111 Cal. 516 | Cal. | 1896
The plaintiff and his assignors entered into separate agreements with the defendants for the purchase of certain lots of land, by which they were to pay a certain portion of the purchase price at the dates of the agreements, and other installments thereafter monthly, until the whole price should be paid, at which time the defendants were to execute a conveyance of the lands. After several monthly payments had been made, differences appear to have arisen between the defendants in regard to the land, and notices were sent to the plaintiff and to his assignors by the defendant Walton, directing them not to make any more payments on the agreement until further notice; and from the defendant Slielper, not to make payments to anyone but to him. In the agreements it had been provided that the money should be paid at the office of McGarvie & Co. in San Francisco, and notices were also sent by
The evidence before the court was ample to justify it in finding that the defendants had violated their agreement, and had sufficiently indicated to the purchasers that they would no longer be bound by its terms. The provision in the agreements that the purchasers should pay the monthly installments to the defendants implied a corresponding agreement on the part of the defendants that they would receive these payments when they should be tendered; and the further provision that the money should be payable at the office of McGarvie & Co. carried with it an agreement on the part of the defendants that the payments might be made to McGarvie & Co. The subsequent direction to the purchasers not to make any more payments until further notice, and the refusal of McGarvie & Co. to receive the money when it was tendered, was evidence from which the court was authorized to find that the defendants had refused any longer to be bound by the agreements, and, as a consequence, that the pur= chasers were entitled to a return of the money already paid. The direction not to make any more payments until further notice was given in September, 1892, and the present action was not commenced until May, 1893, and it was not shown that any further notice had been given, or that the defendants had made any qualification of the directions given in September.
The provision in the agreement that the money should be paid to both of the defendants would author
The proposition of the appellants that it does not appear that these notices were sent to the plaintiff and to one of his assignors is without merit. The plaintiff produced the notices to himself and to his assignors at the trial, and the genuineness of the signatures was admitted by the defendants.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hearing in Bank denied.