Weatherbee v. Sinn

238 P. 134, 73 Cal. App. 98, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 300
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 1925
DocketDocket No. 5118.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 P. 134 (Weatherbee v. Sinn) 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
Weatherbee v. Sinn, 238 P. 134, 73 Cal. App. 98, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 300 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

*100 TYLER, P. J.

Action to quiet title to certain lands. The complaint contains two counts—the first being one to quiet title, the other to recover the sum of $600, as money paid on the contract to purchase certain real property. The facts are as follows: On or about the twelfth day of June, 1916, Ewing, McDaniel & Meux, a corporation, entered into an agreement with A. P. Weatherbee and R. S. Weatherbee, assignors of plaintiff herein, for the sale and purchase of an acre of land described as Lot 6 of Woodrow Acres, Fresno County, California. The corporation agreed to sell, and the Weatherbees agreed to buy the land and improvements thereon for the sum of $1,250. The contract required the payment of twenty five dollars upon the execution of the instrument, and the balance of the purchase price at the rate of fifteen dollars per month, payments to first apply upon interest and the balance upon principal; it also required the vendees to pay all taxes and assessments which might become due upon the property from the date thereof. It contained a provision that in the event of failure on the part of the vendees to comply with its terms, the vendor could be released from all obligations in law and equity to convey the property, the vendees to waive all rights thereunder, and all money paid thereon to be considered as liquidated damages for the nonfulfillment thereof, the moneys received by the vendor to be applied as a reasonable rental for the use and occupancy of the said premises.

Time was declared to- be of the essence of the contract. The vendees went into possession and payments were made by them at irregular intervals, the last being on May 16, 1921. At this time the Weatherbees were delinquent in an amount of $242.60, and after application of the payments to the interest, the unpaid portion of the principal was the sum of $1,001.68 or thereabout, and none of the taxes for the year 1921 were paid by the vendees. On August 26, 1921, and after the vendees had been in actual occupancy of the premises for a period of over five years, and about the time they had abandoned their possession, a communication was sent to each of them by the company notifying them of their noncompliance with the terms of the contract. This notice demanded the payment of the amount of which the vendees were in default by September 1st following, and advised *101 them that unless the amount was then paid, the company would declare the contract terminated and all rights thereunder forfeited. In reply to this communication R. S. Weatherbee telegraphed the company asking for time to comply with the terms of the demand. No further action in this connection was had between the parties except that plaintiff made a tender some several months thereafter, a matter hereinafter referred to, and the vendees having failed to make the payment, the corporation on October i, 1921, conveyed the title of the property to defendant J. F. Ewing. A few days later and on October 15, 1921, Ewing and his wife sold the same to one A. D. Becker, who assigned his interest to defendant Sinn, and he subsequently received a deed from the Ewings on December 18, 1921. At the time of these later transactions in relation to the sale of the property the original agreement between the corporation and the Weatherbees was of record, but its execution was never acknowledged by the vendor corporation. On December 12, 1921, when the purchasers were some seven months in default under the agreement, and some three and one-half months prior to the conveyance of Ewing to Sinn, A. P. Weatherbee and R. S. Weatherbee by J. B. Weatherbee, plaintiff herein, tendered J. F. Ewing, without knowledge of the sale to Becker, the sum of $310 in cash, being the amount of the principal and interest due up to that time on the original contract. Ewing refused to accept. An attempt was made at the trial to prove that this tender was not made in good faith, but on the contrary that it was made for the sole purpose of laying a foundation for the present action. No finding, however, was made upon this subject.

In the prayer of the amended complaint, plaintiff had asked that he be decreed to be the owner of an equitable interest in the premises and that his title to the land be quieted, and on his second cause of action that he be repaid the sum of $637.50 for money paid by his predecessor in interest to the said defendants Ewing, McDaniel & Meux, Inc., and to J. F. Ewing, and for the further sum of $500 damages for breach of contract. Defendants Fred Sinn, J. F. Ewing and Ada Ewing, answered the complaint setting forth that by reason of the default on the part of the vendees, the contract of sale had been terminated, and *102 defendant Fred Sinn by cross-complaint, asked that his title to the property be quieted as against the plaintiff.

No service of summons was ever made upon the defendant Ewing, McDaniel & Muex, Inc., nor was any appearance made by the corporation and as to it the action was dismissed.

Under the facts as above narrated the court found in effect among other things that plaintiff did not have any title or interest in an equity in the property. It further found that plaintiff’s assignors were in default in the payment of installments due under the contract and that they had forfeited all their rights thereunder. Additional findings were to the effect that at the time defendant Sinn took his conveyance he had no notice or knowledge of the contract of the Weatherbees nor of any claim by them to the property, or by any person claiming under them.

The findings being in favor of defendants and cross-complainant, the court rendered judgment to the effect that the action be dismissed as to the corporation (it never having been served) and that plaintiff take nothing and that the title to the defendant Fred Sinn, be quieted in the property as against plaintiff.

It is here claimed that the evidence fails to support the findings and the notice attempting to terminate the contract between the corporation and the Weatherbees is insufficient in form and effect to support the finding that the contract was terminated for the reason that it was inadequate, and unreasonable in length of time of service. Ifi support of this contention it is argued that where time is made of the essence of the contract with references to payments under contracts of the character here involved, and this covenant has been waived by the acceptance of money after it is due, such conduct will be regarded as creating such a temporary suspension of the right of forfeiture as can only be restored by giving a definite and specific notice of an intention to enforce it.

It is true that where time is originally of the essence of a contract and defaults have been subsequently waived, time ceases to be essential and becomes only material thereafter until the vendor again makes it essential by a proper notice on demand. (Boone v. Templeton, 158 Cal. 290 [139 *103 Am. St. Rep. 126, 110 Pac. 947]; Stevenson v. Joy, 164 Cal. 279 [128 Pac. 751].)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 P. 134, 73 Cal. App. 98, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weatherbee-v-sinn-calctapp-1925.