121 Wash. 189 | Wash. | 1922
On or about January 22, 1921, Turner-Hutchinson & Company, real estate agents in Seattle representing the appellant, and the respondents, negotiated a deal for the sale of certain real estate presumed to belong to the appellant. At that time the agreement was reduced to a writing called an earnest
At the time of executing the earnest money receipt, the respondents gave to the appellant their check for $500, being the money agreed to be paid at the execution of the instrument. Shortly thereafter an abstract of title was furnished. Respondents raised objection to the title on account of three old judgments which appeared-to be liens on the property. The appellant at once caused these judgments to be satisfied. At about this stage of the proceedings the appellant caused to be drawn a formal agreement between himself and the respondents, as contemplated by the earnest money receipt, and submitted it to the respondents with a request for the payment of the additional $1,500 agreed to be paid down in cash. This formal
In the court below and here, the respondents have contended that this case must fall because the contract whereby McCall, the original owner, agreed to sell this particular property or a part of it to appellant expressly provided that the appellant should not assign or transfer it, and that, since McCall at all times refused to permit such transfer or sale, the consideration for the original check given by the respondents failed. The trial court seems to have been led into this error. This feature of the case is unimportant. The McCall contract simply forbade the appellant assigning or transferring it, or any interest in it. The appellant did not undertake to violate that provision. He was not selling or transferring to the respondents the contract or his interest in it, but was giving an entirely
However, we think the judgment must be affirmed for at least two reasons. In the first place, the respondents, in the original earnest money receipt, agreed to purchase the 2% acres hereinbefore particularly described. The formal contract thereafter drawn and executed by the appellant had an entirely different description than that contained in the earnest money receipt, and it is asserted, and appears not to be seriously denied by the appellant, that the description in the formal contract covered a less amount of land than the 2% acres mentioned in the earnest money receipt. This, in our judgment, would authorize the respondents to stop payment on the $500 check. They were entitled to receive the identical property described in the earnest money receipt. The appellant contends, however, that respondent examined the property before the earnest money contract was entered into and understood just what he was buying and knew that he was buying, not the identical land described in the earnest money receipt, but that described in the formal contract as drawn. The testimony fails to substantiate this contention of the appellant, and if it did, the respondents had a right to rely upon the description given in the earnest money receipt, and oral evidence was not admissible to prove that the description there was wrong.
Another reason why the judgment should be affirmed is that the appellant was not the owner of the property involved. He had only entered into a contract for the purchase of it. Appellant contends that this can make no difference, because all he was required to do was to have the title when the time came to give a deed to it. It is not necessary to here decide whether this contention is sound as a general proposition. The
The judgment is affirmed.
• Parker, C. J., Fullerton, Mitchell, and Tolman, JJ., concur.