Ratzlaff v. Trainor-Desmond Co.

183 P. 269, 41 Cal. App. 586, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 537
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1869.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 183 P. 269 (Ratzlaff v. Trainor-Desmond 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
Ratzlaff v. Trainor-Desmond Co., 183 P. 269, 41 Cal. App. 586, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 537 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

On or about the first day of March, 1912, the Sacramento Valley Colonization Company entered into a contract with the defendant to sell to the latter a large body of land in the Rancho del Paso, in Sacramento County. At that time and for some time thereafter plaintiff was engaged in selling lands for defendant, and on or about March 26th following the former negotiated with one W. H. Stewart for the sale of some 1,608.38 acres, and thereafter defendant entered into a written contract with Stewart for the sale and purchase of said tract, acknowledging the receipt ■ of five thousand dollars, and agreeing that, when Stewart paid an additional sum of twelve thousand dollars on the purchase price, defendant would give Stewart a new contract according to a form attached to the first contract. When said twelve thousand dollar payment was about due according to said contract, plaintiff ascertained that Stewart was having considerable difficulty in raising funds to meet this payment, and on the twelfth day of June, following, without any objection from Stewart, plaintiff induced one W. B. Harrison to enter into a contract with defendant for the purchase of section 29 included in Stewart’s contract. About this time defendant, without the assistance of plaintiff, sold to one Jonas 320 additional acres of said tract covered" by the Stewart contract. Thereupon plaintiff persuaded Stewart that the latter could handle the residue of the land included in said contract and he came to California from Oklahoma and entered into the second written contract with defendant, whereby the latter agreed to sell to Stewart the north one-half of section 65 and of section 62, being all the land covered by Stewart’s first contract, after deducting those portions sold to Harrison *588 and Jonas. Defendant gave Stewart credit on the second contract for the.five thousand dollars, paid on the first, the second being dated July 1, 1912. Immediately after,this plaintiff and defendant executed the following written agreement: “In entering into an agreement with D. Batzlaff in the sale of the following described property it is understood that the net price to him would be $87.50 and! the said Batzlaff having disposed of the said land at $92.50 per acre, it is therefore understood and agreed that in consideration of the work done and to be .done in the sale of Section No. 29, and the North half of section No. 62 and North half of section No. 65,' amounting to 1288.33 acres located on Baneho del Paso in the County of Sacramento, State of California, we agree to pay D. B. Batzlaff of the city of Sacramento, state of California, the sum of $5 per acre as commissions. Said commissions to be paid pro rata as paid by the purchasers after the first twenty per cent payment is received. No commissions to be paid out of the first twenty per cent. The above commissions are to bear 6% interest, payable as received.” We may refer to this as “the commission contract,” and upon it the action is based. It was dated February 19th, but was actually executed in the early part of July, 1912. The reason for antedating is explained by plaintiff, but that consideration is of no importance here. Thereafter and on or about January 18, 1913, while said Stewart’s second contract and the Harrison contract were in full force, defendant assigned to the Farmers & Bankers’ Investment Company its said contract of purchase with the Sacramento Valley Colonization Company and took in payment therefor the greater portion of the capital stock of said Investment Company. About the same time, at the request of ,said defendant, the Colonization Company conveyed the lánds covered by said commission contract to the Investment Company, and on or about June 11, 1913, the TrainorDesmond Company sold all of its said stock-to one B. F. Bobbins. Thereafter, it is plain, defendant had no interest whatever in any of said lands or in either of said contracts with Stewart and Harrison.

As to the complaint in the action, no criticism seems to be justified. In brief, it may be stated that it alleges the *589 execution of said commission contract, the performance by plaintiff of the terms, covenants, and conditions therein recited, “that defendant has received payment in full for said lands, that heretofore and while said contracts of sale were in full force and effect, defendant sold and transferred all its interest in the said lands,” and that no part of said amount agreed upon has been paid. The complaint 'was verified, and in the verified answer defendant admitted the execution of the commission contract, but claimed that plaintiff had sold thereunder only 648.33 acres and was •therefore entitled to the sum of $3,241.65 as commissions instead of $6,441.65 as claimed. A counterclaim was also set up for about one thousand six hundred dollars, and the prayer was that this sum might be set off against plaintiff’s claim, and defendant offered to pay to plaintiff the difference. Defendant was permitted, however, by the court to file an amended answer, from which was omitted the express admission of any amount due plaintiff. No objection was made to the form of the amended answer, although somewhat uncertain in its denials of certain material allegations of the complaint, and the cause was tried by the court. The findings were in favor of plaintiff on the commission contract for the full amount claimed, to wit, the sum of $6,441.65 together with interest thereon at six per cent from the nineteenth day of February, 1912, amounting to $8,060.23, and in favor of defendant for the counterclaim for a little less than the amount demanded. The judgment was for the difference, the sum of $6,130.66 in favor of plaintiff, from which the appeal is taken.

[1] In the trial of the cause much parol evidence was received of the services performed by plaintiff in the effort" to secure purchasers for said tract of land and to effect its sale. This included an account of the negotiations with said Stewart and Harrison and a statement of the contracts which plaintiff induced them to execute. The evidence was objected to, principally on the ground that it was thereby sought to prove the authority of plaintiff, as agent to represent defendant in the sale of real property—and it is claimed here that such evidence was inadmissible because violative of the statute of frauds, requiring such authority to be in writing. But appellant is entirely mistaken in the view that said rule is applicable to this case. The evidence *590 was received and was certainly admissible for the purpose of showing the consideration for appellant’s promise to pay respondent said commission of five dollars per acre. It was not required of respondent in the first instance to offer such evidence, since the written contract would raise the presumption of sufficient consideration. But the answer virtually denied that any service was performed that would support the said promise to pay, and respondent, by offering such proof, simply anticipated this defense. Plaintiff, let it be repeated, did not rely upon any parol authorization of agency, but this action was and is based upon said written promise to pay.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 269, 41 Cal. App. 586, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratzlaff-v-trainor-desmond-co-calctapp-1919.