Proulx v. Sacramento Valley Land Co.

126 P. 509, 19 Cal. App. 529, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 195
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 22, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1013.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 126 P. 509 (Proulx v. Sacramento Valley Land Co.) 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
Proulx v. Sacramento Valley Land Co., 126 P. 509, 19 Cal. App. 529, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 195 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This is an action for the recovery of a realty broker’s commission alleged to be due under a contract whereby the plaintiffs were employed to assist in the sale of certain real estate. The case, which was tried with a jury, resulted in a judgment of nonsuit, from which the appeal is taken.

Plaintiffs’ complaint in substance. alleges that the defendants were the owners of or had options upon certain several and separate parcels of agricultural land situate in Glenn and Colusa counties, in the state of California, known as “Glenn Rancho Lands,” “Packer Tract” and “Boggs Ranch Lands”; that the plaintiffs and defendants entered into a contract by the terms of which the plaintiffs, as copartners, were employed to assist in the sale of the designated lands for the agreed compensation of two and one-half per cent of all sums for which said lands or any part thereof might be sold with the assistance of the plaintiffs; that in accordance with such agreement the plaintiffs proceeded to and did assist the defendants in the sale of two thousand acres of the lands mentioned at the price of $62.57 per acre, or in all, the sum of $125,140; that there is due to the plaintiffs under the terms of the contract the sum of $3,128.50 as commissions which the defendants refuse to pay.

The defendant, the Sacramento Valley Land Company, by its separate answer admitted the ownership of the lands described in the plaintiffs’ complaint, but denied that there was any employment of plaintiffs to sell said lands or that they had sold or assisted in the sale of the same.

The defendants C. M. Wooster Company and C. M. Wooster, answering for themselves, denied that they owned any of the lands described in the complaint, and while denying the execution of the precise contract pleaded, admitted that they had agreed with the plaintiffs to pay them two and one-half per cent on any lands that the plaintiffs would sell for the C. M. Wooster Company, as the agent of the Sacramento Valley Land Company, which formed a part of and were included *531 within, the tract of land owned by the Sacramento Valley Land Company in Glenn county, known as “the Glenn Tract of the Sacramento Valley Land Co.” The Wooster defendants denied, however, that the plaintiffs, in accordance with the admitted agreement or otherwise, sold or assisted in the sale of any lands in the “Glenn Rancho Tract” or any other of the lands belonging to the Sacramento Valley Land Company.

It was admitted upon the trial of the case that the defendant 0. M. Wooster Company was the authorized agent of the Sacramento Valley Land Company for the sale of its lands, and as such agent was duly authorized to and did contract in writing with the plaintiffs for the sale of lands in the tract of land belonging to the Sacramento Valley Land Company known and designated as the “Glenn Rancho Lands.” This tract of land, however, is located exclusively in Glenn county, and is a piece or parcel of land entirely separate and distinct from the tract of land known as the “Packer Tract,” and no claim is made, in this action, that there is anything due to the plaintiffs from the defendants for or on account of any sale of land lying within the tract known as the “Glenn Rancho Lands.”

There was some evidence offered and received at the trial in support of plaintiffs’ case which tended to show that through the efforts of the plaintiffs one S. W. Punk, as the representative of the “Church of the Brethren commonly known as the Bunkers,” was induced to and did enter into a contract with the Sacramento Valley Land Company for the purchase of two thousand acres, at the price of $62.57 per acre, of the lands known as the “Packer Tract”—one portion of which tract was located in Glenn county and the other in Colusa county. It was for the sale of these lands that commissions are claimed and sued for in this case by the plaintiffs.

The trial court granted the nonsuit upon the sole ground that the evidence adduced in support of the plaintiffs’ ease did not show the execution of a written contract, as required by section 1624 of the Civil Code, between the plaintiffs and the defendants for the sale of the two thousand acres in the “Packer Tract,” which, it is claimed, the evidence shows was brought about by the efforts of the plaintiffs.

*532 The plaintiffs, in order to show the making and executing of a contract with the defendant Wooster Company for the sale of lands in the “Packer Tract,” introduced in evidence and relied largely, if not entirely, upon certain written correspondence which passed "between plaintiffs and the Wooster Company, as agent of the Sacramento Valley Land Company.

Numerous letters, some of which were admitted in evidence and others rejected, were shown to have passed between the parties at different times, but the letter of January 18, 1905, from the Wooster Company to plaintiffs, was the only one wherein the subject of employment and compensation is mentioned. This letter, it appears, was written in response to a written request made upon the Wooster Company for the pay- ■ ment of commissions claimed to be due the plaintiffs for past services rendered in inducing sales and procuring purchasers of lands lying in the “Glenn Rancho” tract. No reference ■was made, directly or indirectly, in the letter to the “Packer Tract,” but after a general discussion of an apparent misunderstanding between the plaintiffs and the Wooster Company as to the exact amount of commissions previously agreed to be paid to plaintiffs for past services in inducing sales in the “Glenn Rancho Tract,” the writer stated, in substance, • that in his opinion it was but fair and right that the plaintiffs, for such sales as they had already made, should be paid a commission of five per cent, and then proceeded to say that “a " fair commission agreement for the sale of lands which we will now talce up vigorously, same as we have the Boggs Ranch, is that sales made by you (the plaintiffs) to your own customers, that you get five per cent; and when you sell to customers that we send to you, or any agents whom we have to ■ pay, that the commission be two and one-half per cent.”

In reply to this letter the plaintiffs wrote as follows: “We have carefully- considered your proposition of the 18th inst. about our"commissions in future, and so that there will be no misunderstanding hereafter we have consented to accept your proposition of five per cent and two and one-half per cent commission. There is considerable inquiry now for lands here and your land will sell readily. We will do our best for you in every instance.” . "

Notwithstanding that neither of these "letters made any reference to the “Packer Tract,” it is claimed that the corre *533 sponden.ee between the parties constituted a memorandum of plaintiffs’ alleged contract with the Wooster Company for the' sale of lands in the “Packer Tract” sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds.

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Bluebook (online)
126 P. 509, 19 Cal. App. 529, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proulx-v-sacramento-valley-land-co-calctapp-1912.