Sawyer v. Sterling Realty Co.

107 P.2d 449, 41 Cal. App. 2d 715, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 302
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 1940
DocketCiv. 11160
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 107 P.2d 449 (Sawyer v. Sterling Realty 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
Sawyer v. Sterling Realty Co., 107 P.2d 449, 41 Cal. App. 2d 715, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 302 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

WARD, J.

Plaintiffs, vendees in a contract for the purchase and sale of real property, sue to recover payments made by them under the terminated contract. Judgment was rendered for the defendant vendor, and plaintiffs appeal. The action follows a quiet title suit by the vendor against vendees as the result of which the vendor’s title was quieted as against any demands of the vendees.

The contract, dated March 10, 1931, covered unimproved property. It provided for a cash payment of $1,000 on the execution and delivery of the agreement and monthly instalments of interest and principal in the sum of not less than $125, commencing May 1, 1931, and continuing until the total purchase price, together with interest, should have been paid. The vendees made the down payment and subsequently eleven instalment payments, each of which, however, with the exception of the first, was made after its due date. The last payment, made on June 17, 1932, was due -in March of that year. After all of the instalment payments had become due, the vendor, on October 14, 1935, through its attorney, made demand for all sums owing under the contract and gave notice that unless payment was made within fifteen days from the date of the letter all of the vendees' rights under the contract would be forfeited. Four days after the demand and notice, a second communication signed by the president of the vendor corporation was sent to the vendees wherein they were notified that by reason of their default in the payment of instalments “all of your rights, and each *718 of you under the said agreement are hereby forfeited and the said agreement is hereby terminated”. On October 24, 1935, the corporation brought a quiet title action against the vendees and obtained a judgment and decree on the 28th day of September, 1936. No appeal was taken therefrom and that judgment has become final.

The present action by vendees to recover all amounts paid by them under the contract was filed on April 14, 1936, and resulted in a judgment for the vendor on September 12, 1938. The appellants contend that the respondent vendor could not lawfully terminate the contract until the fifteen-day period, specified in its letter of October 14, 1935, had elapsed. They declare that where a vendor attempts without right to terminate a contract, the vendee may treat it as at an end and recover instalments theretofore paid, and that in this case, since the demand was not made until the full price was due, it should have been accompanied by a tender of a deed. Respondent’s theory, sustained by the trial court, is that it had lawfully terminated the contract for the vendees’ default in making the payments, and accordingly was entitled to retain instalments paid prior to forfeiture. Respondent further contends that the lawfulness of the forfeiture was established in the quiet title suit heretofore referred to. As an excuse for failure to await the full fifteen-day period, respondent claims that one of the vendees, prior to the expiration of the fifteen-day period, wrote to the vendor as follows: “I cannot, at this time, pay in full, and I do not see that I can in the future.” This letter is likewise respondent’s justification for not tendering the deed. The letter was not introduced in the present case except for identification, and the above has been quoted at this point because of the part it plays in further consideration of the case. However, as stated, the letter, standing alone, was not even offered in evidence. The facts are as follows: At the request of respondent herein, the judgment roll in the quiet title action was introduced in evidence in the present case. Appellants sought to show the purport and sphere of the quiet title decree by offering a brief, in the form of a letter, which was presented to the trial court in the quiet title action, and they now contend that the rejection thereof in this case constituted error. The judgment roll in the quiet title action speaks for itself and may not be modified or enlarged by the contents of a brief. As a statement of legal *719 principles, with citation of authorities, and in some instances quotations therefrom, which the writer claimed sustained such principles as applied to certain evidentiary matter with reference to written instruments or oral testimony, the brief was not admissible as evidence in the present action. It was not part of the judgment roll in the quiet title action. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 670.) It was merely an argument on the law and evidence in the prior action.

Appellants contend that the brief contained a “disclaimer”. This contention is predicated upon the views expressed in the brief—a portion of which is quoted below—which are to be read with the fact in mind that the plaintiff in the quiet title suit is the defendant and respondent herein. “By this notice of termination of the contract the plaintiff, and vendor under the contract, placed itself within the force and liability of the law to return to the defendants all the money it has received from the defendants under the contract with interest. The contract having been terminated by the plaintiff it ceased to exist. It cannot now be enforced by the parties nor by this court. The defendants have no further interest or claim in or to the land, as the only interest and claim they had was created and existed by virtue of the contract. There now being no contract all such interest and claim also ceased.” The brief, from which the above is quoted, was given the court after all evidence in the quiet title suit had been taken and during the period awaiting determination of action by the court. Appellants urge that it was filed prior to the submission of the cause and before judgment. The record is silent relative to the date of the submission of the quiet title suit. Assuming, but not conceding, that the so-called disclaimer should have been or was considered in the quiet title suit, we are confronted with the pleadings, findings and the judgment in that case which has become final. The answer set forth: “Owing to, after and during said financial depression, which still exists, defendants reported to said plaintiff that they could not make any further payments to the plaintiff on account of the purchase price of said lands and property and that said defendants were ready and willing to resell said lands and property as understood and agreed and as alleged herein and in response thereto said plaintiff agreed and reaffirmed its understanding and agreement with said defendants to hold and maintain the respective interest in said lands and property as herein *720 alleged until such time said property and lands could be resold for a price to fully repay the defendants as alleged herein reiterating and repeating to said defendants that the plaintiff would not permit the defendants to suffer a loss of one cent because of said purchase.” The court found that “The defendants, and each of them, have not any estate or interest, whatsoever, in or to said lands or premises, or any part thereof. . . . That defendants, and each of them, willfully failed and refused and now refuses to perform the matters and things required to be performed by them, under the terms of the said above mentioned Agreement.”

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Bluebook (online)
107 P.2d 449, 41 Cal. App. 2d 715, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-sterling-realty-co-calctapp-1940.