McAuliff v. McFadden

183 P. 870, 42 Cal. App. 505, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 655
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 30, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2159.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 183 P. 870 (McAuliff v. McFadden) 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
McAuliff v. McFadden, 183 P. 870, 42 Cal. App. 505, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 655 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

This is an action for reformation of a contract, for the recovery of $421.07 alleged to have been paid by plaintiff on the contract, and for the further sum of two thousand dollars damages alleged to have been suffered by reason of the defendants’ breach of the contract. From a judgment in favor of defendants; plaintiff appeals. The contract was one for the sale to plaintiff of certain real property.

The appeal is prosecuted under the “alternative method,” and a lengthy typewritten reporter’s and clerk’s transcript is presented to us as the record on appeal. No part of the record is printed in respondents’ brief, or in any supplement thereto. In appellant’s brief there is printed the findings, in full, fragments of the pleadings, and a few excerpts from the testimony of the witnesses. [1] As appellant is only required to print in his brief such portions of the record as may be necessary to present to this court, fairly and lucidly, the points upon which he relies (De Bock v. De Bock (Cal. App.), 184 Pac. 890), we think enough is printed in appellant’s brief to necessitate a consideration by us of the principal question presented by his appeal. [2] We cannot, however, consider appellant’s claim that certain facts, material to the question mainly relied upon by him, are admitted by the answer. Whether such facts are so admitted could be determined only from a careful comparison of the entire complaint with the entire answer. As neither pleading is printed in full in the briefs, we are unable to say that the answer makes any of the admissions claimed by appellant.

*507 From the findings—printed in full in appellant’s brief— and from such of the evidence as is therein printed, we are able to glean the following: Prior to January 27, 1913, plaintiff had been furnishing to defendants McFadden and Buxton, copartners, sign paintings in considerable quantities, for which he was entitled to receive pay at certain rates. On the date last mentioned, defendants McFadden, Buxton, Strahlmann, and Mayer, as vendors, but through and “in the name of the defendants McFadden and Buxton,” entered into a written contract with plaintiff— hereafter referred to as the formal written contract of sale—whereby plaintiff, as vendee, agreed to purchase from the vendors, and the latter agreed to sell, lots 32 and 33 in block G of McFadden and Buxton’s North Park, in the city of San Diego. Strahlmann and Mayer are not mentioned in the contract as parties thereto. This particular written contract provided that the purchase price, $1,350, should be paid as follows: Fifty dollars cash, and the remainder in monthly installments of fifty dollars each on the first day of each and every month thereafter, until the total balance of one thousand three hundred dollars should be paid, deferred payments to bear interest at seven per cent, and plaintiff to pay all taxes and assessments. According to the terms of this contract, plaintiff was obligated to pay at least fifty dollars per month on the first day of each and every month, commencing February 1, 1913, and ending March 1, 1915. The action appears to have been commenced after the last-mentioned date. So that if this was the only contract relative to the sale of the lots and the payment of the purchase price—that is, if this document contained the whole agreement respecting the sale-—then plaintiff was in default, for he had not paid more than $421.07 when the action was commenced, and, consequently, he is not entitled to any relief, unless, as he claims, another writing, signed by McFadden and Buxton, was not only a part of the entire contract, but introduced a new element respecting the manner of paying the purchase price.

At the time when the formal written contract of sale was entered into, it was contemplated by plaintiff and by McFadden and Buxton that the former would continue to furnish sign paintings as theretofore. Pursuant to such *508 expectation, and at the same time when the formal contract of sale was executed, plaintiff and McFadden and Buxton made another contract—-a contract which hereafter will be referred to as the collateral agreement. This collateral agreement was evidenced by a writing signed by McFadden and Buxton, and, though not signed by plaintiff, was unquestionably acted upon by him. This document is as follows:

“San Diego, California, Jan. 27, 1913.
“Mr. H. B. McAuliff,
“City.
“Dear Sir: In consideration of the contract entered into this date whereby you have agreed to purchase lots 32 and 33, Block G-, North Park, for the sum of Thirteen Hundred Fifty Dollars, it is agreed and understood that qjLl payments to be made on this property shall be one-third the monthly bills for sign painting rendered from you and in no case will we ask for more. Said payments to be" credited on the first of each month.
“Yours very truly,
“McFadden & Buxton,
“By G-. E. Buxton.”

Buxton, who was the only witness for defendants, testified that the two contracts “were made at the same time; . . . it was the mutual understanding between us [plaintiff and McFadden and Buxton] that the deal [the contract for the sale of the two lots] wouldn’t have been made without having this agreement”—the collateral agreement. Buxton, in his testimony, also said that it was not contemplated that there should be any other method of paying for the lots than the sign painting that plaintiff was to do. McFadden and Buxton were the record owners of the lots and had the handling of the property, though it is a fair inference from the facts appearing in the court’s findings, together with those disclosed by the brief excerpts from the evidence printed in appellant’s brief, that, at the date of the contract of sale, the two lots were owned by the four defendants—McFadden, Buxton, Strahlmann, and Mayer. Plaintiff testified as follows: “He [Buxton] . . . says: ‘You have been doing a lot of work for us people [referring to a time immediately preceding the contract of purchase and sale]; we think you ought to reciprocate by *509 buying a lot.’ I told Buxton that I didn’t want a lot; that I didn’t think I could afford to buy a lot. ‘Well,’ he says, ‘We can make this so easy that it won’t cost you a cent’. . . . Mr. Buxton told me, and I understood him fully, that they would have enough work so that I could pay fifty dollars a month toward the lot, being one-third of the amount of work they were likely to have, and the two-thirds would be paid in cash.” This testimony is not contradicted by any evidence printed in the briefs.

Plaintiff paid his vendors a total of $421.07. From the findings and the parts of evidence printed in the briefs, it is clear that this aggregate sum of $421.07 was made up of payments made in the manner provided for in the contemporaneous collateral agreement. Plaintiff made all the signs and did all the sign painting that he was asked to do after the execution of the formal contract of sale and the contemporaneous collateral agreement. He was eager to do anything the defendants had for him to do, and never refused a job for them.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Versaci v. Superior Court
26 Cal. Rptr. 3d 92 (California Court of Appeal, 2005)
Ecker Bros. v. Jones
186 Cal. App. 2d 775 (California Court of Appeal, 1960)
Klinker v. Klinker
283 P.2d 83 (California Court of Appeal, 1955)
University of Southern California v. Bryson
283 P. 949 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
Gracchi v. Friedlander
270 P. 235 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Kendis v. Cohn
265 P. 844 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
People v. Attema
243 P. 461 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)
Central Savings Bank v. Coulter
236 P. 956 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 P. 870, 42 Cal. App. 505, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcauliff-v-mcfadden-calctapp-1919.