140 P. 30 | Cal. | 1914
This appeal is from the judgment upon the judgment-roll alone. Plaintiff brought his action to enforce the collection of a promissory note in the sum of five hundred dollars executed by defendants. Defendants answered, alleging lack of consideration and fraud in the procurement of the instrument. The facts in this regard alleged and found by the court are the following: In 1908 defendants entered into an agreement with the plaintiff to purchase a piece of land owned by plaintiff in Imperial County for the sum of six thousand two hundred and fifty dollars, two thousand five hundred dollars of which amount were payable May 1, 1909, the remainder at a later date in the same year. On the twenty-seventh day of April, 1909, "the plaintiff rescinded the said contract in toto and sold the said property to one A.A. Cox, without the knowledge or consent of the defendants or either of them." Thereafter, on the twenty-ninth day of April, 1909, plaintiff came to defendants, who were unable to make the forthcoming payment of two thousand five hundred dollars upon May 1st, and, concealing from them the fact that he had sold the property, threatened them that he would commence an action against them for specific enforcement of their contract to purchase if they did not make the payment when due. The defendants did not know and had no means of knowing that plaintiff had theretofore sold the property to Cox, and being unable to meet the payment of two thousand five hundred dollars due on the first of May, and believing that their contract to this effect was in full force and effect and that plaintiff had a right to insist upon its due performance and would bring action against them to enforce such due performance, without any other consideration and so without any consideration at all, they executed to plaintiff in settlement of the controversy and for relinquishment of plaintiff's demands, the note for five hundred dollars which is the subject of this litigation. Under these findings the court concluded that plaintiff was not entitled to recover and gave judgment for defendants accordingly. Plaintiff has appealed, asserting that under the authorities and rule of decision in this state he was neither in default nor had he violated his contract by the conveyance of the property to Cox; that he was under no duty to advise defendants of this conveyance, and that therefore his failure to do so was not a *525
concealment amounting to fraud; that the single condition imposed upon him by his contract was to make a good and sufficient deed to the defendants when the last payment was due and tendered; that this duty did not run concurrently and interdependently with defendants' obligation to pay the installment of two thousand five hundred dollars; that consequently defendants were in default and he, plaintiff, was not (Hill v. Grigsby,
Thus are presented the contentions upon this appeal, and for their proper consideration a review of our decisions becomes imperative. The first of these which may be mentioned is Easton
v. Montgomery,
This completes the review of our decisions, and, to summarize, they hold, first, that a contract to sell a piece of land by one without title will not be held fraudulent and void by virtue of the mere fact that the vendor had not such title. Deceit, concealment, or false representations upon which a vendee was entitled to rely will of course avoid such a contract, but where the dealings between the parties are openhanded and where, as is the general rule, the vendee is charged with the duty of acquiring his own knowledge of the condition of the vendor's title, such contracts will be enforced upon the theory that the vendee contracted with his eyes open and contracted not in the belief that the vendor did have title, but in the expectation that he would be able to make title. *531
Second, our adjudications hold that in an action for breach of contract based upon a conveyance by the vendor to a third person during the existence of such an executory contract of sale, the averment merely that the vendor has sold does not state a complete cause of action, the reason being given in Easton v.Montgomery,
Coming once more directly to the case at bar, the question of consideration or no consideration for the promissory note in suit will be answered as is answered the question — were the vendees' rights under their executory contract protected under the sale which the plaintiff made? Herein it makes no difference whether the sale was made before or after the default of the vendees, and therefore the motion in this case to amend the record by striking from it a certified answer filed in the court of appeals need not be considered. The record here is not in such condition as to enable us to answer the question which we have propounded. The answer, as has *532 been said, charged fraud and lack of consideration. The finding of the court is that the fraud was in the concealment from the defendants of the fact that plaintiff "had previously rescinded the contract and had sold the said property to the said Cox." As we have been at pains to show, the mere sale was not a rescission. The mere concealment could not therefore be a fraud. The vital question is whether the sale to Cox was made in disregard and in sacrifice of defendants' security growing out of plaintiff's ownership of the land. If the sale was so made, then unquestionably there was no consideration for the promissory note and plaintiff would not be entitled to recover. If, however, the sale was made with due regard to those rights, then, as plaintiff would have committed no breach of his contract and no fraud, it could not be said that there was no consideration under plaintiff's forbearance to sue and agreement to rescind the contract.
It appearing therefore that the judgment is not supported by the findings, it is reversed, with direction to the trial court to permit such amendments to the pleadings as will directly present the vital issue in the case, and to retry and determine the action under the law as here set forth.
Angellotti, J., Shaw, J., Melvin, J., Lorigan, J., and Sloss, J., concurred.