238 P. 166 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *116 These two actions were tried together, and resulted in judgments of nonsuit, from which judgments plaintiff appeals.
The principal question presented is whether the defendants, as vendees, under installment contracts to purchase land, after having made part payment of the purchase price, may, under the forfeiture clause of said contracts, terminate the same, and, other than forfeiting the money previously paid, avoid further liability thereunder. [1] The forfeiture clause of the contract reads:
". . . in the event of a failure of the Buyer to comply with any of the terms or conditions of this agreement, and thecontinuance of such failure for a period of 60 days afterperformance due, the Seller shall be released from all obligations in law or in equity to transfer and convey said property, or any part thereof, and the Buyer, shall forfeit all rights under this agreement, and all rights to any and all moneys which he shall theretofore have paid hereunder and said moneysshall be applied as rent for the use of said premises, and as liquidated damages and expenses occasioned by such default, and not as a penalty." (Italics ours.)
Respondents contend in support of the judgments of nonsuit that on account of the language employed in said forfeiture clause said contracts were, in legal effect, options to purchase, and not agreements for the purchase and sale of the property (California Land and Security Co. v. Ritchie,
It has been uniformly held in several cases in this state, however, that forfeiture clauses similar in substance and effect to the one now under consideration — except for the portions hereinabove italicized — are intended for the benefit of the vendor by which, at his option, in case of the vendee's default, he is relieved of his obligation to convey the property contracted to be sold and may regard as forfeited all payments theretofore made by the vendee, or waiving the forfeiture, he may require the vendee to complete his contract. [2] The vendee is given no option, but must abide by the election of the vendor (New Richmond Land Co. v. Ivanovich,
[3] We are unable to agree with respondents' contention that the presence of those additional provisions hereinabove italicized, changed the meaning of the entire forfeiture clause, so as to remove the case from the operation of the universal rule established in this state by the cases above cited, and thus deprived the vendor of the right, granted him by law, to stand upon the contract, and sue to enforce its performance, when the vendee defaulted in making payments. An analysis of those additional provisions, in the light of the entire forfeiture clause, shows plainly, we think, that they do not constitute an abridgment of the vendor's right to exercise the option afforded him by law, in the matter of election of remedies, but pertain only to the application of the forfeited payments as a part of the measure of damages that shall be allowed in the event that the vendor elected to terminate the contract; and even in that regard said additional provisions would appear to be of *119 little value, because without them the measure of damages would be the same, and would necessarily include the rental value for the use of the premises during the vendee's occupation thereof under the contract, and also the expenses occasioned by the vendee's default in the performance of the contract.
The case of Armstrong v. Irwin (Arizona), supra, cited and relied on by respondents cannot be accepted as controlling the situation here for the reasons, first, that the court there took into consideration, in determining the question of the intention of the parties, other clauses of the contract and the evidence offered in support thereof, relating to the occupation and cultivation of the farming land which was the subject of the contract, and from which the court was able to find, as a fact, that the payments were required to be made in such sums and at such times as indicated that, in case of default it was the intention that a relation in the nature of landlord and tenant should arise. That element does not appear in the instant case. The contracts here pertain to unimproved city lots, which, so far as the evidence shows, were not utilized for any useful or profitable purpose during the life of the contract; secondly, the court's conclusion there, in holding that the vendor was restricted to the sole remedy provided for in the contract, is partly based upon the use in the forfeiture clause of the term "liquidated damages." In that respect the decision apparently is not in accord with the conclusions reached in the case of NewRichmond Land Co. v. Ivanovich, supra (which was not cited in the Arizona case), wherein the forfeiture clause of the contract likewise provided that the forfeited payments should be applied as "liquidated damages," and even went farther and declared that upon the vendee's default in payment "the agreement should become void"; nevertheless, the court adhered to the principle established in the earlier California cases, and held that the vendor's right of election of remedies was not thereby restricted, but that upon the vendee's default he might still treat the contract as being in force, and sue for and recover the balance of the purchase price.
For the reasons stated we are of the opinion that the forfeiture clause of the contracts involved in these cases falls within the scope of the rule stated in New Richmond *120 Land Co. v. Ivanovich, supra, and in the other cases therein cited, and that the vendor, in the instant case, was not deprived, by the terms of said forfeiture clause, of the right to treat the contracts as being in force and to sue for the unpaid balance of the purchase price.
