Wright v. Lowe

296 P.2d 34, 140 Cal. App. 2d 891, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2339
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 19, 1956
DocketCiv. 16664
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 296 P.2d 34 (Wright v. Lowe) 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
Wright v. Lowe, 296 P.2d 34, 140 Cal. App. 2d 891, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2339 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

DEVINE, J. pro tem. *

Judgment allowing rescission of a contract of sale of real property and cancellation of a deed *894 having been rendered in favor of plaintiff, the vendor, defendant, the buyer, has appealed.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Wright, was the owner of several lots on which there were dilapidated houses, in Palo Alto. Street and sewer assessments had been levied against the property, and at the time of the sale in question, these amounted to almost $8,000. The assessments were a lien on the property, but they were payable over a term of many years, an instalment being collected annually with the taxes. Mrs. Wright testified she did not know of the assessments. There were deeds of trust on the property of which she was fully cognizant. These, at the time of the sale, secured bank loans of about $2,800.

In 1952, Mrs. Wright decided to sell the property. A broker’s salesman named Brown heard of her wish, and obtained authorization to sell, at first at the price of $15,000 and later at $10,000. These authorizations were in writing, but the documents were not offered in evidence. Appellant Dutch, who is an investor in real estate, had been in contact with Brown about acquiring the property. Dutch offered $11,000 originally, but when he received a preliminary title report which disclosed that the bank loans and assessments would exceed that amount, he voluntarily increased his offer to $12,200, which was $700 above the price Brown had quoted to him. There is nothing in the record to show that Dutch personally used deception on plaintiff, nor that Lowe, the broker for whom Brown worked, did so.

The street and sanitory assessments are the crux of the case. Dutch, on his part, intended that the amount of these should be deducted from the purchase price. Mrs. Wright, as she testified and as the court believed, did not know of the assessments and had no idea that the large amount of these would be deducted from the purchase price.

It is necessary to describe the history of the transaction as it relates to the dealings of Mrs. Wright and Brown. She has had an education which did not go beyond the third grade. Brown asked her if she would be willing to accept $1,000 down and $100 a month, and she assented, telling Brown that she wished to make a down payment on a small apartment house. She does not find fault with the $12,200 price as such, but with the deduction of the amount of the assessments, a subject on which, she claims, she was mistaken. Brown testified that he explained to her that she would receive perhaps $500 or $600 less his commission which he reduced to $450. *895 She denies that any such explanation was given to her, and the trial court accepted her testimony as true.

The results of the sale are startling. The total of assessments, bank loans, taxes, commission and closing expenses were such that Mrs. Wright received nothing at all for her property. Several charges which Dutch had agreed to pay were made against Mrs. Wright. She would have had $198 net to her, but a demand from a bank came in just before the closing, and was honored by the title company, so that Mrs. Wright’s realization from the sale would have been an algebraic quantity of minus about $130. The deficiency, however, was cancelled by the title company, and Mrs. Wright was informed, when she asked for her check, that there was nothing owing to her.

That there was copious evidence for the court to find that plaintiff made the sale under mistake is not disputed by the appellant. His contention is that the court allowed rescission on the ground of mutual mistake and that there was no mutuality of mistake because he, Dutch, was not mistaken about the terms of the contract.

This reasoning, however, must be based on the premise that the written contract between the parties entitled 11 deposit receipt” is in itself a clear expression of terms, which coincides with the subjective intent of Dutch. Actually, it is, as the trial court found it to be, an ambiguous instrument. It is not for one party, then, to assert that there was not mutuality of mistake simply because his intent agrees with what he thought the contract said. The written contract, in fact, not only admits of two interpretations, one favorable to the seller and one to the buyer, but it may well be that if the contract alone were before us on a question of construction rather than of rescission, the preferred interpretation would be against the buyer, especially because he dictated the terms. (Civ. Code § 1654.) In the contract, the buyer agrees to “assume” the assessments, and the property as delivered is to be free of assessments. To “assume” ordinarily means “to pay.” (Words and Phrases, perm, ed., vol. 4, p. 585; Klegman v. Moyer, 91 Cal.App. 333, 339 [266 P. 1009].) Dutch concedes that he did not intend to pay the assessments at the time, nor to accept any personal liability for them, but simply to let them remain. He concedes that he did not intend that the property should come to him, as the deposit slip says it shall, unencumbered *896 by assessments. All this leads up to the question, what was meant by the word “balance,” in the sentence of the contract reading: “Buyer agrees to assume existing loans and assessments and pay balance in cash.” ? The buyer would have it that this means he agreed to pay something which might have been expressed, but was not, like this: “the balance after deducting from the purchase price of $12,200.00 the sum of existing loans, and street and sanitary assessments.” Dutch was mistaken in believing the written contract did so provide; Mrs. Wright was mistaken in having no understanding of the deduction, contemplated by Dutch, of the amount of the assessments. The mistake was mutual and related to the same subject matter. The parties did not agree to the same thing in the same sense, and consent was not mutual. (Civ. Code § 1580.) To avoid an obvious injustice, rescission and cancellation properly were decreed. (Moore v. Copp, 119 Cal. 429 [51 P. 630]; Security T. & S. Bank v. Southern Pac. Co., 214 Cal. 81, 85 [3 P.2d 1015]; Bland v. Kelley, 69 Cal.App.2d 116, 117 [158 P.2d 206].)

There was another document signed by the seller, namely, instructions to the title company, which we do not regard as curing the defect of the deposit receipt which was the basic instrument. The instructions are described following a consideration of the problem of agency. The question at this point is whose agent Brown was. The trial court found him to be the agent of Dutch for the purpose of presenting to Mrs. Wright his ofEer to buy. We believe this finding should be sustained.

Mrs. Wright’s authorization to Brown was at most that of selling at the sum of $10,000. This would not authorize him to accept Dutch’s ofEer with its deduction provisions (Holbrook v. McCarthy, 61 Cal. 216; Stemler v. Bass, 153 Cal. 791, 795 [96 P. 809]), nor did it make Brown solely her agent for bringing Dutch's new effort back to her.

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Bluebook (online)
296 P.2d 34, 140 Cal. App. 2d 891, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 2339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-lowe-calctapp-1956.