148 P. 215 | Cal. | 1915
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendants, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.
The complaint is in four counts. The first alleges the ownership by defendants of a ranch in Solano County, containing 521.65 acres; alleges that in 1910, said defendants offered to sell said ranch to plaintiff, or to any one designated by *76 him, for forty-one thousand dollars, and agreed that, in case of a sale to another, plaintiff was to have all of the price above forty-one thousand dollars; that in December, 1910, plaintiff secured a purchaser, who agreed with defendants to purchase the ranch for $62,468.87; and that nothing has been paid plaintiff. The second cause of action alleges that defendants placed the ranch in plaintiff's hands for sale, and authorized him to sell it for forty-one thousand dollars, agreeing that he was to receive as commission the purchase price above forty-one thousand dollars; that a sale had been arranged through plaintiff for $62,468.87, and that no part of the excess over forty-one thousand dollars had been paid. The third count is based on the theory that plaintiff himself purchased the ranch for forty-one thousand dollars, but that defendants, acting in bad faith, refused to sell to him. The value of the ranch is alleged to be $62,468.87, and the difference between that sum and forty-one thousand dollars is claimed as damages. The fourth count attempts to set up a cause of action for specific performance of the contract to sell to plaintiff for forty-one thousand dollars. The answer denies most of the allegations of the complaint. The court found against the existence of the contract and authorization set up in the complaint, found that plaintiff did not produce a purchaser, or accept any offer of defendants to sell the property to him, and that defendants are not indebted to plaintiff in any sum. Judgment went in favor of defendants for their costs.
The findings above outlined are sufficient to sustain the judgment so far as the prayer for a money judgment is concerned. Whether or not the court failed, as appellant claims, to find on other issues, is therefore entirely immaterial. The fourth count demands no particular attention. It failed to state a cause of action, there being no averment of facts showing the fairness of the contract or the adequacy of the consideration. This pleading would not have supported a decree of specific performance. (White
v. Sage,
No errors in rulings on evidence are assigned. The appellant claims, merely, that the evidence does not support the findings of the court.
It is clear that the findings in favor of the defendants Raymond H. Ross, Mabel I. Ross, and Mrs. Henry are in accord *77
with the undisputed evidence. A contract for the sale of real estate, or for the employment of a broker to sell real estate, must be in writing. (Civ. Code, sec.
The remaining question is whether the findings in favor of defendant Albert T. Ross are supported. The evidence in this behalf is quite voluminous and we shall not undertake to recite it in detail. Read as a whole, it presents the very usual aspect of a substantial conflict, which puts the finding of the trial court beyond the power of appellate review. The testimony on behalf of defendants tended to show, and justified the trial court in believing this to be the state of facts. In August, 1910, Albert T. Ross had written to plaintiff, telling him that the ranch was for sale for forty-one thousand dollars, and that, if he got a chance to sell it, he should charge a good price "so you can get a commission out of it, as my figures are net." Nothing came of this, and some months later McRae wrote to A.T. Ross, offering thirty-six thousand dollars for the land. This was, of course, a rejection of any offer contained in the August letter, and ended that offer. (Niles v. Hancock,
Of the contention that McRae himself purchased the property, it is enough to say that the court found, with respect to the third count, that defendants did not act in bad faith in violating the alleged contract, and that plaintiff suffered no damage. These findings are sufficient to support the judgment in favor of defendants on this count. Assuming that there was a contract, and that it was broken, the measure of damages, in the absence of bad faith, is "the price paid, and expenses properly incurred in examining the title and preparing the necessary papers." (Civ. Code, sec.
The judgment and the order denying a new trial are affirmed.
Shaw, J., and Angellotti, C.J., concurred. *79