Nelson v. Fernando Nelson & Sons

55 P.2d 859, 5 Cal. 2d 511
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1936
DocketS. F. 15503; S. F. 15108
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 55 P.2d 859 (Nelson v. Fernando Nelson & Sons) 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
Nelson v. Fernando Nelson & Sons, 55 P.2d 859, 5 Cal. 2d 511 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

THE COURT.

A hearing was granted in this case after decision by the District Court of Appeal, First Appellate District, Division One. We now adopt the following portions of the opinion of Mr. Justice pro tem. Dooling as part of the opinion of this court.

“Cross-appeals are presented herein from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $2,500 with interest from May 2, 1929. Plaintiff appeals on the judgment-roll alone, claiming that under the findings she is entitled to a judgment for $18,250 with interest. Defendant on its appeal presents a *514 typewritten transcript of the evidence and urges that the evidence does not support the findings in a number of particulars.

“In 1926 plaintiff and Frank F. Nelson were husband and wife. Marital differences between them having become acute, on August 11, 1926, they entered into a property settlement agreement. As a part of said agreement Frank F. Nelson agreed to convey to plaintiff three certain lots of land, and to each of their two children one lot of land. Title to these five lots at the date of said agreement was in the defendant herein.

“On August 12, 1926, defendant and Frank F. Nelson entered into a contract of purchase and sale of said five lots wherein and whereby defendant agreed to sell said five lots to Frank F. Nelson. By the terms of this agreement Frank F. Nelson was to make a total down payment of $10,000 and to give his note for the balance of the purchase price of one lot, which we shall designate as the Lincoln Way lot. As to the other four lots the agreement was silent as to the time for paying the balance on the price of each or any of them, but the agreement recited in this regard: ‘The delivery to the Purchaser of a good and sufficient deed conveying title to said property and the payment of the balance of the purchase price are concurrent conditions. ’

“The evidence shows that in order to finance the down payments on the five lots a bank mortgage of $10,000 was placed on the Lincoln Way lot to secure a promissory note in that amount executed by plaintiff and Frank F. Nelson and endorsed by defendant. The $10,000 thus borrowed was paid to defendant and applied as follows: $7,000 on the purchase price of the Lincoln Way lot; $1,000, respectively, on each of two other lots which by the terms of their property agreement Frank F. Nelson was to convey to plaintiff; and $500, respectively, on each of the lots which by such agreement Frank F. Nelson was to convey to the children. As part of this transaction title to the Lincoln Way lot was conveyed to plaintiff forthwith.

“On August 13, 1926, Frank F. Nelson assigned to plaintiff all of his rights in the aforesaid contract of purchase and sale, and covenanted with her to perform all of its obligations. On May 2, 1929, defendant herein conveyed one of the lots covered by its said contract of sale with Frank F. Nelson to a *515 third party for $5,000. On learning of this sale, plaintiff demanded of defendant that it pay to her the difference between the selling price to the third party and the price fixed in its agreement of sale with Frank F. Nelson, and defendant thereupon notified plaintiff that it recognized no rights in her under said contract on the expressed ground that the contract was with Frank F. Nelson. This suit followed, in which plaintiff sought to recover from defendant the amounts paid upon the four lots plus the difference between the selling price to Frank F. Nelson and the market value of the lots on May 2, 1929, the date of its repudiation of the contract. It further appears that defendant was a family corporation, the stock of which was all held by a father and five children, one of the children being Frank F. Nelson.

“ With this preliminary statement we shall proceed to a consideration of the findings of fact attacked by defendant as unsupported by the evidence. The court found that ‘from and after about said date of August 13, 1926, defendant knew and was informed of said assignment by said Frank F. Nelson to plaintiff’. Plaintiff testified positively that in July or August, 1927, she personally presented the assignment to Fernando Nelson, the president of defendant corporation. Without affecting the rights of the parties in any way we may accept this date as the date of first notice to the defendant. Accordingly this finding is ordered modified by changing the words therein ‘said date of August 13, 1926’ to read ‘August, 1927’.

“ The court found that ‘ after the execution of said contract, the down payment of $10,000, defendant and said Frank F. Nelson and plaintiff, each and all of them, allowed said contract to continue in full force and effect without further performance by either of them’; and further that ‘it is untrue that defendant and said Frank N'elson mutually rescinded or cancelled or terminated or abandoned said contract on August 14, 1926, or at any other time, or at all’; and that ‘said defendant Fernando Nelson & Sons, a corporation, did duly approve and execute said contract, and did at all times thereafter, until May 2, 1929, recognize said contract as being in full force and effect’.

“It is claimed by defendant that defendant and Frank F. Nelson mutually abandoned said contract in August, 1928, by oral agreement. Against this testimony plaintiff showed *516 five bills sent by defendant to plaintiff covering taxes and sidewalk costs on these lots in 1927 and 1928, and on October 29, 1929, after its repudiation of the contract defendant sent a letter to plaintiff purporting to cancel three such bills on the ground stated in the letter: ' These bills were wrongly charged to your personal account as the contract on Lots 17 Block 3273 Lot 2 Block 2484 is with Frank F. Nelson, we are therefore charging his account. ’ The account books of the corporation also show -charges against plaintiff in connection with these lots which remained on the books unchanged until after the repudiation of May -2, 1929, and a charge against Frank F. Nelson on August 1, 1929, in connection with the contract for the purchase of the lots.

“This evidence is ample to support the findings above set out. It is sufficient to support an inference that defendant recognized plaintiff’s interest in the contract until May 2, 1929, and recognized the contract as existing and in force between it and Frank F. Nelson even after, that date, and is entirely inconsistent with the theory of a mutual abandonment by Frank F. Nelson and defendant in 1928.

“ In addition to this, defendant had notice of the assignment to plaintiff in August, 1927. The effect of the assignment was to transfer all of Frank F. Nelson’s rights under the contract to plaintiff (Harris v. Miller, 196 Cal. 8, 17, 18 [235 Pac. 981] ; Kemp v. Enemark, 194 Cal. 748, 756 [230 Pac. 441]; Laack v. Dimmick, 95 Cal. App. 456, 469 [273 Pac. 50]), although the burdens of the contract still rested upon Frank. (Lisenby v. Newton, 120 Cal. 571 [52 Pac. 813, 65 Am. St. Rep. 203].) It would be highly inequitable under such circumstances to permit Frank to surrender by agreement the rights in the contract which were no longer his property but had become the property of plaintiff by his assignment.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.2d 859, 5 Cal. 2d 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-fernando-nelson-sons-cal-1936.