs. Gertsen signed this letter and it was forwarded to the OPA. When Mrs. Gertsen received a reply thereto, dated November 8, 1943, she exhibited the same to Mr. Mayers, telling him she would not sell because “the instructions of that paper are not to sell. ’ ’ She told him to read that portion of the letter which stated, “In any event, if sufficient proof that an illegal eviction of a tenant has occurred comes to the attention of this office, proper action will be taken.” At that time, according to the testimony of Mrs. Gertsen, she stated to Mrs. Mayers, “You see, I can’t sell the house because the law won’t let me.

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Bluebook (online)
167 P.2d 818, 73 Cal. App. 2d 752, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayers-v-alexander-calctapp-1946.