Merzoian v. Kludjian

191 P. 673, 183 Cal. 422, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 423
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 9256.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 191 P. 673 (Merzoian v. Kludjian) 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
Merzoian v. Kludjian, 191 P. 673, 183 Cal. 422, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 423 (Cal. 1920).

Opinions

LAWLOR, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants, L. Kludjian, S. Kludjian, and the said L. Kludjian and S. Kludjian, doing business as Kludjian Bros., from a judgment in' favor of the plaintiff, A. Merzoian, in an action *423 brought .to recover commissions which plaintiff alleged he had earned in securing for the defendants a purchaser for certain real estate which they owned and which they had employed him as agent to sell on a commission of five per cent. The record of the appeal is presented under the alternative method.

On January 16, 1917, the defendants authorized the plaintiff in writing to sell a tract of forty acres of land in Fresno County, together with certain personal property consisting of agricultural implements, livestock, and other accessories used on the ranch. The selling price of this property was to be twenty thousand five hundred dollars, payable as follows: “Five thousand dollars cash. Balance one thousand dollars per year and interest.” It is alleged in the complaint that on or about January 27th the plaintiff found a purchaser who agreed in writing to buy upon the owners’ terms and deposited with the plaintiff the' sum of one hundred dollars; that thereafter and prior to February 2d plaintiff duly notified defendants that he had effected a sale of the property; that the proposed purchaser and the defendants were brought together for the purpose of consummating the sale; “that said purchaser did then and there . . .. offer to purchase . . . the property”; that the defendants thereupon refused to make the sale; that the defendants had agreed to pay the plaintiff “a five per cent commission on the selling price” of twenty thousand five hundred dollars, and that the plaintiff, having produced a purchaser who was ready, able, and willing to buy, is entitled to the commission. Judgment was rendered in accordance with the prayer of the complaint for $1,025.

Appellants raise three questions: “First and foremost of which is whether the prospective purchaser . . ..was ready, willing, and able to purchase . . . Second. Whether the defendants could have obtained a valid and binding contract from the prospective purchaser . . . , and Third. Whether the prospective purchaser was produced as such during the life of the contract of employment of the agent and before revocation of the same.”

1. We shall first consider whether John Hatchegian, the prospective purchaser, was ready, able, and willing to make the purchase, and whether the defendants could have obtained a contract from him. In this connection the court *424 found “that at all times said John Hatchegian was ready, able, and willing to purchase.said property.” Is this finding sustained by the evidence ? Hatchegian testified on . direct examination: “ Q. About the latter part of January, 1917, did you have any conversation with Mr. Merzoian 1 A. Yes, sir. ... On I Street. ... It was further said, he asked me five thousand dollars for cash payment, and I said I didn’t have five thousand dollars. I told him I only had two thousand dollars cash and there was another party, named Avadisian, said he was willing to lend five hundred dollars more. . . . Mr. Merzoian said at that time, ‘In case Avadisian does not loan you five hundred dollars, I am willing to help you with three thousand dollars so you can purchase the place. ’ . . . Q. Did you have any money in the bank or any place at that time? A. I had a thousand dollars in the Bank of Italy, and about seventeen or sixteen hundred dollars in the First National Bank of Fresno. Then, aside from that, I had another note which was due right away, four hundred dollars. Q. And all together, then, you had in the neighborhood of two thousand dollars or two thousand five hundred dollars, didn’t you? A. I had two thousand five hundred dollars. I had two thousand five hundred dollars, and Mr. Avadisian was supposed to give me five hundred dollars. ... I went down and saw the cashier of the First National Bank, . . . Walrond. I asked him if they were willing to give me five hundred dollars. They said, ‘Yes, if you get a couple of fellows to sign on your note. ’ . . . Mr. Merzoian at that time had a note for three thousand dollars, and he says his commission would amount to a thousand dollars, that he would deposit the three thousand dollars in the bank and would get two thousand dollars and give it to me.” On cross-examination, he gave the 'following testimony: “Q. Now, did Avadisian ever have any conversation with you at any time before this particular conversation you have spoken of, wherein he promised to loan you five hundred dollars? A. Yes, lot of other occasions; many times. . . . He has said on many occasions if I were to buy the place he would lend me five hundred dollars. . . . Q. Did you at that time, or at. any other time since, agree as to when you should return that five hundred dollars to him? A. At any time I had money I was going to pay him back. Q. Is *425 Mr. Avadisian related to you by blood? A. Godfather to my children. ... Q. At the time you signed this paper [his agreement with Merzoian for the purchase of the property] you had one thousand dollars on deposit in the Bank of Italy, did you? A. Yes, sir. Q. How much money did you have on deposit in the First National Bank of Fresno? A. I don’t remember correctly; it might be six hundred dollars dr five hundred dollars, I don’t know just exactly; and I had a note for four ( hundred dollars. Q. Do you mean to tell me that on the twenty-seventh day of January, 1917, the day you signed this agreement, you had one thousand dollars on deposit in the Bank of Italy? . . . A. Yes, sir. Q. And you had five hundred dollars or six hundred dollars at the same time ... in the First National Bank of Fresno, did you? A. Why, I don’t know; five or six, I don’t know; I don’t remember whether it was five hundred dollars or six hundred dollars that I had. . . . That is all I had in money, a thousand dollars in the Bank of Italy, and five or six hundred dollars in the First National Bank. ... I had two lots, deeded to my wife. . . . That is all I had. ... At that time and now I had two thousand dollars, my personal money, and Avadisian was going to lend me five hundred dollars. That is how I make two thousand five hundred dollars. . . . Q. You speak of a four hundred dollar note. Who was that given to you by? ... A. One Michael Jacob. He has got eighty acres at Lone Star and forty acres on California Avenue. The nature of that note was so that I could demand my money at any time that I need it. The Court: Ask him if he ever borrowed that five hundred dollars from Mr. Avadisian. A. No, I didn’t borrow at that time. . . . Q. How much did Mr. Merzoian promise to help you? A. He said, ‘I am willing to help you from two thousand five hundred dollars to three thousand dollars.’ Q. Did he loan you two thousand five hundred dollars to three thousand dollars- at any time? A. No, he did not.”

W. A. Piper, bookkeeper at the First National Bank of Fresno, testified that there had never been an account at that bank in the name of John Hatchegian.

The plaintiff succeeded in bringing together at the office of his attorney, Astor Elmassian, the defendants and the prospective purchaser, John Hatchegian. On direct exami *426 nation the plaintiff testified as follows regarding this in- ' terview: “Q. Now, what was said at this meeting at Mr. Elmassian’s office? ... A. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
191 P. 673, 183 Cal. 422, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merzoian-v-kludjian-cal-1920.