97 Cal. 496 | Cal. | 1893
Action for specific performance.
The plaintiff had judgment in the court below, and the defendant has appealed, upon the judgment roll alone, without any bill of exceptions. The court finds that the defendant made an agreement with the plaintiff for the sale and conveyance to him of a parcel of land, of which he was the owner, in the town of San Buenaventura, for the sum of five thousand five hundred dollars, of which he acknowledged in the agreement that he had received one thousand dollars, and the remaining four thousand five hundred dollars was to be paid on delivery of a deed, free of encumbrances, within sixty days thereafter; and the defendant agreed that upon receiving such payment he would execute to the plaintiff a good and sufficient deed conveying the .title to said premises. The agreement contained the clause: “ In case failure to make deed, money paid to be returned.”
On the same day with the execution of the agreement, the plaintiff gave to the defendant an order upon certain bankers in San Buenaventura for the sum of $725, to be paid when he should deliver the deed for said premises, which the court finds was accepted by him in lieu of the cash payment of a thousand dollars provided by the agreement, the difference between the two sums being for certain commissions for the sale of the premises agreed upon between the defendant and the broker who had effected the sale. At the date of the execution of the agreement, there were two mortgages upon the property that had been executed by the defendant, but the debts secured thereby were mature and payable. The court finds that the provision in the agreement giving sixty days to complete the transaction was to enable the defendant to procure a release of the premises from
In an action for the specific performance of an agreement to convey land, a court of equity has power, by its decree, as against the parties who are before it, to enforce all the terms of the agreement. If the vendor’s agreement is that his conveyance shall transfer the title free of encumbrances, the court can direct the application of the purchase-money to the satisfaction of those encumbrances, and for that purpose can cause the money to be brought into court, and disbursed under its direction. If the holders of those encumbrances are before
The agreement between the parties hereto was an unconditional contract on the part of the defendant to convey the land to the plaintiff upon his complying with its .terms. The provision therein, that in case of failure to make the deed the money was to be returned, was for the benefit of the purchaser alone, and did not give to the vendor the option of conveying the lot or not, as he might choose. He could not refuse to make the deed, and thus by his own act, against the will of the purchaser, relieve himself of his obligation to convey. (Newton v. Hall, 90 Cal. 487.) Nor was the right to receive the money that he had paid the only right which the purchaser acquired by the contract. Be had also the right to an enforcement of the vendor’s agreement to make him a conveyance of the land, and if he was willing to accept a conveyance in satisfaction of that obligation, it was not for the vendor to object that there were encumbrances upon the land or defects in the title.
• The acceptance by the defendant of the order for $725, in lieu of the cash payment of $1,000, may be regarded as a contemporaneous agreement between the parties in modification of the price to be received for the conveyance, and is not inconsistent with or contradictory to the acknowledgment in the agreement that $1,000 of the purchase price had been received by the defendant. (See McCroskey v. Ladd, 96 Cal 458.) The defendant can
The judgment is affirmed.
Garoutte, J., and Paterson, J., concurred.