Rempel v. Kells

215 P. 1042, 62 Cal. App. 81, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 299
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 3, 1923
DocketCiv. No. 4492.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 215 P. 1042 (Rempel v. Kells) 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
Rempel v. Kells, 215 P. 1042, 62 Cal. App. 81, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 299 (Cal. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

The plaintiff, as principal, commenced an action to recover a judgment for secret profits against the defendants as her agents. The plaintiff had judgment in the trial court and the defendants have appealed.

The trial court made findings which are not challenged except as hereinafter stated. The findings refer to certain documents which are pleaded in haec verba in the complaint. For the purpose of brevity we have substituted the document for general reference, and without making any other changes, the findings tell the following story:

*82 “That the defendants H. B. Kells and C. W. Grant are, and at all the times hereinafter mentioned were, copartners, and as such doing business as realtors in the City of Los Angeles in said county and state under the firm name of Kells & Grant, that William Huntting Cooper and Harvey Crane at all the times herein mentioned were salesmen and agents of said firm in their said business, that defendant Annabel Grant is the sister of said C. W. Grant and is and at all times herein mentioned was the agent and assistant of said firm, and that Lulu B. Cooper is the wife of said William Huntting Cooper.
“That on the 3rd day of February, 1920, the plaintiff-consulted said Kells and Grant, experienced real estate men of her neighborhood, regarding the value and selling of her then home and residence property, 527 South Hobart Boulevard in the City of Los Angeles in said county and state, who then examined said property, estimated its selling value at $18,000.00, and entered into a written agreement with her to find a purchaser for her in 30 days, which agreement fixed the minimum price at $15,000.00 plus $750.00 as commission to said agents.
“That after the expiration of said 30 days said Kells and Grant continued as agents for the sale of said property by mutual consent. That during said agency said Kells and Grant and their said salesman Cooper submitted to plaintiff the offer of one customer to buy said property for $15,000, which plaintiff declined, and on April 1, 1920, the day before plaintiff’s departure for her new home in Vermont, urged her to approve and sign an agreement for the purchase of said property at $14,000, made by them with Elizabeth F. Davies as buyer, that plaintiff then yielded, approved and signed said agreement to sell at such reduced price and to pay said Kells and Grant a commission of $700 out of the proceeds of such sale, then also signed and acknowledged a grant deed and other papers prepared by her said agents to be used in such sale, entrusted said deed and papers to her said agents to be used by them in the consummation of said sale, and thereupon departed for Vermont.
“That, after plaintiff’s departure, the said buyer Elizabeth F. Davies, discovering that there was a dispute with regard to the division of said commission between said Kells *83 and Grant and an agent who had first showed her said property from the list of said Kells and Grant and fearing a lawsuit, on the 5th day of April, 1920, stopped the payment of her $500 cheek given to the order of said Kells and Grant as initial payment on her said contract, never received her copy of said contract and repudiated said contract, so notifying said Kells and Grant, who, in the name of the plaintiff and as her agents, acquiesced and canceled said contract, and on the 29th day of April, 1920, telegraphed the plaintiff as follows:
“ ‘Sorry to report that your deal is not yet closed. Original buyer failed to consummate. We have resold; and deal will close within next few days.
“ ‘Kells & Grant.’
“That on May 1, 1920, while the absent plaintiff was waiting for a report of the price and terms of said re-sale, having complete confidence in her said agents to care for her interest, the said Kells and Grant, without knowledge of plaintiff and in violation of their said agency and in fraud of plaintiff’s interests, with the deliberate aid of their said agents Harvey Crane, Annabel Grant and Wm. Hunt-ting Cooper, and of the latter’s wife Lulu B. Cooper, sold said property to themselves and said Annabel Grant, to own and use said property and sell the same at an advance price for their own advantage, and they accomplished such sale to themselves and concealed the same from plaintiff, as found below.
“That upon failure of said Davies contract said Kells and Grant, in conference with their escrow clerk, decided not to write to plaintiff and not to ask her for the deed to a new customer, but to alter the deed made for said Elizabeth Davies, which plaintiff had entrusted to them, and thereupon caused the name of Elizabeth F. Davies to be erased from said deed and the names of their said salesman Wm. Huntting Cooper and his wife Lulu B. Cooper to be inserted as grantees in said deed, altho said Coopers never obligated themselves to buy said property nor paid anything to make such purchase.
“That said Coopers on May 1, 1920, executed their grant deed to Annabel Grant, conveying said property of plaintiff, and delivered such deed to defendants Kells and Grant and Annabel Grant.
*84 “That defendants Kells and Grant and Annabel Grant then placed said altered deed to the Coopers and said deed from the Coopers to Annabel Grant in one escrow with the Title Insurance and Trust Company, Los Angeles, Cal., supplied for such escrow the funds needed for a sale of said property at the price of $14,000, and at the closing of said escrow, received said deeds and under them took, managed, used and enjoyed said property as their own.
“That defendants never reported to plaintiff the price and particulars of the re-sale mentioned in their said telegram, nor did they report to her any of the facts found above in this paragraph, except that they after such successful destruction and appropriation of plaintiff’s legal title to said property caused said title company to send to plaintiff an escrow statement, as follows:
“ ‘Escrow Statement of Florence Rempel. Escrow No.
160549.
In Account with
Title Insurance and Trust Company In Escrow with Kells and Grant.
Demand by Deed.............$14,000.00
Credit a/c insurance pro rata... 42.98
Guarantee .......... 50.00
Escrow fee ......... 14.00
Revenue stamps ..... 14.00
Insurance transfers .. 1.00
Commission—Kells and
Grant ............ 700.00
Check herein for balance ..............13,263.98
Total ........;......14,042.98 14,042.98
“ ‘Los Angeles, Cal., 5/11/20.
“ ‘ Title Insurance and Trust Company “ ‘ Settlement Department/

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Bluebook (online)
215 P. 1042, 62 Cal. App. 81, 1923 Cal. App. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rempel-v-kells-calctapp-1923.