235 P. 455 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1925
December 28, 1921, the plaintiff and defendant Sinanides entered into an agreement by the terms of which plaintiff agreed to purchase and Sinanides to sell "the *274 north half of the east half of the west half of the southwest quarter" of a certain section of land, together with certain personal property, for $21,000; $2,700 was paid upon the execution of the agreement and the remainder was to be paid in annual installments of $1,000 on the fifteenth day of November of every year thereafter. Plaintiff was "to erect upon said premises a substantial four-room house and barn on or before July 1st, 1922," and to pay all taxes which thereafter became a lien upon the premises. There was a mortgage on the premises in the sum of $6,500, and the agreement provides that the "buyer agrees to assume and agrees to pay said mortgage according to the terms thereof." The agreement provided that "time is expressly made of the essence hereof" and that, upon default by plaintiff in payment of any installment of the purchase price or of taxes upon the premises or in the performance of any other covenant or condition of the agreement, the "seller may consider this agreement at an end, and may re-enter and take possession of said premises, . . . and all payments theretofore made shall be held and retained by seller as and for compensation for the reasonable use and rental of said premises." At the time of the execution of the agreement "Sinanides represented to plaintiff that defendant Sinanides was in possession of all the land described in said contract and that he would deliver possession of all thereof to plaintiff subject to easements for roads and ditches" and that "a certain fence then standing near the east boundary line of said premises was the easterly boundary line thereof, whereas in truth and in fact the true easterly boundary line was and is approximately 39 feet east of said fence. . . . The amount of land contained in the described premises set out in said contract is 19.78 acres, according to the government description thereof. . . . The area of the strip of land lying between the true easterly boundary line of said premises" and said fence is 1.20 acres. "At the time of making said contract defendant Sinan Sinanides did not know the true boundary of said premises" and believed that the said fence was upon the true easterly boundary line. The plaintiff believed the representation that the fence was upon the true boundary line and "he would not have entered into said contract had he known that the true easterly boundary *275 line of said premises was not as pointed out to him." Sinanides did not make such representation "with the intent to deceive or defraud plaintiff," nor did he make any representation as to the number of acres contained in the tract of land described in the agreement. He delivered to plaintiff possession of all the land so described except the 1.20 acres lying east of said fence.
Plaintiff failed to build a barn upon the premises, but placed other permanent improvements thereon of the reasonable value of $2,000. "Plaintiff discovered a shortage of approximately 1.25 acres in said premises on or about September 1st, 1922, and made no complaint thereof to either of the defendants prior to December 29th, 1922, and then only to defendant Sinan Sinanides." Thereafter "plaintiff harvested from said premises a crop of raisins during the year 1922 of the reasonable value of $1,602.48" and while in possession of the premises performed labor "in connection with producing a crop of raisins thereon" of the reasonable value of $741. He "did not discover or ascertain the correct easterly boundary line of said premises until on or about December 1st, 1922." December 29, 1922, plaintiff served upon Sinanides a written notice of rescission of the agreement, stating that the strip of land lying between the fence and the easterly boundary of the land "has been held in possession by other parties for a number of years and who claim they have held the easterly portion of said land adversely during this period"; offering to restore the premises of which plaintiff had been placed in possession and execute all necessary papers to effect a retransfer, and to account for the rents and profits; and demanding the return of the $2,700 paid on the purchase price and payment of the reasonable value of the improvements made by plaintiff upon the land. No notice or demand was served upon defendant Groshell and he had no notice or knowledge of the attempted rescission until this action was commenced. The action is based upon the notice of rescission.
Sinanides denied the alleged false representations and prayed for judgment for costs. Groshell filed a separate answer, denying the alleged false representations, and by way of cross-complaint alleged that "on or about March 27th, 1922, defendant Sinan Sinanides assigned his right, *276 title and interest in and to said land . . . to W.R. Groshell defendant and cross-complainant herein, and that said W.R. Groshell is now the owner of said land"; that plaintiff had failed to build a barn on the premises; that he had failed to pay the second installment of taxes for the year 1922-1923; that he had failed to pay the installment of $1,000 upon the purchase price which became due November 15, 1922; that "by reason of said default of plaintiff, . . . cross-complainant has elected to consider said agreement at an end, and he has been released from all obligation in law or in equity to convey said property. All moneys heretofore paid under said agreement are retained as a reasonable rental for use and occupation of said premises." Groshell set up a further cross-complaint in the usual form of an action to quiet title. He prayed for judgment canceling the agreement between plaintiff in Sinanides and quieting cross-complainant's title to the land.
The court found the foregoing facts, including those alleged in the cross-complaints, to be true; that Groshell had no knowledge of plaintiff's rights, except such as appeared upon the face of the agreement, until this action was commenced; and that "plaintiff in March, 1922, had knowledge and notice that . . . Groshell had acquired all the interest of . . . Sinanides in said property." The court made no finding as to the rental value of the premises during the time the plaintiff was in possession thereof. Judgment was entered in accordance with the prayers of defendants and cross-complainant. This appeal is from the judgment upon the judgment-roll alone.
There is neither allegation nor finding that Sinanides assigned his interest in the agreement to Groshell, but, for the purposes of this opinion only, it may be conceded that the assignment of the vendor's interest in the land carried with it his interest in the agreement and the payments to be made thereunder. [1] The transfer of Sinanides' "right, title and interest in and to said land" to Groshell was, in effect, a mere deed of quitclaim. (O'Sullivan v. Griffith,
Respondent contends that a vendee in default cannot rescind.[2] But a vendor who is in default cannot terminate the right of the vendee until the former has performed or offered to perform his part of the contract. (Krotzer v. Clark,
[4] Neither did plaintiff's default preclude him from rescinding on the ground of the alleged misrepresentation of Sinanides. In the denial of a hearing by the supreme court in deBairos v. Barlin,
[7] It may be further stated that the complaint, supplemented by the answer of Sinanides to the effect that he did not know the true boundary line, states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action for rescission on the ground of mutual mistake, and the findings are sufficient to support a judgment rescinding the contract on that ground.
[8] Respondent further contends that the plaintiff waived his right to rescind by remaining in possession and harvesting the grape crop on the land after he discovered the shortage in acreage. The court found that there was no misrepresentation as to the acreage contained in the tract and therefore the mere shortage gave the plaintiff no right to rescind. Government subdivisions of land are often found to be short in acreage. The court found that the plaintiff did not discover the location of the true boundary line and that he had not been placed in possession of all the land described in the agreement until December 1, 1922, and that he gave notice of rescission on the 29th of that month. It may be presumed that the grape crop was completely harvested by the 1st of December. It does not appear that the defendants could have suffered any prejudice from the delay of less than a month in giving notice of rescission. Mere delay for so short a time does not amount to laches. (Stone v.McCarty,
In the absence of a finding as to the rental value of the premises while in plaintiff's possession, there is no basis upon which to direct the entry of judgment in favor of plaintiff. All the parties should be given leave to amend their pleadings, if they so request, in order to more certainly determine their respective rights.
The judgment is reversed.
Plummer, J., and Hart, J., concurred.