Appellants Louis Fox and Harold Fox seek reversal of the superior court’s order granting respondents’ motion for summary judgment. Appellants’ action sought damages for breach of contract by decedent, William Dehn. In their pleadings before the superior court, respondents successfully contended that the action (filed moré than five months after rejection of appellants’ claim by the executrix of decedent’s estate) was barred by the statute of limitations. The superior court granted summary judgment on the “statutory ground that the action has no merit and that no triable issue of fact is presented.”
Facts
On appeal, the parties are in substantial agreement as to the following: In October 1969, appellants (who were licensed real estate salesmen) entered into an oral employment agreement with decedent, who was then doing business as a sole proprietor under the name of William Dehn and Associates. Under the terms of the agreement, appellants were to serve as “tract directors” with respect to the sale of real property known as Rancho Tehama Reserve, the sale being supervised by decedent. Their duties included setting up a sales office, handling and supervising all setting-up details and operations of tract sales, making contacts with local people and businesses for good will, attempting to arrange credit with local businesses, meeting and gréeting incoming prospects, supervising sales, finalizing sales of other personnel when they were unable to do so, and reevaluating prices of tract lots. The details as to amounts and method of compensation to be paid to appellants are well known to the parties, and for our purposes it suffices to state that generally, in consideration for appellants’ performance, compensation was to be made in varying percentages of the sales price of lots as they were sold or as payments thereon were made. In addition, appellants were to be reimbursed for expenses, and the oral agreement was to be reduced to a written contract incorporating its terms. Decedent also represented to appellants that all land concerned in the agreement was to be sold in approximately 14 months from the commencement of the sales. Appellants allege that decedent further advised them that the anticipated total sales price would be $10,000,000.
During the period of appellants’ employment with William Dehn and Associates (October 1969 to February 22, 1970), appellants performed some of the activities required of them under the contract and expended $2,000 in preparation of the sales program. However, on February 22,
Dehn died on June 1, 1970, and subsequent to service of notice to creditors, appellants filed a claim with the executrix of decedent’s estate on August 12, 1970, for damages in the amount of $164,500 allegedly arising from decedent’s breach of the employment contract. 1 Appellants’ alleged damages derive from their lost opportunity to realize anticipated profits from commissions for the period of February 22,1970, to the present. The claim was rejected by the executrix and notice of rejection was served on August 18, 1970. On January 22, 1971,.more than five months after rejection of their claim by respondents, appellants filed a complaint for breach of contract. At the time the complaint was filed, the bulk of the sales of Rancho Tehama Reserve property had not been made, with the projected date of final sales being estimated to be between March and June of 1972. The sole proprietorship of William Dehn and Associates ceased with the death of Dehn on June 1, 1970.
Discussion
The appeal presents a single issue: Was the action filed by appellants on January 22, 1971, barred by the statute of limitations as set forth in Probate Code section 714? 2
Determination of this question depends upon whether the termination of the contract resulted in immediate damages or damages only as sales were made. We conclude that the alleged damages were immediate and that the amount was ascertainable and “due” on February 22, the date of termination of the agreement.
As stated by the court in
City of Los Angeles
v.
McNeil,
In the present case we are concerned with the commissions which would have been earned
if
appellants’ contract with decedent had been fully performed by all parties. Here, our focus is on the remedy of appellants which arose when decedent, on February 22, 1970, committed a breach of the contract by completely repudiating his obligations and preventing performance under the contract. The interpretation of the word “due” should reflect the earliest instance at which a claim matures.
3
Appellants rely on language in
Bank of America etc. Assn.
v.
Gillett,
In contrast, claims which have been treated as “not due” and which fall within the two-month provision of section 714, have been for the most part contingent in nature.
4
Courts have denied immediate payment in these cases until the condition which would mandate payment has in fact occurred where there was the possibility that such condition would not occur.
(Brooks
v.
