Defendants appeal from a judgment, without jury trial, in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $1,800.
*694 Questions Presented
1. Is the agreement to build “a speculative home" on each of three lots unenforceable because of uncertainty and incompleteness ?
2. Applicability of sections 2466 and 2468, Civil Code.
3. Is judgment in favor of plaintiff Jackman supported?
Record
In 1955, Vera Rivers, a licensed real estate broker, doing business as Vera Rivers Realty, interested defendants in three lots for sale in San Rafael, the price of which was $16,500. Defendants counterofferеd $13,500. The owners refused to accept less than $15,000. In order to consummate the sale, defendants told Vera Rivers that she would have to waive the brokerage commission. Defendants were buying the property to build houses on it for sale. Vera Rivers agreed to waive the commission, provided she was given an exclusive agency to sell the houses to be built. The following agreement was then entered into:
“March 3, 1955
“In consideration of Vеra Rivers Realty handling my purchase of 3 lots located at Center Avenue, corner K Street, San Rafael, without brokerage, as evidenced by attached copy of deposit receipt, I hereby agree as follows:
“1) To build on each of said 3 lots a speculative home, which is to be placed on the market immediately for sale on completion of same.
“2) To give to Vera Rivers Realty the exclusivе right to sell each of such houses and pay a 3% commission of the selling price, this exclusive right to sell to be effective immediately and to continue in effect for a period of one year from date of completion of each of such houses.
“/s/ Philander B. Beadle
“/s/ Eva May Beadle
“/s/ Vera Rivers”
The court found “That the term ‘speculative home’ means a home built with expectation of selling it for profit, and said meaning of said term was understood by both of the рarties hereto; and that in relation to the area of said lots and the type of homes in said area, the said homes, if constructed by said defendants, would have been homes that would sell for approximately $20,000.” The court thereupon allowed damages based upon an allowance of 3 per cent of $20,000 *695 for each house, totaling for the three, $1,800. The evidence, if admissible, fully supports the finding.
1. Sufficiency of Agreement.
Defendants contеnd that the agreement does not meet the requirements of the statute of frauds and that in admitting evidence in interpreting the agreement the parol evidence rule was violated.
“ The evidentiary consequences of the statute of frauds (Civ. Code, § 1624) are in many respects similar to those of the parol evidence rule (Code Civ. Proc., § 1856). But both require exclusion of extrinsic evidence which would vary, contradict, or add to the terms of the written agreement under consideration
(Craig
v.
Zelian,
The parol evidence rule does not require the parties to put their entire understanding in writing. Thus evidence of contemporaneous oral agreements may be admitted, provided they are not inconsistent with the written contract. As will hereafter appear, the oral evidence introduced in no way conflicts with the written contract. The statute of frauds, however, requires that the writing evidence the contract exclusively.
“Vaguenеss of expression, indefiniteness and uncertainty as to any of the essential terms of an agreement, may prevent the creation of an enforceable contract . . . Vagueness, indefiniteness, and uncertainty are matters of degree, with no absolute standard for comparison. It must be remembered that all modes of human expression are defective and inadequate ... In considering expressions of agreement, the court must not hold the parties to some impossible, or ideal, or unusual standard. It must take language as it is and people as they are. All agreements have some degree of indefiniteness and some degree of uncertainty . . . [P]eople must be held to the promises they make. The court must not be overly fearful of error; it must not be pedantic or meticulous in interpretation of expressions *696 ... If the parties have concluded a transaction in which it appears that they intend to make a contract, the court should not frustrate their intention, if it is possible to reach a fair and just result, even though this requires a choice among conflicting meanings and the filling of some gaps that the parties have left . . . The application of such a rule as this is believed to come nearer to attaining the purpose of the contracting pаrties than any other, to give more business satisfaction and to make [a] contract a workable instrument. ” (Corbin on Contracts, vol. 1, § 95, pp. 288-292.)
As to the statute of frauds, “ ‘. . . To be sufficient, the required writing must be one “which states
with reasonable certainty,
(a) each party to the contract . . . and (b) the land, goods or other subject-matter to which the contract relates, and (c) the
terms and conditions of all the promises
constituting the contract and by whom and to whom the promises are made.” (Rest., Contracts, § 207. Emphasis added.) (Pp. 476-477.) ’ ”
(Ferrara
v.
