Snook v. Netherby

269 P.2d 195, 124 Cal. App. 2d 797, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1810
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1954
DocketCiv. 15788
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 269 P.2d 195 (Snook v. Netherby) 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
Snook v. Netherby, 269 P.2d 195, 124 Cal. App. 2d 797, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1810 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

McMURRAY, J. pro tem. *

Defendant appeals from a judgment ordering reformation of a contract for sale of real estate and awarding damages to plaintiff for a breach of such contract.

Appellant in 1950 listed certain property for sale with a number of real estate brokers, including the Metropolitan Realty Company which employed a Mr. Bryant as a salesman. On May 20, 1950, Mr. Bryant obtained a deposit receipt *798 signed by respondent which offered to'purchase the property for $55,000; recited the receipt of a deposit of $5,000; stated that: “The balance of said purchase price is to be paid within thirty days from date hereof . . . bore the date “May 20,1950”; recited: “That the essence of this Agreement is time” and had the balance of this provision stricken-—a provision that the broker might extend period of performance for thirty days and contained the following addition, inserted by Mr. Bryant on his own initiative: “Acceptance of this offer shall be made by 5:00 p. m. May 25, 1950.”

Mr. Bryant presented this offer to appellant on about May 24, 1950. She refused to accept it and, on the face of the deposit receipt, she struck the $55,000 figure and wrote on the face thereof the figure of $62,000, changed the amount of broker’s commission therein set forth from $2,750 to $3,100, .and then signed the deposit receipt. Respondent refused to accept this counteroffer.

Thereafter, on May 27, 1950, Mr. Bryant obtained from appellant an authorization to sell the property for $58,500 which included a $1,500 broker’s commission. On May 31, 1950, -Mr. Bryant succeeded in getting respondent to agree to this last counteroffer. Instead of preparing a new deposit receipt, Mr. Bryant made the following alteration to the receipt dated May 20, 1950: He scratched out “Sixty Two Thousand” written thereon by appellant and wrote in the amount “Fifty eight Thousand five hundred.” He scratched out the proviso that “Acceptance of this offer shall be made by 5:00 p. m. May 25, 1950,” and inserted certain requirements relative to the assumption of existing loans on the property, and struck out provisions relative to real estate commission.

The same day Mr. Bryant took this much amended deposit receipt to appellant who initialed the changes. The date on this receipt still read: “May 20, 1950,” and the recitation ‘ ‘ The balance of said purchase price is to be paid within thirty days from date hereof ...” still appeared unchanged.

At the time Mr. Bryant received respondent’s agreement to this deposit receipt there was conversation to the effect that'' respondent was leaving on a three-week vacation, but there was no explicit discussion of the time covered by the deposit receipt. There is no evidence that Mr. Bryant informed appellant that the time for performance by respondent was to be computed from May 31, 1950, the date of signing, rather than from May 20,1950, the date appearing on the deposit receipt, nor that he told appellant that re *799 spondent understood the time would run from the later rather than the earlier date.

About June 10, 1950, Mr. Bryant testified that he first noticed that the agreement still bore the date of May 20, 1950, whereupon he phoned appellant seeking an extension to June 30,1950. According to Mr. Bryant appellant gave an equivocal answer to this request. Thereafter on June 22, 1950, after several attempts by Mr. Bryant to get in touch with appellant, Mr. Bryant had his attorney write appellant a letter which stated relative to the requested extension: 11 . . . which extension you declined to give ...” and then stated that the requested extension was unnecessary since the parties on executing the deposit receipt had, by mistake, neglected to change the date thereof from May 20th to May 31st. Appellant answered this on June 26, 1950, and denied that there had been any mistake in not changing the date and that appellant considered the deposit receipt breached by respondent's failure of timely performance. On June 27, 1950, respondent deposited the balance of the purchase price with the designated title company. This was after respondent had been advised by appellant that she considered the deal off.

Sometime after June 19, 1950, appellant listed the same property with several other agents and finally sold the property for a total price of $63,000 to another purchaser on about July 1, 1950. This price included $1,000 which was put in escrow pending certain construction done on the property which cost appellant $1,000, and a real estate commission of $2,000, leaving appellant a net price of $60,000.

The trial court held that Mr. Bryant as appellant’s agent made statements to respondent relating to the date on which the 30-day period was to start running which justified reformation of the deposit receipt so as to provide that such period should run from May 31, 1950; that appellant’s sale of the property to others was a breach of this contract, and that respondent was entitled to damages of $4,500 less a three per cent real estate agent’s commission thereon, leaving a total judgment of $4,365 together with interest from the date of the breach. The findings state that appellant knew of the mistake relative to the date of the contract and wrongfully and in bad faith put it out of her power to perform the agreement by conveying it to third parties. This judgment adopts the measure of damages set forth in section 3306 of the Civil Code.

Appellant urges that no contract ever came into being as *800 there was no real agreement as to date; that therefore the court erred in granting a reformation and, in substance, that Mr. Bryant, by making the representations to respondent, exceeded his authority and that therefore appellant was not bound by these representations.

Respondent contends that appellant is bound by the acts of her agent, Mr. Bryant, and that she “undoubtedly” understood that respondent had thirty days from May 31, 1950, to complete performance. Respondent also states that appellant at the time of acceptance of the final offer could have “clearly” provided that the thirty-day period should run from May 20,1950.

The language of the deposit receipt seems as clear as possible. Respondent also urges that since appellant had not performed her obligations under the agreement she was in default under the provisions of section 1439 of the Civil Code. That section is inapposite here since it merely states that before one can enforce a contract he must perform his own obligations thereunder. This is not so in the instant case as appellant is not seeking to enforce any contract. Respondent also asserts that appellant did not complete this transaction because of a more lucrative sale. This assertion is without any support in the record. Respondent further urges that all uncertainties in the contract are to be resolved against appellant since her agent prepared the contract.

In a memorandum opinion filed by the trial judge it is stated that at the time respondent signed the deposit receipt the agent of appellant assured respondent that he would have thirty days after May 31, 1950, to complete the transaction, and that appellant was bound thereby.

The court’s statement is based upon the theory of imputed notice and is certainly a valid ground to reform the contract here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P.2d 195, 124 Cal. App. 2d 797, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snook-v-netherby-calctapp-1954.