Van Demark v. California Home Extension Ass'n

185 P. 866, 43 Cal. App. 685
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 3019.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 185 P. 866 (Van Demark v. California Home Extension Ass'n) 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
Van Demark v. California Home Extension Ass'n, 185 P. 866, 43 Cal. App. 685 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

SLOANE, J.

The only questions on this appeal arise on the construction and application of provisions in a contract for the sale of land, whereby it is agreed that in the event of the purchaser becoming dissatisfied with the investment the seller shall buy back the land.

*687 The complaint contained two causes of action, based on agreements to repurchase, under separate contracts for the sale of separate tracts, and judgment was against the defendants, appellants here. The repurchase clause in the first contract is as follows: “Art. 10. If after completion of payments the buyer should be dissatisfied with the investment, the association stands ready at any time between the fifth and sixth year from date of planting to buy back the land by paying the buyer the amount of the purchase price.” The second provides: “Art. 6. If after completion of purchase the buyer should be dissatisfied with the investment, the association guarantees at any time during the sixth year following date of this contract ... to buy back the land.” It will only be necessary to incidentally refer to any other subject matter of these contracts, as no dispute exists on any other of the conditions pleaded.

The complaint also contains an . allegation that within the period specified in the contracts plaintiff became dissatisfied with his investments, and so notified the defendant corporation, and demanded that the agreement to repurchase be fulfilled. No facts are stated as to reasons or grounds for dissatisfaction with the investment. Defendants urged on demurrer that without some showing of reasonable grounds for dissatisfaction the complaint does not state a cause of action, and the overruling of this demurrer is one of the alleged errors on appeal. It is claimed by respondent that certain facts set up in the answer gave substantial reasons for dissatisfaction with the investment, thus supplementing the complaint, and there was evidence introduced on this point; but the court found that the matters pleaded in the answer were not true, and as no error is claimed as to such finding, the question is purely one of law as to whether under the terms of this agreement it was incumbent on the plaintiff to plead and prove facts constituting reasonable grounds for dissatisfaction with his investment.

[1] The distinction is well recognized—though the line cannot always be very clearly drawn—in actions arising on these “dissatisfaction clauses,” that where the right involved is one which is submitted to the taste or fancy, feelings, or judgment of the party in whose favor the option is given, it may be exercised without any practical or utilitarian reason; but when it is apparent that the *688 question of satisfaction relates to the commercial value or quality of the subject matter of the contract, it must be shown that it is deficient or defective in these respects, and that the dissatisfaction is reasonable and well founded. [2] “ But where there is nothing to justify the contrary construction, the general rule is that the party to be satisfied is the judge of his own satisfaction, subject only to the limitation in most jurisdictions that he must act in good faith; and if he does so act and is really dissatisfied, he may reject the work or the article on the ground that it is not satisfactory to him.” (Tiffany v. Pacific Sewer Pipe Co., 180 Cal. 700, [182 Pac. 428].) Such construction of the rule has been applied to contracts for a suit of clothes, a portrait, a musical instrument, a carriage, a steam heater, a literary article for a magazine, horses, employment of a servant, dissatisfaction with a home furnished, and with security for performance of an obligation. (9 Cyc. 618, and citations; Singerly v. Thayer, 108 Pa. St. 291, [56 Am. Rep. 207, 2 Atl. 230]; McCarren v. McNulty (Mass.), 7 Gray, 139; Brown v. Foster, 113 Mass. 136, [18 Am. Rep. 463]; Z aliski v. Clark, 44 Conn. 218, [26 Am. Rep. 446]; Moore v. Robinson, 92 Ill. 491.) It has been held in California that an agreement to furnish title satisfactory to the purchaser was not met by a merely good and marketable title, if the purchaser himself was not satisfied. (Parkside Realty Co. v. MacDonald, 166 Cal. 426, [137 Pac. 21]; Allen v. Pockwitz, 103 Cal. 85, [42 Am. St. Rep. 99, 36 Pac. 1039]; Church v. Shanklin, 95 Cal. 626, [17 L. R. A. 207, 30 Pac. 789].)

The contracts considered under the decisions cited by appellant are for the most part clearly distinguishable from the contract under consideration here. They involve the quality or value of things in common use which have a fixed and recognized standard of fitness and worth, and concerning which it is fair and equitable to require a purchaser to be satisfied with the commonly accepted standard of excellence. And sometimes, too, the courts have been controlled in their rulings on this question by the equities involved in cases where the exercise of a captious and unreasonable feeling of dissatisfaction would involve the other party to the contract in serious loss or damage. (Hawkins v. Graham, 149 Mass. 284, [14 Am. St. Rep. 422, *689 21 N. E. 312].) [3] We think it is clear in this case that the purpose of the agreement to repurchase in the event the buyer should become dissatisfied with his investment was to submit the matter to the personal option and judgment of the purchaser. The exercise of this right is not dependent upon a failure in value of the property, or a breach of any conditions of the contract. It was made a question alone of his dissatisfaction with the “investment” —with that particular disposition of Ms capital which tied it up in tMs California land—a matter which might develop into a condition of personal dissatisfaction entirely independent of values or quality. [4] The fulfillment of the terms of the agreement, moreover, does not involve the loss of the vendor’s property. It amounts only to a rescission. He gets his property back and refunds the purchase money with interest. [5] It was probably incumbent on the plaintiff to show good faith, and that he was really dissatisfied; but an allegation that he did become dissatisfied, which was pleaded and testified to, was sufficient. Incidentally, it appears by the plaintiff’s evidence, not only that he was dissatisfied, but that he had grounds for his-dissatisfaction, in that by reason of unseasonable frosts the growing eucalyptus trees on his land had been injured. The defendants pleaded, by their answer, that the injury to the premises resulting from the freeze was the fault of plaintiff, but the court found against this defense, and there was evidence to the contrary; but in any event, the finding is not made an issue on this appeal.

[6] Appellants further contend that the exercise- of the right to demand a repurchase under the “dissatisfied” clauses of the contracts came too late, in the first instance, and too early, in the second.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kowal v. Day
20 Cal. App. 3d 720 (California Court of Appeal, 1971)
Kadner v. Shields
20 Cal. App. 3d 251 (California Court of Appeal, 1971)
R. J. Cardinal Co. v. Ritchie
218 Cal. App. 2d 124 (California Court of Appeal, 1963)
Mattei v. Hopper
330 P.2d 625 (California Supreme Court, 1958)
King v. Stanley
197 P.2d 321 (California Supreme Court, 1948)
Reed v. Consolidated Feldspar Corp.
23 N.W.2d 154 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1946)
Coats v. General Motors Corp.
39 P.2d 838 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)
Melton v. Story
298 P. 1032 (California Court of Appeal, 1931)
Weisenberg v. Hirschhorn
275 P. 997 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 P. 866, 43 Cal. App. 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-demark-v-california-home-extension-assn-calctapp-1919.