211 P. 236 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1922
This appeal is taken by the defendants, Arsen and Ada Yeretzian, from a judgment against them in an action to have a certain contract for the purchase and sale of real property in the county of Fresno, state of California, declared forfeited and to recover damages alleged to have been caused because of waste committed upon said property by the said defendants, while they were occupying the same under a contract to purchase.
In April, 1920, the plaintiffs and the defendant, Pooshichian, entered into a contract with relation to said land, by which plaintiffs were to sell and said defendant was to *509 buy the same. Said defendant paid $1,500 to plaintiffs as the first payment upon the property. The purchase price was to be $6,600, payable in installments, and this sum also included the purchase price of certain personal property, such as horses, cows, chickens, and farming implements upon the property. The agreement also contained a provision that the taxes upon the land were to be paid by the purchaser and that the purchaser was to care for the premises "in the best farmlike manner and keep and maintain all of said personal property thereon in good order and condition and care and feed all the livestock thereon in the best farmlike manner." There was also a provision that the purchaser should not commit nor suffer to be committed any waste or damage to the premises, and that in the event the purchaser should fail to comply with the terms and agreements on his part to be kept and performed, the sellers might, at their option, declare the agreement canceled, annulled, and at an end and re-enter and take possession of the property, and that in that event all sums theretofore paid by purchasers under the contract should be forfeited and held and retained by the sellers as a reasonable rental for the use and occupation of the premises.
The breach relied upon by the plaintiffs as working a forfeiture of this contract was the failure to pay taxes for one year and the failure to keep the premises free from noxious weeds and grasses and to properly cultivate the same and properly care for the grape-vines and fruit trees planted thereon. The trial court gave judgment against the defendants jointly, canceling the contract, decreeing that all moneys paid under said contract be retained by plaintiffs as and for rental for the use and occupation of the premises, and that the plaintiffs recover $1,000 damages for waste and damage done to the property during the time they were in possession of same, and $450, the value of certain chickens, hogs, cows, and horses, sold and disposed of by defendants, which were a part of the personal property included in the contract. The judgment also bound the defendants to return the balance of the personal property included in the contract or pay the reasonable value thereof, which was recited in said judgment.
As stated, the original vendee, Pooshichian, has not appealed from the judgment against him, but this appeal is *510 taken by defendants Arsen and Ada Yeretzian, to whom Pooshichian assigned his rights under this contract, and who took possession of the land. The other defendants held the land under the Yeretzians by virtue of contracts with them, which do not concern us here.
The plaintiffs' right to the remedy they sought is settled in this state, after very careful consideration, by the case ofGlock v. Howard Wilson Colony Co.,
[1] However, the appellants contend that, as assignees of the vendee, they were not obligated to perform the obligations cast upon the original vendee by the contract, and, therefore, may not be charged with damages for a breach of such obligations. The general rule is that the mere assignment of rights under an executory contract does not cast upon the assignee any of the personal liabilities imposed by the contract upon the assignor. (3 Cal. Jur. 281, sec. 33; Lizenby v. Newton,
[4] Appellants argued in the trial court that an action for forfeiture of a contract may not be combined with an action for damages for conversion of personal property. We are of the opinion that the two causes of action may be joined under the circumstances disclosed by the complaint in the present case, because they both arose out of the same transaction. Our code provides (sec. 427, Code Civ. Proc.) that a plaintiff may unite several causes of action in the same complaint where they are all claims arising out of the same transaction. This provision includes causes of action legal and equitable, excontractu and ex delicto, as well as those ex delicto though based on contract. (21 Rawle C. L., sec. 34, p. 469.)
We find no errors in the record before us which would warrant a reversal of the judgment against the appellants and the same is affirmed.
Nourse J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on December 26, 1922.
All the Justices present concurred. *512