Singh v. Burkhart

218 Cal. App. 2d 285, 32 Cal. Rptr. 639, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 1776
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 15, 1963
DocketCiv. 27017
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 218 Cal. App. 2d 285 (Singh v. Burkhart) 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
Singh v. Burkhart, 218 Cal. App. 2d 285, 32 Cal. Rptr. 639, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 1776 (Cal. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

FOURT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment wherein among other things the defendant Ida Burkhart (by and through her guardian Sehiff) was ordered to perform specifically an agreement to sell certain real property upon being paid the consideration agreed upon.

A résumé of some of the facts is as follows: Ida Burkhart was the owner of certain described real property located in Santa Monica and she desired to sell the same. Upon her own accord she went into the office of Thornbury Realty Company in Ocean Park and talked with Harry Baizer, a salesman for the Thornbury Realty Company. Mrs. Burkhart stated to Baizer that she had some property in Santa Monica which she wanted to sell and she gave Baizer a description of the same. Baizer indicated to Mrs. Burkhart that he would look at the property and ascertain what he thought it should bring upon a sale. The office of the Thorn-bury Realty Company and the property in question are several miles apart and Baizer went to the location of the property and examined it. He also contacted P. J. Burns and a Mr. Carlson with reference to what the property should sell for and they referred him to Sidney Grey. Grey was in the real estate business and operated as Grey Associates and was a member of the Realtors’ Multiple Listing Service, Santa Monica Bay District Board of Realtors. Grey, after looking *287 at the property, informed Baizer that he thought the market value of the property was $50,000.

Baizer thereafter advised Mrs. Burkhart on or about Tuesday, January 17, 1961, that they, Thornbury Realty, could get $50,000 for the property. She suggested that the commission should be added to the sales price and then asked $52,500 for the property. An exclusive listing agreement was prepared upon the “California Real Estate Association” listing form and it was signed by Mrs. Burkhart as the owner of the property and by Baizer for Thornbury Realty. The sales price of the property was to be $52,500 with a down payment of $15,000 and the balance payable at $350 or more per month including 6 per cent interest upon the balance until paid. A brokerage commission of 5 per cent of the selling price was to be paid by Mrs. Burkhart “if said property is sold during the term hereof or any extension thereof by broker or by me or by another broker or through any source.” The property was then put on the “Realtors’ Multiple Listing Service, Santa Monica Bay District Board of Realtors, Inc.” of which Thornbury Realty was a member. The description of the property appeared on a circular of the multiple listing service dated Friday, January 20, 1961, under the title, “Advance Listings.” The price and down payment as heretofore set forth were listed in such circular. Max Kramer, a salesman in Grey’s realty office in Santa Monica, apparently received a copy of the listing when it came out about the 20th of January 1961. Grey and Kramer went out to check some of the properties which were listed in the bulletin including the property in question. Kramer had not talked with Grey about the particular property before seeing it listed in the bulletin. Kramer at the time of viewing the property with Grey suggested to Grey that the Singhs, who owned a business next door to the property in question, might be interested. Upon returning to their office Kramer called the Singhs on the telephone and told Mrs. Singh that the property next to them was being offered for sale and she stated that they wanted to buy it. The Singhs brought $2,000 to Grey’s office at once and signed the deposit receipt offer to buy the property at the price under the conditions offered. Grey took the document to Baizer at the Thornbury office.

On Tuesday, January 24, 1961, Baizer presented to Mrs. Burkhart for her signature the deposit receipt offer to buy the property. The document on its face recited that “Karm & Mary Singh H & W as Jt. Tenants” of “426 Lincoln *288 Blvd.’' had placed the sum of $2,000 as a “deposit on account of the purchase price” of the property in question subject to a portion of the taxes, conditions and easements of record “for the purchase price of fifty two thousand five hundred dollars.” $15,000 was to be paid through escrow and the seller to take back a first deed of trust to secure the payment of the balance of $37,500 payable at $350 per month or more, including interest on the balance at 6% per cent until paid. It was set forth that the property was to be sold “as is” subject further to an existing lease on the store building (which lease expired June 30, 1964, with an option to renew for five years more). The lease of the store provided for a rental of $250 per month, and two small houses at the rear rented for $75 and $95 per month respectively. The deposit receipt offer also provided “this is to be a 60 day escrow or less ’ ’ and that ‘ ‘ time is .the essence of this contract. ’ ’ The agreement apparently was prepared by Sidney B. Grey’s office as it set forth his name as a broker and his license number as such, by Max Kramer as the salesman.

Karm and Mary M. K. Singh signed the document under the words, “I agree to purchase the above described property on the terms and conditions herein stated,- and receipt of copy of herein agreement is hereby acknowledged” as the “purchaser.” Mrs. Burkhart signed the document under the words, “I agree to sell the above described property on the terms and conditions herein stated and agree to pay the above signed broker as a commission the sum of twenty six hundred twenty-five & 00-100 dollars, or one-half the deposit in case same is forfeited by purchaser, provided the same does not exceed the full amount of the commission. Receipt of copy of herein agreement is hereby acknowledged,” as the “seller.”

On January 24, 1961, Grey opened an escrow at the Santa Monica Bank and deposited the $2,000 received from the Singhs in escrow. Later on that same day the Singhs signed the escrow instructions. .The escrow instructions provided among other things that the total price for the property was to be $52,500" of which $37,500 was to be paid in installments of $350 per month including interest at the rate of 6% per 'cent (such obligation to be evidenced by a promissory note secured by a first deed of trust upon the property) and $15,000 was to be paid “prior to March 24, 1961,” “of which amount $2,000 has been paid to broker Sidney B. Grey and deposited by him in escrow.” A note in the proper amount *289 and form was signed by the Singhs as was a deed of trust securing the same and left with the escrow holder.

Apparently Mrs. Burkhart told her son-in-law Max Sehiff (interlocutory decree of divorce in Sehiff v. Sehiff, March 21, 1961) who was the tenant of the store building that she was selling the property and wanted to show him the papers. Sehiff asked Mrs. Burkhart to come to the store the next day. She went there with the copy of the deposit receipt which she had signed. Sehiff immediately upon seeing the signed instrument called an attorney (one of present counsel for appellant) and told him in effect that Mrs. Burkhart had sold the property and “I just would like to know what we could do to get out of it.” Sehiff and Mrs. Burkhart went to the attorney’s office the next day, Friday afternoon, January 27, 1961, where Mrs. Burkhart apparently was questioned about the transaction. The attorney called the bank where the escrow was located and inquired whether any money other than the $2,000 had been deposited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 Cal. App. 2d 285, 32 Cal. Rptr. 639, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 1776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singh-v-burkhart-calctapp-1963.