Linton A. Carlson and his wife, prospective purchasers of real property, appeal from a judgment dismissing their complaint for specific performance of an alleged oral agreement under which they were to purchase the property from respondent. Respondent’s general demurrer attacked the second amended complaint on two grounds: the facts alleged showed the action to be barred by the statute of frauds and the description used in the alleged oral agreement was too indefinite to afford a basis for specific enforcement. The trial court concluded that the pleaded facts avoided the statute of frauds; but the demurrer was sustained on the theory that the pleaded description was inadequate. Appellants declined to amend further. We have concluded that the demurrer should have been overruled.
The following factual summary is taken from the second amended complaint. Respondent is the owner of a tract of real property located on a coastal promontory near the town of Stewarts Point in Sonoma County. On May 26, 1962, appellants and respondent entered into an oral agreement, by the terms of which respondent was to sell to appellants “the land enclosed by drawing a line from northwest to southeast across the neck of that certain promontory outlined [in Exhibit A, an aerial photograph] ... so that one acre is thereby enclosed on such promontory”; the price was to be $5,000, a fair price at the time. Respondent assured appellants over the next three years that he would perform the agreement. In reliance on these representations and on the original promise, appellants “passed up opportunities” to buy other land in Sonoma County—land which is now much more expensive than it was at that time ; respondent knew that appellants had also purchased a piece of real property near the land in question in order to have temporary living quarters while building a home on the property to be purchased from respondent. Respondent’s land is now more valuable than it was in 1965; upon that basis unjust enrichment is claimed.
An obligation is not specifically enforceable if the agreement out of which it arises does not “make the precise act which is to be done clearly ascertainable.” (Civ. Code, §3390, subd. 5.)
An agreement to convey realty is incomplete if it lacks a definite description of the land to be
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conveyed.
(Calvi
v.
Bittner
(1961)
The usual test for sufficiency is “whether a competent surveyor would have any difficulty in locating the land and establishing its boundaries from the description contained in the agreement to convey.”
(Leider
v.
Evans
(1962)
Thus in
Denbo
v.
Senness
(1953)
The trial court concluded, on the authority of
Monarco
v.
Lo Greco
(1950)
Three pertinent allegations require analysis. The alleged loss of opportunities to purchase other land does not amount to a change of position on the part of appellants.
(Fallon
v.
American Trust Co.
(1959)
Respondent has pointed to language in
Harrison
v.
Hanson
(1958)
The judgment is reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer.
Devine, P. J., and Rattigan, J., concurred.
