17 P.2d 119 | Cal. | 1932
Action by plaintiff, claiming to be a purchaser from defendant of certain real property owned by the latter and located in Santa Barbara County, for specific performance, with a prayer for damages if such performance be found impossible. Decree in favor of defendant was given by the court below and plaintiff has appealed upon a full record.
On July 2, 1928, defendant signed a writing, the material portions of which are as follows:
"For and in consideration of the sum of One Dollar ($1.00) to me in hand paid by H.J. Ruess, I hereby grant to said H.J. Ruess . . . the sole and exclusive right or option to buy or sell, on or before the 1st day of October, 1928, the following described lands . . . (description). The purchase price of said land to be One Hundred Thousand Dollars . . ., terms not less than twenty per cent (20%) cash at time of transfer, and balance in 1-2-3-4 annual payments equal amounts, interest at 6% per annum payable quarterly, to be secured by a mortgage which shall be a first lien on said lands. . . . Time is of the essence of this agreement.
"Dated at Goleta, Calif., July 2d 1928.
"PIERRE F. BARON."
Prior to October 1, 1928, to wit, on September 21, 1928, defendant served a written notice upon plaintiff purporting to rescind and withdraw the so-called option. No consideration was rendered by plaintiff at the time of execution and delivery of the writing and no consideration was thereafter rendered other than alleged expenses incurred and labor performed by plaintiff in endeavoring to secure a purchaser for the property. Following said repudiation by defendant of the writing, and on September 24, 1928, plaintiff purported to exercise the option to purchase the property himself under the terms specified and to that end he tendered the cash payment, together with the notes and mortgage necessary to comply with the writing, if in force at that time. Defendant, however, refused the tender and stood upon his right to rescind.
[1] The whole appeal turns upon the interpretation to be given the document of July 2d above quoted. If it created the relation of vendor and purchaser, as distinguished *85 from a naked agency, then clearly it was without consideration and constituted a mere offer which could be withdrawn at any time prior to acceptance. But if it was purely an agency contract to sell, plaintiff's outlay and labor would supply a consideration sufficient to infuse life into the authorization until the full period named therein had expired.
There is somewhat of a suggestion of lack of harmony in our decisions relating to this subject. In the case of Sill v.Ceschi,
But in the case of Robinson v. Easton, Eldridge Co.,
Again, in Smith v. Blodget,
Again, in the case of Tufts v. Mann,
We think the line of cases last mentioned are controlling here and that the writing here in question was much more than a mere agency agreement and we are not privileged to interfere with the court's decree to this effect. The price of defendant's property, whether purchased by plaintiff or by another, was to be a net price to defendant. Plaintiff's profit or compensation, if any, was to be what he could sell the property for over and above that amount; whether he sold it for much or little above that amount would avail the owner nothing. Plaintiff testified that he was to receive all sums in excess of the price named as a profit and that he was quoting the property at $125,000. Efforts to sell to others, in view of this relationship, would not be a consideration for the option to purchase. [2] As intimated inSmith v. Blodget, supra, the provision that the price should be net to the owner, no more and no less, was sufficient to authorize the court to decree that the relation of vendor and purchaser was thereby created.
This makes applicable the clear doctrine stated by the court in the case of Brown v. San Francisco Savings Union,
[3] Again, if this document be treated as containing a dual offer, one an option and the other an agency, we *89
see no reason why the two provisions may not rest upon different foundations. It is clear that the option to purchase provision may be segregated from the other provision. (Mott v. Cline,
We see no room here for the operation of the principle that if A gives value for two or more promises from B, B cannot claim that one of such promises was not supported by consideration, though the parties have not apportioned the consideration to the separate promises. The difficulty here is that at the time of the execution and delivery of the document in question, no consideration whatever was given. The only consideration contended for is labor and expenses touching the proposition of an agency, thereby creating an estoppel in favor of plaintiff against defendant as to that particular provision, without bearing any relation to the option provision. Moreover, under no aspect of the case would plaintiff be entitled to specific performance.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Tyler, J., pro tem., Langdon, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred. *90