91 Cal. 282 | Cal. | 1891
This is an action to recover the possession of certain described instruments consisting of a note, mortgage, and two deeds, each signed by the plaintiff, and alleged to have been deposited with the defendants.
The plaintiff was nonsuited, and the question before us is, whether the testimony of plaintiff was such as to show that the documents in controversy were delivered by him to defendants in escrow, as claimed by them.
We think the fair import of the testimony is to the effect that plaintiff had made an agreement, subject to further consideration as to title, with one Stimson and a Mrs. Buttner, for the purchase of certain property from them, and the sale by him of certain lots to them, and as part of this transaction the note, mortgage, and deeds of plaintiff, and the deed of Stimson and Mrs. Buttner for plaintiff, were signed and left with defendants, to be delivered “ when everything was all right and perfected." Upon this point the plaintiff testified: “I said to Mr. Sears: You take these papers, and when everything is all right and perfected, you give these papers to me, and
But in addition to this, we do not think that it can be held, upon the facts above stated, that the defendants were given the right to deliver these papers without further direction from the plaintiff. The delivery was not absolute and beyond the control of the plaintiff. There was to be no delivery to the other parties until “everything was all right and perfected,” and as there is nothing in the evidence to indicate that this matter was to be determined except by the future agreement of the
It follows from the foregoing views that the court erred in granting the motion for nonsuit.
Judgment and order reversed.
McFarland, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.