Sly v. Abbott

264 P. 507, 89 Cal. App. 209, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 136
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1928
DocketDocket No. 6122.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 264 P. 507 (Sly v. Abbott) 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
Sly v. Abbott, 264 P. 507, 89 Cal. App. 209, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 136 (Cal. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

KOFORD, P. J.

Defendant William Abbott was engaged in the real estate business. He contracted to purchase a large number of real estate lots from John A. Van Pelt and associates and also from the Pen Bryn Land Company. Thereupon he turned about and associated with himself the plaintiff Sly, J. W. Allen and later Richard Eagan. These four men, as a result of written and verbal agreements executed amongst themselves, became, as contended by appellant, joint adventurers with the object in view of completing the purchase of said lots from the original owners, and selling them out piecemeal to the public at a profit. The more important details of the steps taken by which these four men formed this syndicate and later separated are as follows: First, there were four documents executed between the eighteenth and the twenty-second days of January, 1923, by which the plaintiff Sly and his associate J. W. Allen agreed to purchase said lots from defendant William Abbott by making an initial payment and agreeing to make subsequent installment payments extending over a consider *212 able period of time. The first in date of these four documents is a memorandum of agreement made the eighteenth day of January, 1923. Time was expressly made the essence of the agreement. Therein plaintiff Sly and associate Allen paid $150 down and agreed to pay, among other installments, the aggregate of $1,500 within thirty days and the sum of $5,150 within ninety days, which would mean April 18, 1923. The other three documents were less formal, each being simply a receipt signed by defendant Abbott acknowledging receipt from plaintiff Sly and his associate Allen of a deposit and part payment on account of the purchase of certain groups of the said lots of real estate and designating the total price and the times for the installment payments on the balance of the purchase price. These receipts contemplated a more formal contract to be made a few days later when further payments were to be made. Thereafter plaintiff Sly persuaded Richard Eagan to join the enterprise. Eagan paid $4,000 for the privilege and such agreements were had, oral and written, that all the previous contracts and agreements between the four parties were on the twenty-ninth day of January, 1923, merged into one contract between the plaintiff Sly, defendant Abbott, J. W. Allen, and Richard Eagan. Each of these four men then became, according to the findings, the owner of an undivided one-fourth interest in and to any rights, equities, or profits to accrue from the sale of the said real estate lots. As part of the consideration of said merger agreement, plaintiff Sly had theretofore agreed to pay defendant Abbott $5,150 on the eighteenth day of April, 1923. This is the same sum which he was obliged to pay under the memorandum agreement above referred to and dated January 18, 1923. Of this sum plaintiff Sly, together with Allen, had previously paid $150. J. W. Allen on the first day of April, 1923, withdrew from the syndicate assigning all his interest to the remaining three, Sly, Abbott, and Eagan.

On the eighteenth day of April, 1923, a conference was had at which all interested parties were present. What happened at this conference forms the important part of this case. Payments due to the original owners, Van Pelt and Pen Bryn Land Company, were in default. The payment of $5,000, which Sly had agreed to pay to Abbott on the *213 18th of April, 1923, had not been made. The clear weight of the testimony, and as found by the trial court, shows that at this meeting the following occurred: Mr. Lincoln, an attorney at law, representing the original owners, required and demanded of each of the members of the syndicate that the overdue payments due to the original owners be paid at once. The response of the members of the syndicate was as follows: Abbott said he was waiting for Sly to pay him the $5,000. J. W. Allen said that he had already sold out and was present to collect a balance due him on that account. Richard Eagan said that he would not put up another cent; that he had gone into the syndicate under misrepresentations; that he wanted nothing so much as to get his money back and return to Boston. Plaintiff Sly said in effect: I have no money and cannot borrow any and cannot pay a cent, but if you will take care of Eagan I will be satisfied to drop out and surrender my interest. Thereupon Lincoln and defendant Gray, who was also present at the conference and who subsequently bought out Abbott’s interest, conferred together and agreed to take care of Eagan. This was subsequently done. They bought out Eagan. The conference adjourned and thereafter Abbott, Gray and successors carried on the enterprise with their own funds.

According to this verson of the conference all of the four members of the syndicate had withdrawn except Abbott and this was Abbott’s attitude as expressed by his answer filed in this suit.

The plaintiff Sly, however, denying the essential features of the conference as we have outlined them above, claimed that he had not withdrawn or surrendered, but that he still remained in the syndicate. He filed this action based upon that claim. The complaint alleged in effect that Abbott had taken matters into his own hands and had made a large profit, of which the plaintiff’s share was some $34,000; that plaintiff Sly was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the syndicate, lots and profits; that defendant Abbott had wrongfully secured and retained for himself certain commissions and also a secret profit by turning into the syndicate certain lots at a higher price than that which he had paid for the same; that by reason of these two things *214 Abbott owed plaintiff in excess of the $5,000 which Sly was in default to Abbott under his contracts. The complaint followed this with an allegation that the plaintiff was ready, willing, and able to perform his obligations and to pay any sums of money due to Abbott if any be due to him.

The findings of the court were that it was untrue that Abbott had received any secret commissions and found that it was untrue that said defendant Abbott had made a secret profit of $5,000 as alleged by the plaintiff. The court also found that the plaintiff was not ready, willing, and able to fulfill his obligations and make the payments as required by his agreements, particularly the contract of January 18, 1923, and, further, that plaintiff Sly defaulted in the payment of $5,000 due Abbott on the 19th of April, 1923, and further defaulted in the payment of his share of overdue payments of $3,600 to the original owners of the land. The court further found expressly and in detail upon the occurrences taking place at the conference of April 19, 1923, and these findings state the facts substantially as we have outlined them above, which include the statement that Sly had agreed to surrender his interest if defendants Abbott and Gray would buy out Eagan and that Abbott and Gray had done so.

Going further with reference to this conference, the court also found that Sly did then and there abandon and relinquish all his rights and still further that the action of Sly in so abandoning his interest had created an estoppel precluding him from asserting any interest in the property or in the profits.

Practically all of the points urged by appellant on this appeal are based upon the contention that the findings of the court of abandonment, relinquishment, and estoppel are outside of the issues raised by the pleadings.

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Bluebook (online)
264 P. 507, 89 Cal. App. 209, 1928 Cal. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sly-v-abbott-calctapp-1928.