Pearson v. Brown

148 P. 956, 27 Cal. App. 125
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1462.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 148 P. 956 (Pearson v. Brown) 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
Pearson v. Brown, 148 P. 956, 27 Cal. App. 125 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendant. The action was one to recover the sum of three hundred and ninety dollars, with interest, alleged to have been paid by the plaintiffs on account of two certain contracts for the purchase by them of certain lots in Richmond from the defendant, which contracts, it was claimed, the latter had broken and abandoned by his refusal to receive further payments thereon, and by his express cancellation of said contracts.

The facts regarding the making and execution of these contracts and the defendant’s alleged breach of them, out of which the plaintiffs’ claim arises, are, according to the admissions of the pleadings, as follows: On August 21, 1909, the plaintiffs and the defendant entered into a contract by which the former was to purchase from the latter a lot in *127 a certain tract in Richmond for the sum of eight hundred dollars, to be paid in monthly installments of not less than ten dollars, the first deferred installment to be payable on September 21, 1909, and the balance in monthly installments of ten dollars payable on the twenty-first day of each and every month thereafter until the purchase price was fully paid. These deferred payments were to be without interest, except that it was agreed that if the purchaser should be delinquent for a period of sixty days, interest at the rate of six per cent per annum was to be paid thereon during the period of such delinquency. It was also provided that time was to be of the essence of the agreement; and that if the payments were not made according to the terms and conditions of the contract within sixty days after they became due, then all of the payments were to be forfeited as liquidated damages without recourse at the option of the seller. On the fourteenth day of October, 1909, a similar contract for the purchase of two additional lots in the same tract, for the purchase price of four hundred dollars each, payable by like monthly installments on the fourteenth day of every month thereafter, was entered into between the parties. The admissions in the pleadings show that the plaintiffs commenced making payments on both of these contracts, but that almost from the beginning they fell behind in paying the installments on the stipulated dates, sometimes being only a few days in arrears, and at other times allowing a month or more of delinquency to occur. On their first contract the plaintiffs paid in all and at irregular intervals the sum of two hundred dollars up to May 15, 1911. On their second contract they had paid in all and at like irregular intervals the sum of one hundred and ninety dollars up to May 15, 1911. These various payments were all received by the defendant without any objection on his part that they were not being made on time. No further payments upon the installments of either contract were made or offered by the plaintiffs after May 15, 1911, until December 30, 1911. On December 5, 1911, the defendant wrote plaintiffs a letter in the following words:

“December 5, 1911.—James F. and S. K. Pearson, Areata, Calif. Gentlemen:—This is to advise you that I have on this day canceled your contracts for lots in the Brown Andrade Tracts on account of nonpayment of installments, as you are now delinquent ten months, and I feel that I have *128 carried this account long enough. However, if at any time within one year from date of this letter you should wish to buy four lots from me, I shall be very glad to apply what payments you have made on any four lots that you may select that I have in any of my tracts, at current prices.
Tours very truly,-—Herbert F. Brown.”

This letter was sent by mail to the plaintiffs at their place of residence in Areata, Humboldt County, and in the ordinary course of the mails probably reached them a few days later. On December 30, the plaintiffs paid to one J. G. Dolson, the agent of the defendant to whom their previous installments had been paid, the sum of one hundred and twenty dollars upon each contract, which, according to the admitted averments of the plaintiffs’ complaint, would have fully paid up all back installments then delinquent, and all interest upon deferred payments to that date. On January 19, 1912, the defendant wrote again to the plaintiffs, informing them that he had received their said payments of December 30th, but that he returned same, inasmuch as he had canceled their contracts on December 5th, and that he could not reinstate them as to the lots in question. On January 24, 1912, the plaintiffs demanded of the defendant that he retain and credit the said money, and apply the same upon the payments and interest on said contracts, which demand the defendant again refused to comply with. Thereupon and on February 16, 1912, the plaintiffs demanded the return of the sum of three hundred and ninety dollars which they had previously paid on said contracts; and this being also refused, this action was brought to recover said sum.

The court on motion rendered judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendant, from which judgment the plaintiffs have appealed.

Upon the foregoing admitted facts, the first question that arises is as to what the rights of the respective parties were on December 5, 1911, the date of the defendant’s first letter to the plaintiffs informing them that he had canceled their contracts. On that date the plaintiffs were about eight months in default in respect of their monthly installments upon, each of these contracts; and, according to the strict letter of their agreements making time the essence of such contracts, the plaintiffs would then have been subject to the penalty of- having their contracts canceled, and of a forfeiture *129 of the payments which they had theretofore made. On the other hand, however, the defendant, by repeatedly receiving without objection the several payments which the plaintiffs had been tardily making upon these contracts, must be held by his action in so doing to have so far waived his right to insist upon the strict letter of the contracts as to be no longer entitled to take advantage of the plaintiffs’- past delinquencies so as to either declare the contracts canceled because of them, or to claim the forfeiture of such payments as he had theretofore received without objection when they were not being made on the dates fixed by the contract. (Pomeroy on Contracts, sec. 337; Boone v. Templeman, 158 Cal. 291, [139 Am. St. Rep. 126, 110 Pac. 947] ; Stevinson v. Joy, 164 Cal. 279, [128 Pac. 751]; Sausalito etc. Co. v. Sausalito Imp. Co., 166 Cal. 302, [136 Pac. 57]; Standard B. K. Co. v. Anderson, 121 La. 935, 15 Ann. Cas. 251, [46 South. 926]; Barnett v. Sussman, 116 App. Div. 859, [102 N. Y. Supp. 287].)

The foregoing cases not only sustain the rule above set forth, but they also undertake to distinguish and declare what the rights of a vendor are as to all subsequent payments due or to become due upon such contracts after such waiver on his part of the default of the vendee as to prior dilatory payments. The rule in this regard is well expressed in Stevinson v. Joy, 164 Cal. 279 [128 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P. 956, 27 Cal. App. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-brown-calctapp-1915.