Tatum v. Levi

3 P.2d 963, 117 Cal. App. 83, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 396
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 24, 1931
DocketDocket No. 416.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 963 (Tatum v. Levi) 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
Tatum v. Levi, 3 P.2d 963, 117 Cal. App. 83, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 396 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

FINNEY, J., pro tem.

The plaintiff in this action brought suit against the defendants for the specific performance of an *85 option contract for the sale of real estate, with an alternative prayer for damages for violation of the contract. The defendant Adolph Levi filed a cross-complaint on the fifteenth day of May, 1928, alleging that the option contract was a contract for purchase and sale and that the cross-complainant offered on the sixth day of April, 1928, to convey the property to the plaintiff, but that the plaintiff refused to accept the offer, and prayed for the specific performance of the option agreement. Thereafter, permission of the court having been duly obtained, the plaintiff filed an amended complaint against the defendants for the recovery of $5,000 which was the deposit made by plaintiff’s assignor at the time of the execution of the option contract. It was alleged in the amended complaint, as well as in the original complaint, that the defendants had failed to perform the terms and conditions of the option contract and that the plaintiff was therefore entitled to a return to him of the deposit made by his assignor. After a trial before the court without a jury, judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of the defendants, denying the plaintiff all relief. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed. On the sixth day of February, 1928, W. C. Zinkand entered into an option agreement with Adolph Levi, the material parts of which are as follows:

“Upon the exercising of this option, said Five Thousand Dollars ($5000.00) to apply on purchase price of One Hundred twelve thousand five hundred dollars ($112,500.00) and shall be deducted from the first payment of twenty-eight thousand one hundred twenty-five dollars ($28,125.00) and the balance of the purchase price, to-wit: Eighty-four thousand three seventy-five dollars ($84,375.00) to be evidenced by three (3) promissory notes each in the sum of twenty-eight thousand one hundred twenty-five dollars ($28,125.00) payable on or before one, two and three years after date of issuance of certificate of title, to Adolph Levi, with interest at six per cent (6%) per annum, payable *86 quarterly, which said notes shall be secured by mortgage on said property; . . .
*85 “Received of W. C. Zinkand, this 6th day of February, 1928, the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) for an option to purchase Pueblo Lots 1225, 1226, 1239, and the West One Half of 1223, in the City of San Diego, County of San Diego, State of California . . . for the term of sixty days from date.
*86 “Said property having this day been deeded to the Southern Title and Trust Company of San Diego, with instructions to convey said property to said W. C. Zinkand or his assigns, and accept said notes and mortgage payable to Adolph Levi; title to said property to be clear and marketable; said Southern Title and Trust Company to issue its unlimited certificate of guarantee of title showing said premises in fee simple, free and clear of all encumbrances except such taxes as have become a lien since December 31, 1927; . . .
“It is mutually agreed that should one R. C. Cushing make claim to or establish any right to said property, by virtue of or under an option dated November 21, 1927, the undersigned, Adolph Levi, shall have the right to terminate this option and cancel this agreement and demand a reconveyance of said property, upon returning to said W. C. Zinkand any and all moneys paid hereunder, without interest. Said Adolph Levi agreeing to defend and determine any claim made by said Cushing as speedily as possible.
“Time being of the essenqe of this contract and of all conditions and time therein contained should the said Zinkand, his heirs, or assigns, fail to perform in full compliance with this option then the said W. C. Zinkand, his heirs, or assigns, waive any and all rights hereunder and forever quit claim any claims whatsoever to Adolph Levi, his heirs or assigns, and the undersigned, Adolph Levi, shall retain any and all payments made hereunder as and for ascertained and liquidated damages, it being agreed that it would be impracticable and extremely difficult to fix the actual damages that would be sustained by said Adolph Levi. ...”

The $5,000 was duly paid by Zinkand to Levi and Zinkand immediately assigned his interest in the contract to one E. L. Leavitt, who thereafter, and before the expiration of the option, assigned the contract to R. L. Tatum, plaintiff and appellant herein. Previous to the execution of the contract with Zinkand, and on the twenty-first day of November, 1927, Adolph Levi and Edgar B. Levi had entered into a contract with Richard C. Cushing for the sale of the same property for the sum of #80,000. On February 1, 1928, an *87 interest payment fell due under the terms of the Cushing contract, and Levi immediately claimed that Cushing was in default under that contract, by failure to make that payment of interest, and informed Zinkand that Cushing had no further rights under the contract and that all of Cushing’s rights had been forfeited. Meanwhile, Cushing had tendered payment of the interest on the sixth day of February, 1930, which tender had been refused by Levi. On the fourteenth day of February, 1928, Cushing filed suit against Levi for specific performance of the contract of November 21, 1927, with an alternative prayer for damages for its breach, and on the same day recorded a lis pendens on the property involved in that contract, being the same property described in the contract in this suit.

Prior to the commencement of his suit on April 13, 1928, neither the plaintiff Tatum, nor his assignors, had made any tender of performance under the option, or given notice of cancellation thereof, to the defendant Levi or anyone acting for him. And no tender to plaintiff, or his assignors, of any deed or certificate of title, under the terms of the option, was ever made by the defendant Levi or his agents, until June 6, 1929, more than a year after the expiration of the sixty-day period named in the option.

On the twenty-fifth day of April, 1929, judgment was rendered in the case of Cushing v. Levi, adjudging that the contract between Cushing and Levi, entered into on November 21, 1927, “be and hereby is declared void and unenforceable”, and that the plaintiff, Richard C. Cushing, recover $11,000 from the defendants therein, and, in the same judgment, it was further adjudged “that the defendants and the intervener, Eleanor Levi, are the owners in fee of the tract of land described in the complaint herein and the claims of the plaintiff herein, and of all persons claiming or to claim said premises or any part thereof, or any interest therein, through or under said plaintiff, are hereby adjudged to be groundless, and that the title to said land be quieted against all claims, demands or pretensions of the plaintiff”.

The findings and judgment in that case indicate that Mrs. Eleanor Levi, the wife of Adolph Levi, intervened in the suit and that the court was unable to decree specific performance of the contract with Cushing because of the fact that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 963, 117 Cal. App. 83, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tatum-v-levi-calctapp-1931.