Riganti v. McElhinney

248 Cal. App. 2d 116, 56 Cal. Rptr. 195, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1610
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1967
DocketCiv. 29512
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 248 Cal. App. 2d 116 (Riganti v. McElhinney) 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
Riganti v. McElhinney, 248 Cal. App. 2d 116, 56 Cal. Rptr. 195, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1610 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

FOX, J. *

This is an action for quasi-specific performance of an oral contract between plaintiffs and one James R. Trissel, now deceased, wherein plaintiffs agreed to look after his improved real property, collect the rents, and account to him for same and to care for said Trissel so long -as he lived and *118 to show respect and obedience toward him as children toward a father. For this service, attention and care Trissel agreed plaintiffs should have free rent of the living quarters on his property that they then occupied and that on his death he would leave them a part of his property by his will. Although plaintiffs carried out their part of the agreement, decedent failed to provide for them in his will.

The court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs. Defendant, Muriel McElhinney, the residuary devisee and legatee under the will, has appealed.

The significance of the circumstances surrounding the agreement between plaintiffs and Trissel and the relationship between the parties during the six-year period between the making of the agreement and Trissel’s death is of such importance that it seems desirable to have an accurate and comprehensive statement thereof. To that end we quote, in the footnote, the language from the findings of fact. 1

*119 As a conclusion of law, the court declared that the plaintiffs are entitled to “quasi specific performance to avoid the perpetration of a fraud upon them and unjust enrichment of the devisee.”

*120 As additional conclusions of law the court also declared:

1. That plaintiffs are the sole beneficial and equitable owners of that certain improved real property described as Lot 4.

2. That defendant holds the legal title of said last herein-above described real property as constructive trustee for the .sole .use and benefit of plaintiffs and that she be required to execute a Grant Deed thereto and deliver the same to plaintiffs.

3. That the defendants have no right whatsoever in and to said real property or the rents, issues and profits therefrom.

The judgment decrees, inter alia, that plaintiffs have quasi-specific performance of an oral agreement with James R. Trissel; that plaintiffs are the sole and only beneficial and equitable owners of the improved real property here in question, and that defendant has no right, title, interest or estate whatsoever in and to said real property or the rents, issues and profits therefrom, and that she and her heirs, representatives, transferees, or assigns, and each of them, is permanently restrained and enjoined from claiming or asserting any right, title, interest, claim or estate whatsoever in, to or over said real property.

Defendant pled the statute of frauds as embodied in Code of Civil Procedure section 1973, subdivisions 1 and 6, and Civil Code section 1624, subdivisions 1 and 6.

This decision and judgment find solid judicial support in McCabe v. Healy, 138 Cal. 81 [70 P. 1008], The guiding principles are stated on pages 84 and 85: “ The principle of law invoked by this bill cannot be gainsaid, and it is well stated by Professor Pomeroy in his work on Specific Performance (p. 268), in this language: ‘Courts of equity will, under special circumstances, enforce a contract to make a will, or to make a certain testamentary disposition; and this may be done, even when the agreement was parol, where in reliance upon the contract the promisee has changed his condition and relations so that a refusal to complete the agreement would be a fraud upon him. The relief is granted, not. by ordering a will to be made, but by regarding the •property in the hands of the heirs, devisees, assignees, or "representatives of the deceased promisor, as impressed with a '.trust in favor of the plaintiff, and by compelling defendant, who must of course belong.to some one of these classes of *121 persons, to make such a disposition of the property as will carry out the intent of the agreement. ’

“. . . It therefore follows in this case that if the deceased Matthew Healy, for an adequate consideration, agreed to leave a will upon his death, by its terms giving all of his estate to the plaintiff, and that he died without leaving such a will, and, if plaintiff cannot be placed in statu quo, and the failure of the deceased, Healy, to leave the will as agreed works a fraud upon plaintiff, and the granting of equitable relief to plaintiff would not work a gross injustice upon innocent third parties, then a court of equity will enforce Healy’s agreement by declaring his heirs constructive trustees of the title cast upon them by reason of his dying intestate.

Defendant points out, however, that McCabe was decided in 1902, and that such an agreement was not then required to be in writing, and that in 1905 and 1907 our codes (Civ. Code, § 1624; Code Civ. Proc., § 1973—on which defendant relies) were amended to require such an agreement to be in writing in order to be enforcable. But even though the agreement is oral, sufficient facts may be shown to take the case out of the statute of frauds. The guiding principles in this respect are stated in Walker v. Calloway, 99 Cal.App.2d 675, 678 [222 P.2d 455] :

“Where a contract is within the statute of frauds, as it is here (Civ. Code, § 1624(6); Code Civ. Proc., §1973(6)), the mere rendition of services is not usually such a part performance of a verbal agreement as will relieve the contract from the operation of the statute, but ‘if the services are of such a peculiar character that it is impossible to estimate their value by any pecuniary standard, and it is evident that the parties did not intend to measure them by any such standard, and if the plaintiff, after the performance of the services, could not be restored to the situation in which he was before the rendition of the services, it is such a part performance of the verbal agreement as will remove the contract from the rule, and equity, where other objections are not present, will decree specific performance. But in such cases the reason for the interposition of equity is quite obvious. Plaintiff has rendered services of extraordinary and exceptional character, such service as in contemplation of the parties was not to be compensated for in money, and as in contemplation of law, cannot be compensated for in money; therefore, by no action at law could a plaintiff be restored to *122 Ms original position. It wouM be in the nature of a fraud upon Mm to deny him any relief, and, the law failing by reason of its universality, equity, to promote justice, makes good its imperfections. (Waterman on Specific Performance, §41; Pomeroy’s Specific Performance, §114.)’ (Owens v. McNally, 113 Cal. 444, 450 [45 P. 710, 33 L.R.A. 369] ; Mc-Cabe v. Healy, 138 Cal. 81 [70 P.

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Bluebook (online)
248 Cal. App. 2d 116, 56 Cal. Rptr. 195, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riganti-v-mcelhinney-calctapp-1967.