Richter v. Union Land & Stock Co.

62 P. 39, 129 Cal. 367, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 988
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1900
DocketSac. No. 622.
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 62 P. 39 (Richter v. Union Land & Stock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richter v. Union Land & Stock Co., 62 P. 39, 129 Cal. 367, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 988 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

SMITH, C.

The plaintiff recovered judgment for the sum of eight hundred dollars, with interest from April 16, 1892, and costs—the principal sum adjudged being the amount of the consideration paid by the plaintiff to the defendant on a contract of the date named which the defendant had failed to perform.

The defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial. The material facts, as disclosed by the pleadings and findings, are as follows: The contract in question was accompanied, or rather preceded, by a deed of the same date from the defendant to the plaintiff purporting—for the consideration of eight hundred dollars in hand paid—to convey to the plaintiff "a perpetual water right for a sufficient quantity of water to properly and fully irrigate [the land described in the deed]; said water to be taken and used from the water system belonging to the party of the first part on Red Rock creek in said county,” and the use of the water to be restricted to the land described.

By the contract—which was executed by both parties—the defendant agreed "to deliver in an open ditch, at the most, convenient point on the margin of the [land described in the deed], at all proper and seasonable times for the irrigation of said land, a.sufficient quantity of water to fully and properly irrigate the said land for the raising of all kinds of agricultural crops, each and every year perpetually”; and plaintiff agreed to pay therefor certain water rates.

The. contract contained a proviso that the defendant should "not be liable in damages for a deficiency in water caused by drought, hostile diversion, forcible entry, temporary damages by flood or other accident”; and also the agreement, "that the grant this day made of water to irrigate said land, and herein-before mentioned, shall be and is subordinate to this agreement.”

The land referred to in the deed and contract was, at the date thereof, public land of the United States; and the defendant— who at the time was engaged in the construction of its water system, consisting nf a storage reservoir on Red Rock creek, and distributing canals and ditches leading therefrom—by its agent *371 suggested to the plaintiff the acquisition of this land from the government, and represented to him that the work on its water system would be prosecuted with due diligence and completed as soon as practicable; and thereupon, on the same day, before the execution of the deed and contract, but in contemplation of their execution, the plaintiff, relying on these representations, filed in the United States land office, under the provisions of the Revised Statutes for such cases made and provided, his declaration of intention to reclaim the said land, and paid the required fee. The deed and contract were then executed, and the consideration named (eight hundred dollars) paid.

It is found by the court “that defendant has never completed said reservoir or completed the canals or ditches leading therefrom, and has not constructed a ditch nearer than one and one-half miles of plaintiff’s said lands, though defendant could have done so by the first day of January, 1896, had it used due or any diligence in prosecuting its said work, as it promised plaintiff it would do. That defendant failed to deliver any water, etc.; .... that defendant prosecuted its work with due diligence until the summer of 1895, when said defendant ceased to work thereon, and since said time .... has done nothing toward performing its promises and agreements hereinbefore set forth; that plaintiff received nothing of value from defendant under or by virtue of said water deed or grant, and that said deed or grant is of no value either to plaintiff or defendant.”

The two passages italicized indicate the portions of the finding objected to in the specifications of insufficiency of the evidence. With regard to the first, the specification is probably insufficient; but the case will not be materially affected if we substitute for the passage objected to the facts admitted on the trial and referred to in the specification—to wit, "that the said reservoir and canals leading therefrom were completed prior to 1893 to such an extent that defendant could have delivered water to the land of plaintiff by making a distributing ditch from the main canal to said land; .... and .... that the defendant has had sufficient water, and could have delivered the same to plaintiff each year until the spring of 1897.” With regard to the finding as to the value of the supposed water right, according to the view we propose to take of the case, *372 it is but a necessary deduction from the other facts found, and is therefore supported by the evidence upon which they rest.

The principal contentions of appellant’s counsel are, that there was no breach of the contract; and that—even if the breach be admitted—there was no right of rescission, and, in fact, no attempt to rescind or offer to reconvey the “water right” before the commencement of the action.

1. With regard to the first point it is contended that the contract was to deliver water only “at all proper and seasonable times for the irrigation of said land,” and that “there is no allegation or finding that a proper and seasonable time has existed.” The point of the contention is that the language of the contract is not to be construed as referring merely to the proper seasons of the year for irrigation, but as requiring also, as a condition precedent to the defendant’s obligation to deliver the water, that the land should be “cleared, ploughed, fenced, or in (such) manner improved” as to be ready for irrigation. But clearly the language used refers only to the recurring seasons of the year, and the case is that defendant did not deliver the water at any season of the year.

2. The position of the plaintiff that the failure of one of the parties to a contract to perform does not, in any case, constitute a failure of consideration—and that the only remedy of the injured party is to recover damages—cannot be sustained. In all executory contracts the several obligations of the parties constitute to each, reciprocally, the consideration of the contract; and a failure to perform constitutes a failure of consideration—either partial or total, as the case may be—within the meaning of section 1689 of the Civil Code.

In the ease of an executed contract—as, e. g., a deed of land of which the consideration is a promise to pay the purchase money—this is not always true; because in such cases, or generally in such cases, “the vendor has waived actual performance upon the part of the vendee, relying upon his mere promise to perform.” (Lawrence v. Gayetty, 78 Cal. 126, 134 1 ; Hartman v. Reed, 50 Cal. 485; Schultz v. McLean, 93 Cal. 358.) *373 Which is hut to say that, the actual inducement to the vendor to enter into the contract, or, in other words, the sole and sufficient consideration contemplated hy him, is the mere obligation of the vendee to pay, without regard to the contingency of its performance. For in such cases, almost universally, the payment of the purchase money is secured by a lien on the land sold, and the reliance of the vendor is upon his ability to enforce the payment of the vendee, in inmium.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 39, 129 Cal. 367, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richter-v-union-land-stock-co-cal-1900.