Whiting v. Delozier

255 P. 861, 82 Cal. App. 525, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 844
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5316.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 255 P. 861 (Whiting v. Delozier) 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
Whiting v. Delozier, 255 P. 861, 82 Cal. App. 525, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 844 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.,

pro tem. — This is an appeal by appellants from a judgment entered in favor of respondent and against appellants and interveners. The interveners have not appealed.

On August 1, 1919, the appellants Delozier and Colvin, being real estate brokers located in Los Angeles, but formerly located in Imperial Valley, where they had known and had business dealings with respondent, received a letter from one Francisco inviting them to come to San Diego, saying, “I have a real big trading proposition for you.” This Francisco was a real estate dealer in San Diego and was either an agent for or jointly interested with the interveners McDonald and Evans. He introduced appellants to the interveners and proposed that appellants make some kind of a trade with the interveners for a large partially constructed apartment house in San Diego known as the Winchell Apartments. The interveners had, according to the evidence, acquired this apartment house for practically nothing; the former owner had died after expending considerable money upon the building; there were a number of judgments against the building and the interveners had bought it at the sale; they had promised to protect these judgment creditors, but had not done so; it did not cost them very much money and they said they could offer a big deal to turn it quick.

*527 The interveners were brothers-in-law. McDonald was a real estate agent who had acted in many deals as such, but who handled practically his own properties and occasionally employed other brokers. Evans was an undisclosed partner or co-owner with his brother-in-law and a practicing attorney. At the trial they testified first that they two were sole and equal owners and solely interested except for the lien or mortgage holder in the amount of $16,600, but later admitted that Francisco had bought the property for them and owned a one-fourth interest in the net profits they should make.

Prior to the transaction here in question the appellants had acted as agents for the respondent in exchanging an apartment house in Los Angeles for 251 shares of the capital stock of the First National Bank of San Jacinto, and respondent had complained to appellants that they had misrepresented the facts to him, and it was to adjust this complaint that appellants agreed to act as respondent’s agents in exchanging the bank stock for the San Diego apartment house. According to the testimony of respondent appellants told him that they would get him a trade for the bank stock that would enable him to recover the loss and more and would ask him no commission. Appellant Delozier prepared a written contract by which respondent employed appellants to make the exchange. Appellant Delozier testified: “I wrote up the agreement there at the desk at the Maryland Hotel; then I just drew a line through the commission part; then he went to sign it and he said, ‘You haven’t got net in here,’ and I had to write that in before he signed it, and I think, by looking on the agreement which you have here in your files, that you will see it is a little different colored ink, as Mr. Colvin handed me his fountain pen then.”

The agreement itself provides: “This agreement witnesseth: That I, D. G-. Whiting, of El Centro, Cal., the owner of the following described first piece of property, situate, lying and being in the city of ... , county of ... , state of ... , particularly described as follows, to wit: 141 shares of bank stock of the First National and the Savings Bank of San Jacinto, Cal., which I agree to exchange for the following described second piece of property, situated, lying and being in the city of San Diego, county of San Diego, *528 state of California, particularly described as follows, to-wit: One apartment house known as the Winchell Apts., located on lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, in block 239 of University Heights in the city of San Diego.

“It is further agreed and understood that all principals to this agreement have investigated the respective properties and this exchange is being made on representations of the owners only and the agent is hereby released from all liability regarding the same.

“And J. G. Delozier & B. E. Colvin is hereby authorized to act as my agent in negotiating said exchange.

“And it is further agreed with said J. G. Delozier & B. E. Colvin that when he has secured an acceptance of the proposition to exchange the above described properties on the above terms, or such other terms which may hereafter be accepted by me, I will then pay the sum of nothing dollars, making it a net proposition, as commission for such services.”

With this authority from the respondent Whiting the appellants went to the owner of the apartment house and received from him a proposition addressed to the respondent Whiting, as follows: “I, William E. McDonald, hereby make the following proposition to D. G. Whiting, for a transfer of all my right, title and interest in and to the following described property situated in the county of San Diego, city of San Diego, state of California: Lot 5 to 8, inclusive, in block 239 of University Heights, improved with a 4-story building known as the Winchell Apartments, the said property being free of all encumbrances, with the exception of a mortgage in the sum of $16,600, and state and county taxes for the year 1920. The consideration for said transfer to be 100 shares of the capital stock of the First National Bank of San Jacinto, Cal.”

When the construction of the contract was put squarely to the defendant Delozier, he testified:

“The Court: I want to know how you considered yourself operating at that time, as to whether you were agent for either of these parties, or whether you were a free lance making what you could in this deal.
“A. In this case I suppose it would be agent for Mr. Whiting, a net proposition. In other words, it would be about the same as an option.”

*529 Mr. Lane, attorney for the defendants, cleared the matter np for the trial judge when he said:

“Mr. Lane: Mr. Delozier’s evidence has scarcely died from our ears, his testimony that in this document that they charged a commission, but after he had seen Mr. Whiting they came back and told Mr. McDonald and Mr. Evans that the deal would be made on a net proposition, and no commission. Now, there is one ground upon which that instrument may be material. I want to call your Honor’s attention to that. The preliminary instrument shows they did contemplate acting as agent for Mr. McDonald in this matter, and it so recites, but the later instrument, which is the final agreement between the parties, recites just exactly the opposite, namely, that Mr. Delozier and Mr. Colvin were to be the agent of Whiting.”

The offer of the interveners to transfer the apartment house to respondent for 100 shares of stock was admittedly concealed from respondent by appellants.

The written agreement for exchange, the written offer of the interveners and the testimony of appellant Delozier recognize that appellants were the agents of respondent, as also does the testimony of respondent establish such fact, and amply support the findings of the trial court:

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Bluebook (online)
255 P. 861, 82 Cal. App. 525, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiting-v-delozier-calctapp-1927.