Wilson v. White

119 P. 895, 161 Cal. 453, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 449
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1911
DocketL.A. No. 2771.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 119 P. 895 (Wilson v. White) 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
Wilson v. White, 119 P. 895, 161 Cal. 453, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 449 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal by plaintiffs from a judgment in favor of defendant and from an order denying their motion for a new trial in an action brought by them for the specific performance of an alleged contract for the sale to them by defendant for fourteen thousand dollars cash, of certain real property in San Bernardino County, California, described in the complaint as being subdivision lot 1 in block 35, East Bedlands, according to the plat thereof on record in the office of the county recorder of said county, together with ten shares of the capital stock of the East Bed-lands Water Company, a corporation, said property containing ten acres more or less and being planted to orange trees.

Defendant, the owner of the property, was a resident of the state of Texas, and during the whole period of the negotiations for a sale of the property was in that state. The plaintiffs during all of said period were in the city of Bedlands, *456 California, as were also John W. Gill and W. E. Rabbeth, the real estate brokers through whom the negotiations were had. Said Gill and Rabbeth had received a letter written by defendant to them on April 6, 1909, in reply to an inquiry on their part asking for a selling price on the property, in which he said he would sell this property for fifteen thousand dollars without the crop. Plaintiffs’ negotiations with defendant for the purchase were entirely by means of letters and telegrams which will hereinafter be set forth. To these letters and telegrams we are confined in determining whether there was any contract between plaintiffs and defendant for the sale and purchase of the property.

During the whole period of the negotiations there was on the orange trees on said property about one third of the annual crop of oranges, the remainder having been harvested. This third of the crop was of the value, according to a finding of the trial court which is sufficiently sustained by the evidence, of twelve hundred dollars, and the same was not harvested until some time in May, 1909. The evidence was also sufficient to sustain the conclusion of the trial court that these oranges so remaining on the trees had not been theretofore sold by defendant,- and that he was then the owner thereof.

On April 13, 1909, at the request of plaintiffs, who within a day or two thereof had been shown the property by Gill and Rabbeth and solicited to make an offer for the same, the following telegram was sent to defendant:

, “4-13-09, Redlands, Cal.
“To J. Lowell White,
“Kingsville, Texas.
“Have offer 14,000 net to you half cash lower ten advise sale. Much scale in grove.
“Gill & Rabbeth.”
On April 15, 1909, defendant answered this telegram by both telegram and letter. The telegram was as follows:
Kingsville, Tex. Apr. 15-09. “Gill & Rabbeth, Redlands, Cal.
“‘On terms named will not sell for less than fifteen thousand.
“J. Lowell White.”

The letter was simply a confirmation of the telegram. This telegram was shown to plaintiffs and on the same day, at their *457 request, another telegram was sent to defendant. It was as follows:

“Redlands, Cal., Apr. 15, ’09. “J. Lowell White, Kingsville, Texas.
“Cannot get fifteen. Client offers fourteen cash.
“Gill & Rabbeth.”
On April 16th defendant replied by telegram as follows:
Kingsville, Texas, Apr. 16.
“Gill & Rabbeth, I accept fourteen thousand net cash to me for lower ten without crop.
“J. Lowell White.”

On the same day defendant mailed a letter to Gill & Rabbeth confirming the telegram, and saying he would be glad to hear further in regard to details of the sale, asking that they have their client deposit the money in First National Bank at Redlands for delivery on presentation of a satisfactory deed, and suggesting that the transfer be made on May 1st.

Before the receipt of the last named telegram, and on April 16th, one W. D. Bethell offered Gill & Rabbeth for the defendant fifteen thousand dollars net cash for the property, without the crop, he (Bethell) to pay Gill & Rabbeth the commission on the sale, and Gill & Rabbeth accepted such offer, and received from Bethell three thousand dollars on account of such purchase price. Thereafter, on the same day, the telegram last quoted was received, and they showed the same to plaintiffs, and at the same time informed them that prior to its receipt they had sold the property to Bethell, without the crop, for fifteen thousand dollars net cash to defendant.

On April 17th, plaintiffs tendered to Gill & Rabbeth fourteen thousand dollars and demanded a conveyance of the property, and this tender was rejected by said brokers.

On the same day plaintiffs sent directly to defendant, this being the first time they had communicated directly with him and the first time that the names of the proposed purchasers were communicated to him, the following telegram, viz.:

“Ar. 17.
“Mr. Joseph L. White,
“Kingsville, Texas.
"On April 15 last, we offered by telegram sent through Gill & Rabbeth to pay you fourteen thousand dollars cash for your *458 sub. lot one, block thirty-five, East Redlands, San Bernardino County, California, and on April sixteenth last through .Gill & Rabbeth received your acceptance. Will you carry out and perform said contract of sale? If so, wire instructions concerning delivery of deed and payment of money. Wire answer.
“A. J. Wilson “R. C. Willis.”
On the same day Gill & Rabbeth telegraphed to defendant as follows:
Redlands, Cal., April 17, 1909.
“J. Lowell White,
“Kingsville, Texas.
“Before last telegram came we sold grove another party fifteen thousand. First party claims grove at fourteen. Full explanation by letter.
“Gill & Rabbeth.”
and at the same time wrote to him an explanation of the situation.
On April 19th plaintiffs again telegraphed defendant as follows:
Redlands, Cal. April 19, 1909.
"J. Lowell White,
“Kingsville, Texas.
“Have deposited in your name $14,400, with Citizens National .Bank of Redlands, California, and demand deed of sub. lot one, block 35, East Redlands.

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Bluebook (online)
119 P. 895, 161 Cal. 453, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-white-cal-1911.