National Pacific Oil Co. v. Watson

193 P. 133, 184 Cal. 216, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 312
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 4869.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 193 P. 133 (National Pacific Oil Co. v. Watson) 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
National Pacific Oil Co. v. Watson, 193 P. 133, 184 Cal. 216, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 312 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff in an action brought upon the alleged breach of a contract for the sale of real property to recover payments on account of the purchase price made the defendant as vendor. The facts are practically undisputed, and are these:

The defendant by written contract agreed to sell to one Reynolds a certain forty acres of land in the oil district of Kern County for twenty-five thousand dollars. Although it is not so specified in the contract, which calls directly for the sale of the land as distinguished from a sale of the defendant’s title, the land was government land and the defendant’s only title thereto was under an unpatented mineral location. Two thousand five hundred dollars of the purchase price was paid down, and the balance was to be paid in subsequently maturing installments. Upon the payment of the last installment, the vendee was to receive a quitclaim deed to the property. Time was expressly made of the essence of the contract, and it was also provided that the buyer should be entitled to immediate possession and to the right to take oil from the property. Shortly after the making of the contract, Reynolds, the buyer, assigned it to the Consolidated Midway Oil Company.

Not long after the execution of the contract and before the date fixed for the payment of the first deferred installment of the purchase price, it was found that the land was, and since before the execution of the contract had been, in the adverse possession of others than the defendant, and that, because of this adverse possession, the vendee and his as *219 signee could not have possession under the contract. To cover this situation, a further arrangement was made, evidenced by written escrow instructions signed by both parties, whereby the installments of the purchase price as they became due were to be paid to a certain bank to be by it paid over to the defendant when, but not before, peaceable possession of the land was delivered to the assignee of the buyer. The escrow instructions contain no provision whatever for the possible contingency that peaceable possession might not be delivered for an indefinite time or at all, and in fact make no mention whatever of that contingency.

Three installments, aggregating twelve thousand five hundred dollars, were paid into the bank as they became due. When the last of them was paid the property was still being held adversely, and shortly thereafter, and before the next installment became due, a third arrangement was made, also in writing, whereby the money in escrow was divided between the parties, seven thousand five hundred dollars to the vendor and five thousand dollars to the vendee’s assignee and it was provided that no further payments on the purchase price need be made until thirty days after the delivery of possession, when all of the purchase price unpaid, including the five thousand dollars to be received back from the escrow by the vendee’s assignee, should be paid. In the case of this arrangement also, although.it was called forth by the continuing inability of the defendant to deliver possession, no provision is made for the contingency that such inability might continue indefinitely.

The money in escrow was divided in accordance with this last arrangement, and not long afterward the vendee’s assignee in turn assigned the contract to the plaintiff. The date of the last arrangement was May 27, 1910. After it was made, the inability of the defendant to give possession continued, and from time to time proposals were made on both sides for a final settlement of the transaction. None of these proposals, however, came to anything, and after the matter had run along in this fashion until February 18, 1914, with the defendant still unable to give possession, the plaintiff notified the defendant that because of his failure and inability in this respect it demanded back the ten thousand dollars which the defendant had received, two thousand five hundred dollars as the original payment on account *220 and seven thousand five hundred dollars from the money in escrow. This demand, which was practically a notice of rescission, was refused, and the plaintiff immediately brought the present action, which resulted, as we have said, in a judgment in its favor, from which the defendant appeals.

[1] It is manifest at once that the primary question in the case is whether or not the defendant’s continued failure and inability to give possession from the date of the last arrangement between the parties, May 27, 1910, to the date of the notice of rescission, February 18, 1914, a period of nearly four years, constituted a breach of the contract in such an essential particular as to entitle the plaintiff to rescind it. If it did, the contract having been rightfully rescinded, the defendant is liable for the return of the money which he received. Before considering this question, however, there is another which should be disposed of preliminarily. It is contended on behalf of the defendant that even if the contract were properly rescinded, the defendant’s obligation to return the money he received is one to return it to the parties who paid it, who were not the plaintiff but the original vendee, Reynolds, and his immediate assignee, the Consolidated Midway Oil Company, that the plaintiff cannot recover except as the assignee of these last-named parties of the right to the money, and that the assignment of the contract to the plaintiff was not an assignment of this right. The crux of the contention, of course, lies in the proposition that an assignment of the contract was not an assignment of the right to recover moneys paid upon the contract in case of its breach and consequent rescission.

[2] It is to be noted that the assignment of the contract was prior to the rescission, so that upon this point the question is, Has one who holds a contract by assignment and who because of a breach of the contract rightfully rescinds it, the right by virtue simply of his ownership of the contract to recover all moneys paid under the contract, whether paid by him or by those who held the contract prior to him? The answer to this question is not doubtful. It is said, first, that the money must be regarded as money in the defendant’s hands had and received for the use of those who paid it, who were not the plaintiff, but his assignors. But this begs the question. It is true that the *221 contract being rescinded, the money paid upon it is considered as if originally paid the defendant for the use and benefit of those paying it. But the real question is, Did the assignment by those parties of the contract under which they paid the money have the effect of assigning their right to recover that money in ease the contract were subsequently rescinded for a breach? Upon this point it would seem plain enough that when the assignor assigns the contract, he intends to assign, and does assign, all benefits under it, including the benefit of any payments that have been made on account of it.

It is said, second, that the recovery of the money is upon an implied contract to repay, that this implied contract is wholly distinct from the contract of sale which is ended by the rescission, and that the conclusion follows that an assignment of the contract of sale is not an assignment of the separate and distinct implied contract for the return of the moneys.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 P. 133, 184 Cal. 216, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-pacific-oil-co-v-watson-cal-1920.