Rosenthal v. Silveira

184 P. 58, 42 Cal. App. 637, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 834
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 12, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2666.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 P. 58 (Rosenthal v. Silveira) 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
Rosenthal v. Silveira, 184 P. 58, 42 Cal. App. 637, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 834 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

*639 WASTE, P. J.

Appeal from a judgment; rendered in favor of plaintiff and respondent, for the sum of $8,257.75, together with costs and disbursements, ordering that plaintiff have a lien upon the real property involved in the action to the amount of the judgment, and canceling and annulling a contract, wherein plaintiff agreed to purchase from defendant, and defendant agreed to sell, the real property described in the pleadings. The judgment of the court below is for the return of the payments made by plaintiff on the purchase price of the land, and interest, on the theory that there was a rescission , of the contract.

Plaintiff in the case is an experienced real estate operator and engineer by profession. He bought the property for subdivision purposes. He understands perfectly the English language. Defendant is a Portuguese farmer, unable at all to read or write the English language and understanding it at best but imperfectly.

The property in question was part of the farm owned and cultivated by the defendant. The contract provided for the sale of the property for the sum of thirty thousand dollars, five thousand dollars of which amount was paid on execution of the contract. The balance of twenty-five thousand dollars was payable at any time within four years from date. The contract also provided that all taxes on the property, which became due after June 30, 1913, were to be paid by plaintiff, who was also obligated to pay interest on the deferred payments at six per cent net per annum, payable semi-annually, the contract not stating whether such interest payments were to be paid in advance or otherwise. Under the terms of the agreement, plaintiff was given the right to a conveyance of one or more acres of the land, upon the payment of three hundred dollars, or five hundred dollars, per acre, according to the location of the property, but no definite time was stated when or under what conditions such conveyances should be made. Time was made the essence of the contract.

Plaintiff took possession of the property, built roads therein, destroying some of the fruit trees in so doing, and plotted out the property for subdivision purposes.

The tract, being part of defendant’s entire acreage, was assessed in one amount for 1913-14. Rather than allow the tax to go delinquent, and after his attention had been called to the matter by the tax collector, the defendant paid taxes on the whole *640 tract for the year 1913 when they became due. After settlement as to the amount due, plaintiff repaid to defendant his pro rata share, as required by the agreement. Plaintiff also paid all installments of interest to and including July 2, 1914. Taxes for the year 1914-15 became due October, 1914, and were again paid by the defendant. No adjustment or pro rata payment by the plaintiff had been had when the purported rescission took place, on December 29, 1914, nor had the interest on the contract been paid subsequent to July 2d of that year.

After entering into possession of the tract plaintiff, on February 6, 1914, made a quitclaim deed of the property to the Clarabelle Realty Company, and this deed was recorded. Plaintiff also entered into a contract, without the knowledge of defendant, to sell two and one-half acres of the tract to a German, whose name was unknown to defendant. No money was paid on this contract, and the purchaser appears to have never entered into possession. The plaintiff, through the realty company, entered into a written agreement, in escrow, with S. G. and Clara F. Brown, for the purchase of five acres of the real property. Brown entered into possession. No money was paid to defendant under either the contract with the unknown purchaser or with Brown, and neither contract was recorded.

On December 29, 1914, in the evening, after defendant was in bed, plaintiff, accompanied by a Mr. Atthol, called upon the defendant at his residence, near Hayward, and requested defendant to sign a deed conveying sixteen and two-thirds acres of the premises, explaining to defendant that it was in consideration of the five thousand dollars theretofore paid and credited on the purchase price at the time of the execution of the contract. Defendant refused to execute the deed. Thereupon plaintiff tendered to defendant the further sum of three hundred dollars and demanded that he sign a conveyance of a certain one acre of the land to the party Atthol, as provided in the contract. Defendant also refused to accept the three hundred dollars or to execute the conveyance demanded.

The evidence is conflicting as to just what occurred at this meeting. The plaintiff testified that the defendant positively refused to execute any further deeds until the remainder of the purchase price, amounting to twenty-five *641 thousand dollars, had been paid. The defendant testified that he merely explained to the plaintiff that he did not understand the matter, and requested that the execution of the deeds be postponed until the next day, when he could consult his attorney; that his only refusal to comply with plaintiff’s demand occurred when he was pressed by plaintiff to sign the deeds, and finally said, “No, I sign nothing to-night, until I see my lawyer.” While the trial court, with the witnesses before it, was satisfied with, and accepted, plaintiff’s version of the occurrence, and what subsequently transpired, and found that defendant’s conduct amounted to a rescission of the contract, we cannot but feel that there is much in the whole line of action of the plaintiff on the occasion of that visit, and immediately thereafter, which lends vivid color to the contention of the appellant that “the purpose of this visit by Rosenthal and Atthol was to inveigle Mr. Silveira into some sort of a technical default, so as to enable plaintiff and his successors in interest to evade carrying out of the contract of purchase.”

On the very next day following the visit to defendant, at Hayward, plaintiff signed, and sent by a messenger to defendant, who personally received it, a notice of rescission and cancellation of the contract of sale, based on the alleged refusal of defendant to execute deeds for certain portions of the tract, and for false statements and alleged misrepresentations to various prospective purchasers. We pause here to note that nowhere in the record does it appear that any false statements or misrepresentations were ever made by defendant, or by anyone in his behalf, in the premises. The notice was accompanied by a quitclaim, executed by the plaintiff and his wife to defendant and his wife, which deed released and quitclaimed the entire tract. It contained a recital that it was “made for the purpose of releasing all interests of the” makers “by reason of” the contract of sale between the parties. The plaintiff did not in this notice, or at any other time, offer to pay, or tender, to defendant the taxes accrued on the property, and paid by defendant, for the year 1914, or the interest on the contract which accrued after July 2d of that year.

Defendant could not read the documents thus served on him, but within a day and a half, or two days, he handed them to his attorney. The latter, acting for defendant, as *642 quickly as he could ascertain the proper address, returned the quitclaim deed to plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
184 P. 58, 42 Cal. App. 637, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenthal-v-silveira-calctapp-1919.