Yule v. Miller

252 P. 733, 80 Cal. App. 609, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 949
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1927
DocketDocket No. 5298.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 252 P. 733 (Yule v. Miller) 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
Yule v. Miller, 252 P. 733, 80 Cal. App. 609, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 949 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

This appeal is from that portion of the judgment only which awards to respondents judgment on their cross-complaint, in the amount of $976.23, together with interest and costs, and not from the judgment entered in favor of appellant quieting title to certain lands and canceling certain instruments of conveyance.

On the fifteenth day of June, 1921, respondent Katie C. Miller entered into a written contract with appellant, W. A. C. Yule, for the purchase and sale of lots 2 and 11 in block 121 of Middletown, being 50 by 200 feet, number 3153, India Street, San Diego, California.

Respondent took possession of the property, furnished it, and up to the time of the acts of rescission set forth in the counterclaim and cross-complaint filed herein retained possession thereof. Until about June 24, 1922, the premises were occupied by a tenant of respondent. On June 24, 1922, the house upon the lots was nailed up by a carpenter employed by appellant, who refused to stop nailing it up when requested to do so by Richard L. Miller, husband of respondent. There was a sign posted on the property at the time upon which was printed “Keep out. Trespassers will be prosecuted. Owner W. A. C. Yule.” Thereafter respondents’ furniture was moved from the premises. On July 10, 1922, appellant wrote to respondents, notifying them that their furniture was placed in a storehouse for safekeeping until claimed" by them and that appellant’s letter would he an order to thé transfer company to let respondents have their furniture.

The purchase price agreed upon in the agreement of sale for the property in question was $2,950. On June 15, 1921, the date of the agreement, $375 was paid, and within one year, or by May 27, 1922, further payments in the sum of $520 were made.

*612 The agreement executed by W. A. C. Yule and Josephine K. Yule, his wife, as parties of the first part and Katie C. Miller, as party of the second part, provides that the first parties agree to sell and the second party agrees to buy the property in question for $2,950—$375 cash, receipt whereof is acknowledged, and the balance in monthly installments as follows: $35 or more per month, including interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum on deferred balances, interest to be deducted from each payment to date and balance applied on principal beginning July 15, 1921. The agreement further provides that the buyer shall make monthly payments within the first year of $500 and in each year thereafter until the balance due is reduced to $1,500, which shall be made into first mortgage for three years, with interest at seven per cent, and deed shall then be delivered to the buyer.

Appellant, who was the plaintiff in the action, on June 26, 1922, brought suit praying judgment that by reason of the default of respondents in making payments in accordance with the terms of the agreement, the same be declared canceled and ordered delivered up. The answer denies the alleged default in payments and by way of cross-complaint demands judgment for $1,192.33 as damages for sums alleged to have been paid out for improvements, taxes, street bond assessments, etc. The trial court, after allowing $300 as the rental value of the property, entered judgment in favor of respondents upon the cross-complaint for payments, taxes, assessments, repairs, interest, and costs in the sum of $976.23; canceled the agreement and entered a decree in favor of appellant quieting his title to the premises against respondents, subject only to a lien against such property in favor of respondents for the amount of the judgment.

Appellant in the bill of exceptions urges five specifications wherein the trial court erred: Exception No. 1. “Error of the Court in construing the contract of sale in question as to when payments required to be made, and in failing to find that the defendants were in default in the performance of said contract prior to the time of any question of retaking possession.” Exception No. 2. “Error of the Court in finding that said defendants were not in default upon said contract and that said defendants had thereby first *613 rescinded said contract.” Exception No. 3. “Error of the Court in finding that the plaintiff had rescinded said contract by seizing possession of said premises, there being no sufficiently competent evidence on which to base said finding.” Exception No. 4. “Error of the Court in- finding and allowing interest from the time of the making of payments by said defendants instead of from the time when, by the cross-complaint, plaintiff is alleged to have rescinded said contract.” Exception No. 5. “Error of the Court in finding and allowing the sum of $895.00 as having been paid by defendants to plaintiff, whereas defendants’ cross-complaint alleges and claims such sum to be in amount of $885.00.”

Respondents paid on the agreement $375 on June 15, 1921, when it was executed, and thereafter made the following payments: July 9, 1921, $15.03 interest and $19.97 on principal; July 13, 1921, $200 on principal; August 20, 1921, $50 on principal; September 6, 1921, $27.18 interest and $7.82 on principal; October 4, 1921, $13.41 interest and $21.59 on principal; November 16, 1921, $13.20 interest and $21.80 on principal; January 5, 1922, $13 interest and $57 on principal; May 6, 1922, $40 on principal; May 27, 1922, $12.82 interest and $7.18 on principal —making a total of $520 paid on the agreement before the expiration of the first year in addition to the $375 paid on the date of its execution, during which period $35 or more was required to be paid monthly, including interest, and which total payments for such period should aggregate $500.

While it is true that respondents made no payment during the month of December, 1921, nor during February, March or April, 1922, in none of these months were respondents in arrears in the amounts due nor in default, unless under the contract $35 or more was required to be paid each month, even though advance payments had been made covering the amounts due monthly. Appellant, however, contends that the clause in the contract, “thirty-five dollars or more per month, including interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable on deferred balances, interest to be deducted from each payment to date and balance applied on principal . . . the buyer shall make monthly payments within the first year of $500.00,” really *614 meant to provide, as shown by the manner of the first several payments, that there should be during the year enough more than $35 per month paid to amount to $500 on principal; that they omitted to use the words “on principal, ’’ but that the words “on principal” are necessarily implied. The interpretation of this clause of the contract presents the main question on appeal and is determinative of the objections raised in “Exception No. 1” and “Exception No. 2.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P. 733, 80 Cal. App. 609, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yule-v-miller-calctapp-1927.