103 P. 176 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1909
This is an action to recover $1,000, a deposit paid upon the purchase price of a certain piece of *677 real property in San Francisco. Judgment was entered, denying plaintiff any relief, and in favor of the defendants for their costs, from which judgment and from the order of the court denying his motion for a new trial plaintiff appeals.
Under the terms of the contract the purchaser was given twenty days from February 7, 1907, within which to examine the title to the property and consummate the purchase, and if the title was found to be defective the vendors were to have ninety days in which to perfect it, and if not perfected within that time the deposit was to be returned. Time was made of the essence of the contract.
Within the twenty days allowed for the examination of title plaintiff rejected it, both orally and in writing, upon the ground, among others, "that the records of the City and County of San Francisco do not show any valid title to said property in said Clyde Payne or Charlotte Payne, and that there is no public record of said property whatever in said City and County." (The other written grounds of objection were subsequently waived.) About a month later, and before the expiration of the ninety days given to the vendors to perfect title, the plaintiff commenced this action for the return of the deposit.
Under the contract the purchaser was entitled to a good or perfect record title. (Bates v. Howard,
There is in the record testimony of a conversation between the plaintiff and the agent of the defendants, and also expressions in a letter from plaintiff's attorney to the defendants' agent, which lend color to the suggestion of the defendants that plaintiff would not have taken the land even if the title thereto had been perfect; but we do not think there is anything either in the letter or in the conversation which can be construed as an abandonment or repudiation by plaintiff of the contract. It may be that plaintiff did not intend to take the property under any circumstances, but even so, he had a right to rely on the imperfect condition of the record as an excuse for avoiding the contract; and, as we view the record, plaintiff did not mislead the defendants, or in fine do anything which could be held to estop him from insisting upon a strict compliance with the terms of the agreement.
Upon the question of whether or not the suit was prematurely commenced, it was brought before the expiration of the ninety days after objection to the title. If the defendants had repudiated the contract, or voluntarily put it out of their power to perform, or if the contract had been by the act of God or of the law rendered impossible of performance, a right of action would have accrued to plaintiff immediately, and without waiting for the day of performance fixed in the contract. (Garberino v. Roberts,
Tender of performance by plaintiff of the conditions of the contract on his part was of course, under the facts of this case, unnecessary. (Merrill v. Merrill,
The judgment and order are reversed.
Cooper, P. J., and Hall, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on June 22, 1909.