194 P. 83 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
This action was brought by the plaintiff as the vendee under a contract for the sale of real property to recover from the defendant, Corning Farms Company, a corporation, the amount paid by the plaintiff to said defendant under the terms of said contract after the same had been terminated by the vendor for the alleged failure of the *682 vendee to make certain installment payments due upon the purchase price of said property, according to the terms of said contract.
The amended complaint was in two counts, the first of which set forth the contract in haec verba and alleged the making of the payments thereunder for the recovery of which the suit was brought, and further alleging a mutual cancellation, termination, and rescission of said contract. The second count was in the form of the common counts for money had and received by the defendants to and for the plaintiff's use. The defendants in their answer admitted the making of the contract and the payment of the sums alleged to have been paid by the plaintiff thereunder; but they denied that said contract was canceled, terminated, or rescinded by mutual consent, and in that respect affirmatively averred that the plaintiff, after having made repeated defaults in the payment of the installments due upon said contract, had wholly abandoned any intention to carry out or fulfill the terms of the same, and had notified said defendants of his said intent, and that it was only after such repeated defaults and such express notification of the plaintiff's intent to abandon said contract and refuse to fulfill its terms that said defendants had proceeded to terminate the same by giving notice of such termination to plaintiff.
Upon the trial and submission of the cause the court made its findings of fact in which, after finding that the plaintiff had made the payments alleged to have been made by him aggregating the sum of $6,142.58, proceeded to expressly find that the plaintiff, after a series of defaults in making the installment payments due under the terms of said contract, had notified and informed the defendants that he did not intend to, and that he refused to, carry out said contract, and that he had permanently abandoned all intention to perform the same, and that thereafter the defendants had terminated the same by notice to the plaintiff as averred in their said answer. Thereupon the trial court ordered judgment entered in favor of the defendants, and it is from such judgment that the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
[1] The first contention of the appellant is that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings of the trial court to the effect that the plaintiff had abandoned said contract prior to the defendants' termination of the same *683 by notice. After an examination of the evidence in the case we are satisfied that there is no merit in this contention, since the evidence sufficiently shows that the plaintiff not only orally announced his intention to abandon said contract, notified the defendants in writing of his said intention, but that he also, and when upon the witness-stand during the trial of the cause, admitted and repeated his refusal to further perform the terms of said contract. The trial court was, therefore, justified in finding that such an intention existed and had been expressed on the part of said plaintiff prior to the defendants' notification to him that they had terminated said contract.
[2] The next and main contention of the appellant is that notwithstanding his repeated defaults in making the payments required by the terms of said contract, and notwithstanding his expression of an intent to abandon the same, the defendants were not entitled to terminate said contract and thereby work a forfeiture of the payments which the plaintiff had theretofore made upon it without first giving to said plaintiff a notice, granting him a reasonable time within which to make said payments and otherwise perform the terms of said contract, before exercising their asserted right to terminate the same and to forfeit the payments which the plaintiff had made thereunder. In making this contention the appellant relies uponStevinson v. Joy,
We are of the opinion that the authorities sustain the respondents' contention in this regard. In the early case ofGray v. Dougherty,
In the case of Andrews v. Karl,
In the light of these decisions we are of the opinion that the conclusion of the trial court was correct, and that the said plaintiff having on his part abandoned his contract, and expressly refused to perform the same, was not entitled to a *685 notice from the vendor allowing him further time to perform that which he had expressly notified said vendor he did not intend to perform, and hence that he was not entitled to recover the payments made by him upon said contract prior to his express abandonment of the same.
It follows that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Waste, P. J., and Beasly, J., pro tem., concurred.