The other cases cited by respondent California Land andSecurity Co. v. Ritchie, supra, and Beckwith-Anderson Co. v.Allison, supra, are not in point for the reason that they were cases involving brokers' commissions, wherein the brokers secured from prospective buyers contracts providing, unconditionally, for the forfeiture of a deposit upon failure of the buyer to make the purchase, which clearly showed those contracts to be options to purchase without obligation beyond the forfeiture of the deposit.
The complaints in the present actions set forth the execution, on January 8, 1913, of written contracts for the sale and purchase of the land, fixing a purchase price for each of two parcels of land contracted to be sold in the sum of $2,250, of which amount $225 was paid at the time the contract was signed, and the balance was made payable in monthly installments of $40 each, with interest on deferred payments; that between January, 1913, and April, 1916, approximately $928.01, principal and interest, was paid on one contract, and $1,009.40, or thereabouts, was paid on the other contract; that no further payments were made on either contract until the year 1919. It is then alleged that in 1919 it was mutually agreed, in consideration of the waiver of accrued interest, that said contracts "should be renewed and extended," and that the vendees should "thereupon pay in part performance of said agreement of renewal" the sum of forty dollars and thereafter pay the monthly sum of forty dollars together with interest and taxes until the full amount of said purchase price specified in said contracts was paid. The evidence in this regard shows that these so-called renewed agreements were oral, and that thereafter two payments of forty dollars each were made on both contracts between the months of March and July, 1919, after which all payments ceased.
[4] Respondents contend that proof of part performance of these oral agreements was not sufficient to avoid the effect of the statute of frauds in that respondents did not take possession of the property contracted to be sold. If, in order *121
to maintain these actions, appellant is compelled to rely upon the oral agreements of 1919, there is much force in respondents' contention, for the evidence shows that neither at the time said oral agreements were made nor thereafter did respondents take possession of the land, in the manner required by the rule stated in the cases of Hambey v. Wise,
[6] Finally, respondents make the contention, that the allegations of the amendments to the complaints, and the proofs, by which it was sought to establish the fact that the contracts were just and reasonable were legally insufficient for that purpose. It may be conceded to be the law, as respondents contend, that where the vendor files his bill in equity asking for the specific performance of the contract he must allege and prove that the consideration provided for in the contract sought to be enforced is adequate and that the contract is just and reasonable to the defendant (Joyce v. Tomasini,
[7] The form of complaints originally filed here contained no allegations that the contracts sued upon were fair, just and reasonable, and from which it might be reasonably concluded that appellant had adopted the latter form of action; but after the motions for nonsuit were made, and evidently for the purpose of meeting the objections made by respondents in support thereof, appellant amended its complaints so as to allege that the contracts were fair and equitable, and thereafter reopened its case to offer proof in support of those allegations. Counsel for appellant nevertheless insists that he has never sought and does not now seek relief in equity through specific performance, but that he is suing in law merely for the recovery of the debt. *123 Assuming, however, as respondent asserts, that the final position taken by counsel for appellant before the trial court in reference to this matter, was equivocal, and assuming further that said amendments and proof upon the issue of the adequacy of consideration were wholly insufficient, it is obvious, we think, that those matters did not operate to destroy the entire cause of action, but merely served to deny to appellant additional equitable relief which he might have obtained through a suit for specific performance; and that such allegations and proof might be eliminated entirely and appellant still be entitled, under the allegations of the original complaints and in the absence of any proof whatever of an adequate consideration, to relief in law, namely, a judgment for the purchase money. In other words, the matter of the allegations and proof upon the issue of a fair contract was vital only after the court reached the point of granting the relief; and although equitable relief might then have been denied, the right of the vendor to recover upon the debt would still remain. The trial court therefore was not justified in dismissing the actions upon the ground urged.
Summarizing, it appears that the complaints filed herein were susceptible of being construed as actions at law instituted by appellant as a vendor, who had retained legal title to the land, to recover the debts represented by the unpaid portions of the purchase money due under written contracts of sale, and for that purpose and upon that theory said complaints were legally sufficient to constitute causes of action.
[8] Evidence was adduced in support of those allegations sufficient to maintain the actions, as actions at law, against Henri Bercut, Peter Bercut and Celine Bercut, who were the original vendees under said agreements of 1913, but not as against their assignee Jean Bercut and Grant Meat Market (Wilson v. Beazley,
The judgments are reversed as to respondents Henri Bercut, Peter Bercut, and Celine Bercut, and are affirmed as to respondents Jean Bercut and Grant Meat Market.
Tyler, P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on July 3, 1925, and a petition by respondents to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on July 30, 1925.
All the Justices concurred.