Silver,
With these rules in mind, let us examine the contract, (a) It clearly sets forth each party to the contract. The parties are the defendants on the one hand, and Vera Rivers on the other.
(b) The subject matter is that in consideration of the waiving of a commission by Vera Rivers for her handling defendants’ purchase of the described three lots, defendants agree to build on each lot “a speculative home” to be placed on the market for sale immediately on completion. That “speculative home” had a definite meaning to the parties will hereafter appear.
(c) The agreement also clearly shows “the terms and conditions of all the promises constituting the contract and by whom and to whom the promises are made.” These are, first, that defendants agree to build the homes (although the time is not stаted, such an agreement imports an understanding that it must be built within a reasonable time (see 12 Cal.Jur.2d p. 375)); secondly, that defendants will place the homes for sale on the market immediately upon completion, and that Vera Rivers has the exclusive right until the expiration of one year after the houses are completed to sell them, and defendants agree that on such sale Vera Rivers will receive a commission of 3 рer cent of the sale price. While the selling price is not fixed in the agreement (it eoulcl not be until the homes were built and their cost obtained), implied in the agreement, *697 and well understood by the parties, is that the defendants would fix the selling price to return a profit to them. Vera Rivers was not concerned with the selling price. She was given the right to sell, if possible, the houses for whatever price defendants might place the housеs on the market. There was nothing indefinite in this term of the contract.
“Speculative home” as here used is not indefinite or vague. It had a definite meaning to the parties. The evidence showed that this is a term well known in real estate circles and to defendants, as meaning simply a home built with expectation of selling it at cost plus a profit and of the type and price of homes being then generally being built and sold in the area. Applicable here is
Bettancourt
v.
Gilroy Theatre Co., Inc.,
All the terms and conditions of the promises are included in the agreement, namely, that defendants are to build three houses to sell. Vera Rivers has the exclusive right to sell them for a period of one year after they are constructed, and to receive a commission on sale of 3 per сent of the selling price. No other terms or conditions are required to make a definite contract; hence there was no violation of the statute of frauds.
It is true that some explanation has to be made of what the parties meant by a “speculative home,” just as in
Bettancourt, supra,
explanation was required as to what the parties had in mind by “ ‘. . .
First class Theatre. ’ ”
In considering this question applicable here is the following from
Avalon Products, Inc.
v.
Lentini,
The evidence concerning the meaning of the term did not violate the parol evidence rule. It in no way varied
*698
the terms of the writing or supplied any terms. It merely served to identify the subject matter and assisted in interpreting the expressed intentions of the parties in the light of the circumstances at the time of the execution of the contract. Parol evidence here “should be, and is admissible, to explain what the parties meant by what they said.”
(Wells
v.
Wells,
Nor is the fact that the contract does not state the time in which the buildings are to be constructed fatal to the contract. Where time is not stated, the law fixes the time as within a reasonable time after the execution of the contract (Civ. Code, §1657; see 12 Cal.Jur.2d p. 375, § 159), and the evidence shows that such was the contemplation of the parties.
The facts of our case differ greatly from those in
Ferrara
v.
Silver, supra,
*699
In
Ellis
v.
Klaff, supra,
In
Colorado Corp., Ltd.
v.
Smith
(1953),
More applicable to our situation are
Hillman
v.
Hillman Land Co., supra,
Guerrieri v. Severini
(1955),
“ ‘It has long been the rule that when parties have not incorporated into an instrument all of the terms of their contract, evidence is admissible to prove the existence of a separate oral agreement as to any matter on which the document is silent and which is not inconsistent with its terms; and that when there is a known usage of trade, persons carrying on that trade are deemed to have contracted in reference to the usage unless the contrary appears. ’ ’ ’
The evidence in our case shows that the term "speculative home” was one well known in the real estate business and known to the defendants. It should be pointed out that while thе writing here was prepared by Vera Rivers, one of the defendants is and for a number of years has been a practicing lawyer. It is unreasonable to assume that he would enter into a contract which appeared indefinite to him, or whose terms he did not understand. He testified that when he signed it, the agreement was perfectly clear to him.
