Walsh v. MacAire

227 P.2d 517, 102 Cal. App. 2d 435, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1326
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 20, 1951
DocketCiv. 17721
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 227 P.2d 517 (Walsh v. MacAire) 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
Walsh v. MacAire, 227 P.2d 517, 102 Cal. App. 2d 435, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1326 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

SHINN, P. J.

Plaintiffs brought this action for specific performance of an agreement to purchase from defendants a parcel of land 400 feet by 525 feet in the city of Los Angeles in a community known as Tujunga. Although plaintiffs have spent $12,800 building a house and otherwise improving the property to which they have no title, and are in much need of performance by defendants, they have appealed from a judgment in their favor decreeing specific performance, contending that they were granted inadequate relief. Most of their contentions are untenable. The serious question is whether the court failed to make findings on all material issues and should have considered and determined the question of plaintiffs’ damage with respect to a certain feature of the agreement as to which specific performance could not be decreed.

The land in question is on a brush-covered hogback bordering on Haines Canyon and is not served by any public utility. There is what is known as a fire road extending from a public road in Haines Canyon to and beyond the property in question. From Haines Canyon Avenue the road leads across some privately owned land, government land in the Angeles National Forest and other land of the defendants. It is used by federal, state and county agencies in fire prevention and other protective work. So far as shown the right of these agencies to use the road is no more than a reserved easement.

The agreement was in the form of escrow instructions executed by the parties. They contained the following: “Buyer and seller agree to furnish the metes and bounds description of the road which is to be used as a means of agress [sic] and *437 ingress for the Buyer, and you are to draw at the close of your escrow a separate agreement using this description which is to be signed by both buyer and seller, and remain in effect as long as buyers, their heirs or assigns, shall use above described property.

“You are further instructed and authorized, without any liability or responsibility on your part whatsoever, to draw, at the close of your escrow, an agreement as between the buyer and seller as to the use of and right in an adequate supply of water which is to be furnished by seller from sellers property, until water is available from public utilities. ’ ’

There was no other executed written agreement covering these matters. The pleadings raised the following issues: (1) Whether defendants agreed to provide as a part of the transaction, an irrevocable right of ingress and egress for plaintiffs over the fire road; (2) whether the land being purchased bordered on a public road; plaintiffs alleged it did not; defendants alleged that it did; (3) what was agreed as to plaintiffs ’ right to be furnished with water from a spring on other land of the defendants; (4) what were the terms of payment for the land.

The findings, as far as they went, were in favor of plaintiffs. They have paid some $1,800 on their contract. The decree orders them to give their promissory note for the balance, $2,351.26, including interest, payable $50 or more per month at 6 per cent and a trust deed on the real property securing the same. It orders defendants to convey title and furnish a policy of title insurance showing title in plaintiffs subject only to taxes, conditions, restrictions, reservations, rights and rights of way of record and said trust deed; also to grant an easement for a pipe line and maintaining a pump and motor at the spring on defendants’ land, and an easement for the purpose of conducting and maintaining a power line over defendants ’ land, the location of the easements being described in the decree. There was a finding that plaintiffs should have a nonexclusive right to use a maximum of 1,200 gallons of water per day from defendants’ spring until such time as water may be available from a public utility, but the decree is silent as to plaintiffs’ right to use water from the spring.

The court specifically declined to make a finding with respect to the alleged agreement of defendants to provide plaintiffs with a right of way for ingress and egress. The decree is silent as to that matter also,

*438 Finding No. 11 reads as follows: “No finding is made herein as to what, if any, permanent right of way was promised by the Defendants, Scott D. Macaire and Ada R Macaire over that certain road in Haines Canyon, referred to in the testimony as the ‘Fire Road.’ The purpose of this finding being that since the plaintiffs, Harry J. Walsh and Mary M. Walsh would not be entitled to specific performance of such an agreement, of [sic] any was made, the parties hereto should be left to their rights and remedies at law and the denial of the Plaintiffs’ motion to amend their complaint shall be without prejudice to either party in this action.” The evidence was such as to require a finding as to the alleged agreement. On February 4, 1947, Mr. Walsh wrote Macaire saying, in part: “I would want a right of way to and over the fire road to Haines Canyon.” On February 10, 1947, Macaire replied to Walsh: “You should have 400 feet that would give you property down to Haines Canyon Road and take in that flat on the west side of the Hog’s Back.” Enclosed with this letter was a small map showing the location of the property and that it abuts upon a road other than the fire road. Mr. Walsh testified that defendants promised to provide a right of way. There was undisputed evidence that defendants tendered to plaintiffs only a Forest Ranger’s revocable permit for plaintiffs to use the road.

Having taken jurisdiction of an equitable action the court may determine all legal as well as equitable issues in order to make a complete disposition of the matters in controversy (see cases collected 10 Cal.Jur., Equity, § 42, p. 499; 23 Cal.Jur., Specific Performance, § 67, p. 511, and 10-Yr. Supp.).

Plaintiffs should not have been left to an action at law for breach of defendants’ alleged contract to provide an outlet from the property to a public road. Whatever the agreement may have been it was clearly shown by the evidence that the right of way agreement was an inseparable part of plaintiffs’ agreement to purchase the property. If plaintiffs could not have specific performance of that part of the agreement they were entitled to damages as a matter of right. Evidence was introduced by the parties on this issue and presumably it was all the evidence they had to offer. The issue should have been decided.

Although the pleadings raised the issue as to whether the land abutted on a public road, the court made no finding upon that issue. After reading the testimony concerning this matter *439 we are not sure that the parties themselves knew where the corners were located on the ground with relation to the Haines Canyon Road. Defendants evidently believed when they agreed to sell the land that it did extend to the road. The court should have had the benefit of the evidence of a competent surveyor on that issue. The question was one that had to be determined before it could be known how plaintiffs could reach a public road, and also what damages they suffered through their inability to procure a right of way over the fire road if they were able to prove the agreement as alleged.

Plaintiffs contend that they had no valid agreement to be furnished with water and that the court erroneously decreed that they have a water right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 P.2d 517, 102 Cal. App. 2d 435, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-macaire-calctapp-1951.