Lawson,
In his treatise on probate practice, Condee states: “Whether or not a claim or a portion thereof is contingent may be tested by this question: Could the decedent, at the moment of death, have been sued for the full amount of the claim?” (1 Condee, Probate Court Practice (2d ed. 1964) § 1784.) It is appellants’ contention that decedent’s breach constituted an anticipatory breach as a result of which appellants could elect to treat the repudiation as a breach and sue immediately for damages, or to treat the contract as still binding and wait until the time for performance arrived before bringing suit. 5 Appellants assert that as this right of election belongs to them, not to respondents, they have elected to treat the contract as still binding and have awaited the time for performance before initiating suit. The answer to this contention is twofold: the breach was not anticipatory and therefore did not give rise to any election; and even if the breach were anticipatory, appellants made their election when they asserted their claim in probate to be one for breach of contract.
An essential element of an anticipatory breach is that repudiation by the promisor occur before his performance is due.
(Gold Min. & Water Co.
v.
Swinerton,
Although a creditor must file his claim against an estate, whether it is actual, contingent, or future
(Verdier
v.
Roach, 96
Cal. 467 [
Appellants also argue that their agreement with decedent is sever-able and as such the statute of limitations only began to run at the time of breach as to each obligation.
7
Gold Min. & Water Co.
v.
Swinerton, supra
(at p. 30) answers this contention. There, the court stated that “Where the acts to be performed by the promisor are connected, and the thing to be accomplished by' the contract is an entirety, the breach may be total where there is a partial breach coupled with repudiation . . .” Where the acts required are indivisible, continuous, and not separable, the breach is total.
(Ibid.)
As pointed out in
Gold Min. & Water Co.,
where such continuous acts are required and where the contract is viewed as an entire obligation, the fact that compensation is made on a monthly basis with no implication that one payment is severable from another causes such a
We have concluded that decedent’s action of February 22, 1970, constituted a total breach of contract and that appellants’ cause of action was not one arising from an anticipatory breach. At what point then is a claim for breach of contract “due” so as to set the statute of limitations in motion? In general, where there has been a willful and wrongful termination of a contract and prevention of the other party’s performance, an action lies to recover all damages sustained by the injured party (12 Cal.Jur.2d, Contracts, § 244 at p. 470); the statute of limitations begins to run against such a cause of action for breach of contract at the time of the breach.
(Baker
v.
Joseph,
Although the cases use conditional words such as “may” and “ordinarily” when designating the time when a cause of action for breach of contract arises, as the construction and purpose of Probate Code section 714 are aimed at resolving determinable claims as soon as possible, and as there was a total breach of contract on February 22, 1970, appellants’ claim then became “due” within the meaning of section 714. As a suit “may” have been maintained on February 22, 1970, appellants’ claim was one due on presentation to respondents,
9
and it was at the time of rejection
The order of summary judgment in favor of respondents is proper where, as here, the affidavits in support of the motion provide sufficient evidence to support a finding that appellants’ action was barred by the statute of limitations. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c);
Graham
v.
Bank of California,
The judgment is affirmed.
Ashby, J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Notes
An additional claim was m.ade in the sum of $2,000 for “monies advanced,” which was also rejected.
Probate Code section 714 provides in pertinent part: “When a claim is rejected either by the executor or administrator or by the judge, written notice of such rejection shall be given by the executor or administrator to the holder of the claim or to the person filing or presenting it, and the holder must bring suit in the proper court against the executor or administrator, within three months after the date of service of such notice if the claim is then due, or, if not, within two months after it becomes due; otherwise the claim shall be forever barred.” (Italics added.)
As stated by Condee: “Statutes of limitation are for the protection of debtors against the assertion of claims, the merits of which may become difficult or impossible of ascertainment through great lapse of time.” (1 Condee, Probate Court Practice (2d ed. 1964) § 755; see also
Estate of Jacobson,
In
Morse
v.
Steele,
Appellants cite
Atkinson
v.
District Bond Co.,
Atkinson,
relied upon by appellants, is not to the contrary. There, plaintiffs agreed to bid for certain street improvement work and to perform the work if a contract was awarded to them; defendants in turn agreed to buy the warrant and bonds issued in payment of the work. Defendants repudiated the contract one week after the contract was entered and- prior to plaintiffs’ bidding on the street improvement contract. (
Appellants cite
Sweet
v.
Watson’s Nursery,
This conclusion also disposes of appellants’ contention that performance of acts under the contract were not connected so as to make breach of such an obligation only partial, even if there were unequivocal repudiation of the whole contract (citing
Riess
v.
Murchison
(9th Cir. 1964)
In
Maurer
v.
King,
