This is an action to recover damages for breach of contract to purchase real property. Judgment was for plaintiff for $2,500. Defendants appeal from thе judgment.
The property involved herein, consisting of an improved lot and two adjoining unimproved lots, was listed with a real estate broker for sale for $25,000. On April 8, 1946, defendants entered into an agreement to purchase the property for $21,750 and paid a deposit thereon of $500. Escrow instructions were signed by the seller and the purchasers, and the seller delivered a grant deed and “a bill of sale” into escrow. About July 3,1946, before the escrow had been closed, defendant Jacob Pine sent a notice of rescission to the escrow holder and to the plaintiff. Thereafter, plaintiff commenced this action and alleged it was damaged in the sum of $6,750.
Appellants contend that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; that the finding of fact relating to the amount of damages was not sustained by the evidence; and that the judgment is not sustained by the evidence.
Appellants assert that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action for damages, for thе reason that it did not allege the value of the property at the time of the breach. It was alleged in paragraph VII of the complaint herein, as amended, that “since defendants’ breach of contract as aforesaid, the value of said property has decreased from Twenty-One Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty ($21,750.00) Dollars to Fifteen Thousand ($15,000.00) Dollars, all to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of Six Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty ($6,750.00) Dollars.” The measure of damages for breach of agreement to purchase real proрerty is stated in section 3307 of the Civil Code, which
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provides that the damage sustained by a seller by reason of a breach of agreement to purchase real proрerty is the excess, if any, of the contract price “over the value of the property” to the seller. As a general rule, “the value of the property” to the sеller is the market value of the property at the time of the breach
(Shurtleff
v.
Marcus Land etc. Co.,
*302 As to the further contention of appellants that finding number 10, relating to damages, was.not supported by the evidence, they argue that there was no еvidence that the value of the property at the time of the breach was $2,500 less than at the time the contract was made. They assert that no witness testified that the “figure" $2,500 wаs the difference between the selling price and the market price at the time of the breach, and that there was no testimony as to any combination of figures from whiсh the sum of $2,500 could have been calculated.
The real estate broker with whom the property had been listed for sale, and who represented plaintiff in negotiating the sale with defendants, was called as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff, and testified as follows: He had been licensed to sell real property in California about 15 yeаrs and during that time had maintained his office directly across the street from the property here involved. The building on said property was erected in 1922 and the witness watched its сonstruction from the beginning. He was familiar with the value of real property of that type in that area. He had sold the property here involved three different times. In his opinion $2.1,750 was a fair price for the property on April 8, 1946, the date the agreement was entered into. After the agreement was entered into the property declined in value. About the first part of July there was no demand for real property, and market prices dropped suddenly. In his opinion “$17,000 was tops" for the building and the lots on or about July 3, 1946, and they were not worth “over $17,000" at that time.
A witness called on behalf of defendants testified that he was a real estate broker and that he had entered into an agreemеnt to purchase the property here involved on October 9, 1946. He also testified that he believed statistics would show that the value of real property decreased in June, 1946. He testified further that he believed the last witness was “more familiar ’ ’ with industrial property than he was, and that the testimony of the last witness was “pretty much accurate."
There was evidence, oral and documentary, showing the selling price of the property to be $21,750, and there was expert testimony that the value of the property at thе time of the breach was not “over $17,000." That evidence would have been legally sufficient to have supported a finding that the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $4,750 (the difference between the selling price and the market value at the time of the breach). As shown above, the court awarded damages
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in the sum of $2,500, which was less than the amount of said diffеrence in values. The trial court was not required to find the value of the property to be the full value stated by a witness. It was stated in the case of
Roloff
v.
Hundeby,
The judgment is affirmed.
Shinn, P. J., and Vallée, J., concurred.
