Ware v. Security-First National Bank

61 P.2d 936, 7 Cal. 2d 604, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 682
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1936
DocketL. A. 14681
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 61 P.2d 936 (Ware v. Security-First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ware v. Security-First National Bank, 61 P.2d 936, 7 Cal. 2d 604, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 682 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

The trial court rendered judgment that plaintiff recover from defendant The Frank Meline Company, Inc., and defendant Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles the sum of $955.75, with interest, paid by him upon an instalment conditional sales contract for the purchase of a lot in Ventura County for the sum of $790, on the ground that plaintiff was entitled to rescind for failure of consideration. Said failure of consideration was alleged to have resulted from encroachments of the Pacific Ocean in 1931, and was caused by exceptionally severe windstorms or such other phenomena of the sea as have occurred with some frequency along the southwesterly ocean shore of the state during the past few years. Defendant Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles is the successor in interest of the Pacific Southwest Trust and Savings Bank, which as vendor entered into said contract with plaintiff. The District Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District, reversed the judgment against defendant The Frank Meline Company, Inc., Avhich had acted as sales agent in negotiating the contract, but affirmed the judgment against defendant bank. (Ware v. Frank Meline Co., Inc., (Cal. App.) [53 Pac. (2d) 1033].) Thereafter we granted the bank’s petition for hearing.

The lot which plaintiff contracted to buy, No. 866, consists entirely of sand, and it is part of a larger body of a sandy area Avhieh is bounded on the west by the Pacific Ocean. It is designated as Pierpont Bay tract on the official map on file in the county recorder’s office. Said lot 866 adjoins lot 867 easterly, and fronts on Ormond Court. Lot 867 corners on Shore Drive and Ormond Court. It *607 will be seen that plaintiff’s lot, 866, is not contiguous to Shore Drive. Westerly from Shore Drive is a single row of lots which fronts easterly on Shore Drive and faces the ocean shore on the west. To the west of this zow of lots the line of mean high tide of the Pacific Ocean is delineated on said map. Plaintiff’s lot is thus separated from the mean high tide line as marked on said map by lot 867, by Shore. Drive, and by lots 88 and 89 (west of Shore Drive), a distance of approximately 137½ feet, and, in addition, by the distance between the westerly boundary of lots 88 and 89 and the line of mean high tide as marked on said map. This distance between the westerly line of lots 88 and 89 and the mean high tide line is not definitely ascertainable, as that distance is not drawn according to scale.

On January 25, 1926, plaintiff contracted to buy lot 866. He viewed the lot a few days thereafter, and again after the streets had been paved in 1927. In September, 1931, he made the final payment upon the contract. He did not see the lot after the storm of 1931 until more than a month after making the final payment. After payment in full, but before receiving a deed, he observed the conditions upon which he relies as grounds of rescission. When a deed was tendered to him he refused to accept it. The court below decreed rescission, based on the following finding: “That the improvements provided for in the sales contract of January 25, 1926, between plaintiff and the defendant . . . were installed during the year. 1927, and that during the months of January and February, 1931, the Pacific Ocean encroached upon and destroyed Shore Drive, the ornamental street lighting, the facilities for water, gas, and electricity appurtenant on said real property, and also encroached upon said real property, causing it to be covered •with sand and debris; that this destruction was not known to plaintiff until the 15th day of October, 1931. ...”

The only provision with regard to installation of improvements by the seller is not contained in the conditional sales contract, but in the deposit receipt executed prior to said contract. Said provision is as follows: “Improvements in the above tract include Water, Gas, Electricity, Ornamental Street Lights, Paving Seward Avenue, Pierpont Boulevard, and all lanes and walks in Courts.” No provision is made for the paving of Shore Drive, but plaintiff contends that *608 because Shore Drive is delineated as a street upon the subdivision map prepared by The Frank Meline Company, Inc., as sales agent, and used by it in the sale of the lots, the seller bank_ was under a duty to pave said Shore Drive in like manner with the other streets in the tract. The seller, it seems, did in fact improve Shore Drive in a manner not described, together with other streets in the tract, in 1927. The severe and unusual storms of January and February, 1931, washed out Shore Drive and left it covered with sand. The storm did not wash out Ormond Court or other streets in the tract. As noted above, plaintiff’s lot was not located on Shore Drive, but on Ormond Court. The washing out of said drive did not leave plaintiff’s lot without convenient means of ingress and egress by Ormond Court.

The court’s finding that the storm destroyed the ornamental street lighting and facilities for water, gas and electricity appurtenant to plaintiff’s lot is not supported by the evidence. The ornamental lighting on Shore Drive was washed out, but there is no showing that the lights on Ormond Court or any other street in the tract were destroyed or seriously damaged. There was testimony on behalf of defendants that the improvements on Ormond Court remained. It was not shown by plaintiff that lots on Ormond Court were to be supplied with water, gas and electricity from Shore Drive. The burden was on plaintiff to establish the alleged failure of consideration. The record is silent as to the location of facilities for supplying water, gas and electricity to lots on Ormond Court. In plaintiff’s briefs on appeal it is suggested that the services in question were to be supplied from Shore Drive. But defendant bank in its brief states unequivocally that the mains for supplying gas, electricity and water to plaintiff’s lot on Ormond Court were on Pierpont Boulevard, which was on the easterly side of the tract, farthest from the ocean. Plaintiff cannot supply a failure of evidence on this point, upon which he had the burden of proof, by unsupported statements in his briefs on appeal.

The court further fomid that the ocean encroached upon plaintiff’s lot, “causing it to be covered with sand and debris”. It is admitted that the waters of the ocean during the period of extremely severe storms in January and February, 1931, washed over plaintiff’s lot and receded. The *609 fact that after the storm it was “covered with sand and debris” scarcely affords ground for rescission. Plaintiff testified that when he purchased the lot it was the usual sandy beach lot “with perhaps a little sage or some green stuff growing on it”.

There was testimony that bulkheads placed along the shore opposite the tract had been washed out in the storms of 1931. Plaintiff contracted to buy the lot in 1926. There is no claim that during the years before 1931 the waters of the ocean at any time washed over or endangered Shore Drive or plaintiff’s lot. Nor is there any showing that the waters of the ocean have washed over plaintiff’s lot at any time since 1931. The testimony of Anthony J. Oliver, a witness for defendants, indicates that since 1931 new bulkheads and a groin have been built. There is no showing that these barriers are likely to prove insufficient to protect plaintiff’s lot from future storms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 P.2d 936, 7 Cal. 2d 604, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-security-first-national-bank-cal-1936.