Wood v. Metzenbaum

203 P.2d 105, 90 Cal. App. 2d 533, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1013
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 10, 1949
DocketCiv. 7587
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 203 P.2d 105 (Wood v. Metzenbaum) 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
Wood v. Metzenbaum, 203 P.2d 105, 90 Cal. App. 2d 533, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1013 (Cal. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

This is a purported appeal from a judgment of dismissal of the cross-complaint of defendants Walter Metzenbaum and Rose Metzenbaum, rendered pursuant to an order sustaining plaintiffs’ demurrer thereto, with leave to amend. Said defendants refused to amend within the time allowed, or at all. The suit based on the complaint and answer is still pending.

Two questions are involved: First, Is the judgment appeal-able? Second, Does the cross-complaint adequately state a cause of action under section 442 of the Code of Civil Procedure ?

The amended complaint alleges that the defendant Walter Metzenbaum, who is an attorney at law and appears for appellants, was a duly licensed real estate broker and that the other named defendants are his wife, daughter, son and the son’s wife; that Oulton Land Company owned the “Oulton Ranch” on Twitchell Island in Sacramento County, described in Exhibit “A” attached to the complaint, which was subject to an oil and gas lease held by the Standard Oil Company of *534 California, by the terms of which lease the owner of the land was entitled to one-eighth royalty in all oil or gas extracted therefrom. It is alleged that on August 15, 1943, plaintiffs employed said defendants Walter Metzenbaum and M. Metzenbaum as their agents and brokers to purchase the land for plaintiffs in consideration of one-third of said one-eighth of all royalties paid to plaintiffs under said oil and gas lease as defendants’ commissions for negotiating said purchase; that at all times the Oulton Land Company was willing to sell said land for the sum of $110,000, which fact was known to the defendants but unknown to plaintiffs, and that the defendants falsely represented to plaintiffs that the sum of $125,000 was the least the owner would accept for said land; that relying on said false representations plaintiffs executed with the defendants as their brokers on August 19, 1943, a written agreement to pay the owner of said land said sum of $125,000, in consideration of which services plaintiffs agreed to pay the defendants one-third of said one-eighth royalties as broker’s commissions for negotiating the purchase, and plaintiffs thereupon agreed to and did purchase said land, and deposited with Title Insurance and Guaranty Company, the sum of $10,000 as part payment of the purchase price thereof; that thereafter, and on August 21, 1943, the defendants fraudulently entered into a written contract with the Oulton Land Company to purchase the land in their own names and they did purchase it for the sum of $110,000, payable in the sum of $40,000 cash, plaintiffs’ $10,000 deposit being included therein, and the balance of $70,000 to be paid the owner by defendants’ notes in said sum, secured by their trust deed to the property; that plaintiffs had no knowledge of said purchase of land by the defendants for said sum of $110,000, until June 1, 1945; that defendants, at the time of acquiring their title to the land, conveyed it to plaintiffs, pursuant to their agreement of August 15th, for the pretended purchase price of $125,000, retaining their one-third of one-eighth of all royalties derived from the oil and gas lease, and also wrongfully and fraudulently retaining said sum of $15,000, being the difference between their purchase price of $110,000 and said sum of $125,000, which they represented to plaintiffs to be the amount paid to Oulton Land Company. The complaint further alléges that subsequent to defendants’ purchase of the land in September, 1943, they were paid and wrongfully retained the sum of $8,108.06 in royalties from the oil and gas lease without the knowledge or consent of plaintiffs, and that defendants *535 wrongfully and fraudulently converted said sum of $15,000 to their own use and benefit. The amended complaint prays for judgment for said sum of $15,000, with interest, for an accounting of all moneys received by the defendants from royalties paid to them from the oil and gas lease, and for judgment for the amount thereof belonging to plaintiffs, together with interest, and for a decree quieting title to the land in plaintiffs, and determining that defendants have no right, title or interest in said land.

The defendants, Walter Metzenbaum and his wife Rose, jointly answered the amended complaint, denying the material allegations thereof, including the alleged fraudulent statements, concealed profits of the transaction and conduct, and also affirmatively alleged as defenses that the said Walter and M. Metzenbaum purchased the land and oil and gas lease from Oulton Land Company in their own names and thereafter sold the land and two-thirds of one-eighth of the royalties to be derived from said oil and gas lease to plaintiffs; that the alleged oral agreement employing them as brokers to purchase the land from the owners was a unilateral contract, lacking mutuality and therefore void under section 1624 of the Civil Code.

The defendants Walter and Rose Metzenbaum also filed a cross-complaint, to which plaintiffs demurred on the grounds that it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that another suit was previously filed and is now pending in the city and county of San Francisco, involving the same issues. The cross-complaint alleges that plaintiffs’ complaint asserts they agreed with the defendants, on August 19, 1943, that defendants, as their brokers and agents, would purchase from the owners the land in question and the oil and gas lease, upon terms specified, in consideration of one-third of one-eighth of the royalties to be derived from the oil and gas lease as commissions, but that “it was manifested that the minds of the said defendants and the plaintiffs had never met and that, if the claims of the plaintiffs that said defendants acted as agents of plaintiffs . . . was well founded and true, that a mutual mistake had taken place, . . . and that no actual contract had been made” (italics added); that the defendants believed they were making an actual sale of the land to plaintiffs, and that a mutual mistake thereby occurred. The cross-complaint does not purport to recite the conversation or facts with relation to the agreement upon which the defendants assume that the alleged mistake was founded. It *536 does state that defendants purchased the land from the former owners and that they sold and conveyed it to plaintiffs for $125,000, the sum of $55,000 of which was paid by plaintiffs to them in cash, and the balance of $70,000 was to be paid upon terms specified and that a trust deed was executed by plaintiffs to secure said unpaid portion of the purchase price; that plaintiffs took possession of the land and have retained and farmed it for more than two years. The cross-complaint states that defendants elect to rescind the entire transaction and prays for an accounting. No fraud or previous notice of rescission is alleged. It is not alleged defendants suffered any loss by the contract. Defendants’ election to rescind is evidently conditional, for it is merely stated that “if the claim of the plaintiffs that said defendants acted as agents of plaintiffs” is well founded, a mutual mistake occurred and they then elect to rescind the transactions.

From the judgment dismissing the cross-complaint for failure to amend that pleading, this appeal was perfected.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 P.2d 105, 90 Cal. App. 2d 533, 1949 Cal. App. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-metzenbaum-calctapp-1949.