In
Buckner
v.
A. Leon & Co.,
In
United Truckmen, Inc.
v.
Lorentz
(1952),
The allowance by the court of a commission based upon the lowest price in the price range for homes contemplated by the parties was eminently fair.
2. Failure to Allege and Prove Compliance With Sections 2466 and 2468, Civil Code.
The complaint is entitled “Vera Rivers and Cole Jackman, Plaintiffs.” It alleges that at all times mentioned therein “plaintiffs Cole Jackman and Vera Rivеrs were, and now are, doing business as . . . Vera Rivers Realty.” Defendants demurred that the plaintiffs did not have legal *701 capacity to sue as they did not allege compliance with sections 2466 and 2468, Civil Code, the latter of which provides that an action may not be maintained “upon or on account of any contract or contracts made, or transactions had under . . . their partnership name” if the partnership is doing business “under а fictitious name, or a designation not showing the names of the persons interested as partners ...” (§ 2466.) The demurrer was overruled. As “Vera Rivers Realty” obviously does not show the names of the partners alleged in the complaint, the demurrer should have been sustained. However, as will hereafter appear, defendants by their conduct at the trial are foreclosed from raising the point here.
Moreover, “An objection to the maintenance of an action on the ground that plaintiff has not complied with the provisions of sections 2466 and 2468 of the Civil Code by filing and publishing the certificate required thereby, is a mere matter of abatement pending the trial, which has the result of suspending the trial until the statute is complied with. It is not jurisdictional.”
(Kodota Fig Assn.
v.
Case-Swayne Co.,
At the trial defendants made no objection to the trial proceeding, nor to the introduction of evidence by plaintiffs in support of their claim, nor was any question of plaintiffs’ *702 right to mаintain the action presented to the trial court. Defendants made no effort to refute the statement in the pretrial conference order that the name under which the plaintiffs are conducting their partnership business is RiversJackman Realty. No mention of the matter appears in defendants’ memorandum in support of the motion for new trial. Sections 2466 and 2468 only require compliance therewith if the business is being conduсted under a fictitious name or one not showing the names of those interested in it. During the time the name of the business was Vera Rivers Realty, the name was not a fictitious one and showed the name of the only person interested in it. Then when the partnership was formed the name Rivers-Jackman Realty was not a fictitious one, and was one which gave the names of the persons interested in the business. Hence, at neither time was it neсessary to comply with sections 2466 and 2468. These facts, coupled with the findings in the pretrial conference order and the failure of defendants to raise any question concerning the matter in the trial court, support the judgment.
3. Judgment in Favor of Plaintiff Jackman.
The situation concerning him is one that frequently occurs in the trial of cases. All parties assume that there is evidence on a certain subject and yet none has been introduced. Here it is apрarent from a reading of the transcript that the parties and the court assumed that the new firm of Vera Rivers and Cole Jackman, doing business as RiversJackman Realty, had succeeded to the claim against defendants of Vera Rivers, doing business as Vera Rivers Realty. Apparently no evidence of this fact was introduced. The pretrial conference order states that at the time of the agreement plaintiff Rivers was the sole owner of the business and that Jackman was her office manager. "Subsequently the parties became partners. There are no other parties who either now, at the time the suit was filed, or at the time the agreement was entered into . . . have or have had any interest in the said real estate business.” In listing the contentions of the parties the order does not show any issue raised by defendants over the ownership of the claim by the new partners.
*
The pretrial order controls the subsequent course of the case in accordance with rule 8.8, Rules of the Superior Court
(Fitzsimmons
v.
Jones,
*703 At the trial counsel for both parties stated the issues. At no time prior to the appeal did defendants’ counsel raise any question concerning plaintiff Jackman’s interest in the claim. It is too late to do it now. Moreover, it would seem to be of no great concern to defendants whether Jackman shares in the recovery or not, since his doing so in nowise would increase or decrease the extent of defendants’ obligation.
The judgment is affirmed.
Tobriner, J., and Duniway, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 8, 1960, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 13, 1960.
Notes
As hereinbefore stated, defendants did raise an issue over the alleged failure of the new partnership to comply with sections 2466 and 2468, Civil Code.
