Plaintiffs, appellants, filed this action for unlawful detainer. The three-day notice required by statute declares noncompliance by defendant to have been failure to pay the sum of $13,500 which was due to appellants on or
The agreement between plaintiffs and defendant is made part of the complaint and there is no pleading of any contractual terms extraneous to this agreement. The complaint asks for judgment for restitution of the premises, for loss of 1 ‘rental value” of $37,797.60, for brokerage fees encountered in the negotiation of the agreement of $22,400, for trebling of the total $60,197.60, for attorney’s fees and for costs. The contract is on a printed form, although parts of it are typewritten. It is described in its heading as ‘ ‘ Agreement for Sale of Real Estate.” The terms “buyer” and “seller” are used throughout. Title remains in the seller, but the buyer is permitted to stay in possession in the absence of default. In event of failure of buyer to comply with the whole or any term of the contract, the seller shall be released from all obligations to convey, buyer forfeits all rights, and seller shall be immediately entitled to possession of the land.
The remedy of unlawful detainer is a statutory and summary one, and a person who seeks it must bring himself clearly within the relationship between himself and the occupier of the property that is described in the statute.
(WoodsDrury, Inc.
v.
Superior Court,
We hold with the trial judge that respondent was not a
A license in land confers on the licensee no interest in the premises. It is a mere personal privilege. It is personal and revocable.
(Fisher
v.
General Petroleum Corp.,
The arrangement for payments shows that the installments are successive payments of the purchase price and are not rent, and are by no means mere compensation for a license. The contract calls for twenty equal installments of $13,500 each, to be followed by a final payment of $28,435.20. The total of these equals the agreed purchase price of $298,435.20. Although it seems from the pleadings that not even the first payment was made, this fact does not change the relationship between the parties. It is possible that a default in making an installment payment would have occurred after many payments had been made. The vendor chose to sell his land. In doing so, he created the relationship of seller and buyer, not that of licensor and licensee. Certain legal remedies are available to him, but not the summary one of unlawful detainer.
. The judgment is affirmed.
Rattigan, J., and Christian, J., concurred.
