Superior Bedding Co. v. Erenberg

193 Cal. App. 2d 86, 13 Cal. Rptr. 903, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1671
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 14, 1961
DocketCiv. 24063
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 193 Cal. App. 2d 86 (Superior Bedding Co. v. Erenberg) 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
Superior Bedding Co. v. Erenberg, 193 Cal. App. 2d 86, 13 Cal. Rptr. 903, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1671 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

*88 McMURRAY, J. pro tem. *

The plaintiffs 1 have appealed from an adverse judgment rendered by the court without jury on their action for specific performance of, and declaratory relief in connection with a written agreement of March 29, 1949, between two brothers, plaintiff Victor Erenberg and defendant David Erenberg.

The agreement was entered into on the severance of a business relationship which had theretofore existed between these brothers and provided for division of corporate and other property belonging to them. Under its terms, either party might become the “buyer” or “seller”; eventually David became the “seller” and Victor the “buyer.” Among the corporate assets divided by the agreement were certain parcels of real property located in the city of Los Angeles along Medford Street. These parcels were so divided that the two brothers received adjoining frontages, Victor receiving a 70-foot frontage and David getting a 130-foot frontage on Med-ford Street. Under the terms of the agreement, Victor was to attempt to obtain an additional 60-foot frontage from the city of Los Angeles by taking steps to compel abandonment of a portion of Tremont Street, a dedicated, but fenced and unused street which intersected Medford and was westerly of and adjacent to Victor’s tract. The agreement provided that if the city refused to abandon this street, David would convey, without compensation, an additional 30 feet of his frontage to Victor so that each would own 100 feet of frontage on Medford Street. 2 It is to enforce such conveyance of this additional 30 feet of frontage that Victor brought this suit.

In April 1951 Victor, with David’s knowledge, initiated proceedings for the vacation of the 60-foot strip known as *89 Tremont Street by filing a petition with the Los Angeles City Council. On December 14, 1951, Victor received a letter from the Los Angeles City Clerk “recommending the conditional granting of the request. . . for the vacation of Tremont Street . . .” upon the performance of certain conditions by Victor, the most important of which was the dedication by him, from other land owned by him, of a strip of land 20 feet wide and 300 feet long fronting on Medford Street just west of Tremont Street.

David was informed of this letter but evidenced no desire to confer concerning it. Thereafter, on December 21, 1951, the Los Angeles City Engineer wrote to Victor to the same effect as the city clerk had done, with the request for the payment of the fee for vacation proceedings. In January 1952, counsel for David and Victor met and David was requested to compensate Victor for the 20 by 300-foot strip, since if it were given to the city it would save David from relinquishing his 30-foot strip under the agreement. David refused. On May 28, 1952, Victor wrote to the city engineer requesting that the city reconsider its position requiring the dedication of the 20 by 300-foot strip. On June 10, 1952, the city engineer replied stating that the city needed the 20-foot strip as part of the planned future widening of Medford Street, and he further noted that the proposed dedication would “not involve any physical change in the fence line along the north side of Medford Street and would permit all ordinary uses of the land except erection of buildings thereon until such time as the legislative body shall accept same for street purposes.”

The trial court concluded that the letter of June 10, 1952, from the city did not have “the effect of officially denying, or denying in any other way, manner or form plaintiffs’ original petition for the vacation of Tremont Street,” and that the city had “not refused to grant a vacation and abandonment of Tremont Street.” The trial court did find, however, that the city required that plaintiff dedicate his 20 by 300-foot strip of land to the city in exchange for its granting of the petition for abandonment; and, further, the trial court found that the 20 by 300-foot strip was a useful portion of the plaintiff’s premises and that it had some monetary value.

The trial court also found (1) that, while the agreement of March 29, 1949, made no reference to the 20-foot strip of land, Victor and David knew as early as 1940 that plans called for a widening of Medford Street from 60 to 80 feet, (2) that, because of the necessity of obtaining a zoning vari *90 anee in 1941, Victor and David knew of the 20-foot building setback requirement along Medford Street, (3) that these facts were, or should have been, known to the parties when the agreement of 1949 was entered into, and (4) that it was thus known to or contemplated by the parties that certain conditions might attach to the granting of the vacation of Tremont Street.

The court awarded the defendant David $500 for reasonable attorneys’ fee and found that plaintiffs were not entitled to fees or costs under the provisions of paragraph 5 of the agreement since the proceedings under that paragraph “were not commenced nor conducted in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth” therein.

The court below based its judgment on a two-step argument: first, that the parties to the agreement contemplated that the city would require either the dedication of the 20 by 300-foot strip or some equivalent dedication as a condition to the vacation of Tremont Street; and, second, that therefore the imposition of this condition was not the official notification of the city’s refusal to abandon the street. It thus follows from the judgment that the plaintiffs failed to take “such steps, proceedings and legal action as may be required to compel the abandonment of said street” since such a “step” would have been the dedication to the city of the 20 by 300-foot strip. By finding as it did that the action of the city council did not result in a refusal to abandon, it appears that the trial court erred. The determination of the legal effect of the city’s action is not a determination of a question of fact but is, rather, a determination of a question of law. Granting, that under the provisions of the Streets and Highways Code, sections 8300 to 8308, a city may attach conditions to the abandonment of the street, nevertheless, when such conditions are to be performed by a petitioner, it would appear that the imposition of the condition requiring dedication of a portion of petitioner’s land would amount to a refusal to abandon. The conditional acceptance of a contract is, of course, a counteroffer, and is a refusal to perform in accordance with the terms of that offer (Johnson v. Goldberg, 130 Cal.App.2d 571, 576 [279 P.2d 131]; Lewis v. James, 134 Cal.App.2d 15, 21 [285 P.2d 86]), and there is no reason why a different rule should apply to the granting or denying of a petition to abandon a street where the abandonment is granted on a condition not accepted by the party. Persuasive of this result is the holding in General Elec. Co. v. Federal *91 Rañño Commission,

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Bluebook (online)
193 Cal. App. 2d 86, 13 Cal. Rptr. 903, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 1671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/superior-bedding-co-v-erenberg-calctapp-1961.