Orton v. Embassy Realty Associates, Inc.

205 P.2d 427, 91 Cal. App. 2d 434, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 1949
DocketCiv. 16506
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 205 P.2d 427 (Orton v. Embassy Realty Associates, Inc.) 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
Orton v. Embassy Realty Associates, Inc., 205 P.2d 427, 91 Cal. App. 2d 434, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

Plaintiffs’ complaint herein contained two causes of action: the first, for damages, alleged a breach of contract by the defendants which made it impossible for plaintiffs to perform thereunder, and the second sought a sum of money alleged to be due as payments under the same contract. As to the first cause of action a nonsuit was granted, and on the second, judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs for the sum of $952.75. Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment against them pursuant to the nonsuit on the first cause of action, and defendants have appealed from the judgment against them on the second cause of action.

It appears that in October, 1945, plaintiffs were the owners of all the issued capital stock of Orlando Realty Company, the assets of which consisted almost entirely of real estate. On or about October 4,1945, the parties entered into a written contract for the sale of all the stock to Embassy Realty Associates. Because of a difference of opinion as to the value of one of the Orlando properties known as 1501-25 East First Street, there was added to the contract a provision entitled “Contingent Addition to Purchase Price,” the full text of *436 which appears below. * In substance, it provided that should the sellers, on or before September 1,1946, secure an acceptable lessee for a term of 10 years or more at a rental of $10,000 or more per year, the purchase price would be increased by certain stated amounts depending on the amount of the annual rental under the lease.

In their first cause of action plaintiffs set forth the contract and alleged that in June, 1946, defendant sold the real property known as 1501-25 East First Street and thereby prevented plaintiffs from leasing said property and becoming entitled to the additional payment; that defendant, by rendering performance by plaintiffs impossible, damaged plaintiffs in the sum of $6,000.

The answer admitted the making of the contract and the unconditional sale of the property, but denied the remaining allegations of the complaint, and set up as an affirmative de *437 fense that the plaintiffs were real estate brokers; that the property was sold through one Max Jolles, a broker associated with plaintiffs; that plaintiffs intentionally or by want of ordinary care led defendant to believe that Jolles was acting as plaintiffs’ agent in proposing the sale; that upon information and belief plaintiffs profited from the transaction through Jolles, and were estopped to claim a breach of the contract by defendant. As a second defense it was alleged that plaintiffs conferred actual authority upon Jolles to act as their agent in proposing the sale.

As to the first cause of action, appellants assign error “in refusing to accept testimony on intention; in rejecting offers of proof of value; in interpretation of the contract; and in granting a nonsuit.” As to the first point, the record discloses that the trial court did accept evidence of the conversations of the parties in the negotiations which led up to the insertion of the provisions in the contract which are here under discussion. In connection with its assignment of errors appellants assert that the intention of the parties was that if the sellers could “demonstrate” greater value of the property by procuring a suitable lease, then they would be entitled to the added consideration.

The foundation of appellants’ ease on the first cause of action is that by their act in selling unconditionally the property prior to September 1, 1946, the defendants effectually prevented performance by the plaintiffs of the condition, to wit, securing a satisfactory lessee at $10,000 per year, which would entitle them to the additional “contingent addition to purchase price. ’ ’

The defense position is that all that plaintiffs had was an agency, as brokers, to negotiate a lease, and that such an agency, unless accompanied by an exclusive right to sell or lease in the agent, leaves the owner free to make a sale or lease himself, without liability for a commission. (Merkeley v. Fisk, 179 Cal. 748 [178 P. 945]; Snook v. Page, 29 Cal.App. 246 [155 P. 107].) Defendants contend that “to become entitled to what was, in effect, a commission, plaintiffs must first have presented to the defendant a lessee meeting the requirements of Paragraph 19, or there must have been an acceptance of a lessee produced by either another agent or by the defendant, itself.” In other words, the plaintiffs must allege and prove that prior to the sale by defendant they had produced an acceptable lessee ready and willing to enter into a lease.

*438 It is our view that the analogy drawn by defendant between the contract situation here presented and that of a simple agency where a broker may not recover unless he procures a purchaser or lessee before the property is disposed of by the principal, is not well founded. It is true that the plaintiffs here were authorized as agents to negotiate a lease. They were not, however, to receive a commission as such agents for procuring a lessee, but were to receive an addition to the purchase price if a suitable lease was entered into or tendered before September 1,1946, regardless of who negotiated it. The contract recites that the consideration for the sale of the stock of Orlando is $115,000 “plus such amounts as contingent additions to said purchase price as are hereinafter provided and minus such amounts as contingent deductions from said purchase price as are hereinafter provided.” Prom a consideration of the contract itself and the intention of the parties as indicated by its terms, without resort to extrinsic evidence, it must be held that the buyer impliedly agreed to hold the property available for lease until September 1, 1946. To hold otherwise would be to do violence to the expressed intention of the parties that the sellers were to have until September 1, 1946, in which to bring about the contingency upon which the enhancement of the purchase price depended. A contract should be construed so as to give effect to all its provisions, if reasonably practicable. (Civ. Code, §1641.) If defendant’s position is correct, then it could with impunity have sold the property immediately upon acquiring it, thus giving plaintiffs no opportunity at all to perform.

By putting it out of its power to enter into a lease, the defendant effectively prevented performance by plaintiffs. Obviously, the plaintiffs could not, without being guilty of misrepresentation, secure from a responsible party a bona fide offer to lease property which the defendant no longer owned.

“Each party to a contract impliedly agrees not to prevent the other party from performing or to render performance impossible by any act of his own.” (17 C.J.S. 967.) Prevention of performance is equivalent to repudiation. (Woodruff v. Adams, 134 Cal.App. 490 [25 P.2d 529].) In Bewick v. Mecham, 26 Cal.2d 92, 99 [156 P.2d 757, 157 A.L.R. 1277], the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
205 P.2d 427, 91 Cal. App. 2d 434, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orton-v-embassy-realty-associates-inc-calctapp-1949.