Thomas J. Rowley, a real estate broker, represented Louis Steiner and his wife in connection with their purchase of certain real estate. He is now being sued by them to recover the amount of his commission, an alleged secret profit and exemplary damages. The appeal is from a judgment entered upon an order sustaining Rowley’s demurrers to the complaint.
The pleading is in four counts. In the first one, the Steiners allege that Rowley was employed by them as such broker under an oral contract and he owes them $2,000 because
The second count is for money had and received. Rowley is indebted to the Steiners for $2,000 paid to him by Andersen and Shubert, it is alleged, and despite demand by the plaintiffs, that amount remains wholly due, owing and unpaid.
The third count alleges that, in addition to $400 which the Steiners paid Rowley for his services, he received a secret profit of $2,000 out of a certain escrow pursuant to instructions given by Andersen and Shubert, the grantees of the property purchased by the Steiners. The instructions as to such payment, the Steiners plead, were not assented to nor known by them.
In the last count, the plaintiffs assert that because Rowley obtained the $2,000 by fraud, oppression and malice, express or implied, they are entitled to exemplary damages.
Rowley generally demurred to each of the four counts, and also pleaded that they are uncertain, ambiguous and unintelligible. There was also a special demurrer upon the ground of failure separately to state a cause of action for contract and one for tort. The court did not expressly distinguish between the general and special demurrers in its minute order, which reads: “ [d] emurrer as to fourth cause of action is sustained without leave to amend. Demurrer as to first, second and third causes of action is sustained; plaintiffs are given twenty days to amend.” The Steiners declined to plead further and the judgment of dismissal followed.
The use of the singular rather than the plural in the minute order referring to the “demurrer” to each cause of action, and the arguments of the parties upon appeal, show that it was the general demurrer as to each count which was sustained. In any event, it does not appear that any of the counts is ambiguous, uncertain or unintelligible, or that there was any failure separately to state causes of action in contract and tort.
The right of the Steiners to recover against Rowley on count one of their complaint depends upon the applicability of section 1624 of the Civil Code to the transaction which is
A general demurrer admits the material allegations of the pleading to which it is directed (Hevren v.
Reed,
Section 1624 of the Civil Code is applicable to the collection by the agent or broker of his “. . . compensation or a commission ...” and the enforcement by the principal of the broker’s agreement
(Marks
v.
Walter G. McCarty Corp.,
As to count two, the Steiners insist that neither a
The Steiners defend the sufficiency of count three notwithstanding the specific allegation that the claimed secret commission received by Rowley came to him through an escrow to which they were parties. Although the buyers concede that the principals to an escrow are charged with knowledge of its contents, they say that the rule does not make them cognizant of a broker’s fraud “even though that fraud may appear incidentally or inferentially in the papers in the escrow. ’ ’
Notice of the contents of the escrow agreement is imputed through the escrow holder to the parties
(Ryder
v.
Young,
The third count, therefore, states a cause of action. But even if the facts pleaded in this count show knowledge of the secret purpose of the payment, the first count would not fall because of those allegations. Concededly, all of the counts are based upon the same transaction. A complaint may plead inconsistent causes of action
(Goldwater
v.
Oltman,
In the parallel field of aider by reference, the averments of one count cannot be amplified by the allegations of another separately stated cause of action in the same pleading unless the latter are included by special reference or otherwise in the portion of the complaint under attack
(Lord
v.
Garland,
Rowley attacks count four upon the ground that, under section 3294 of the Civil Code, exemplary damages are recoverable only in a tort action and, by obtaining a writ of attachment, the Steiners elected to sue in contract. It is further argued that the count is defective because exemplary damages may be allowed only upon the allegation of actual damages
(Mother Coil’s Chicken T., Inc.
v.
Fox,
It is not necessary in this state to plead with the exactitude required at common law. Section 452 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “In the construction of a pleading, for the purpose of determining its effect, its allegations must be liberally construed, with a view to substantial justice between the parties.” Section 475 of the Code of Civil Procedure declares that1 ‘ The court must, in every stage of an action, disregard any error ... or defect, in the pleadings or proceedings which, in the opinion of said court, does not affect the substantial rights of the parties.” Many decisions apply this rule.
(Continental Mtg. Co.
v
Eyraud,
208 Cal.
In this action, the complaint as a whole clearly shows that any actual damages suffered were in the amount of the agent’s commission plus the alleged secret profits. Under the circumstances the fourth count sufficiently pleads that the Steiners sustained damages in a specific amount.
(Risco
v.
Reuss,
Concerning the effect of the writ of attachment obtained by the Steiners, the doctrine of election of remedies is based upon the principle of estoppel. “Whenever a party entitled to enforce two remedies either institutes an action upon one of such remedies or performs any act in pursuit of such remedy, whereby he has gained any advantage over the other party, ... he will be held to have made an election of such remedy, and will not be entitled to pursue any other remedy for the enforcement of his right.”
(DeLaval Pac. Co.
v.
United C. & D. Co.,
An action for tort in which exemplary damages are sought is inconsistent with one for money had and received. (Civ. Code, § 3294.) The Steiners were therefore required to make a timely election of remedies. Pleading the two causes of action in the alternative did not constitute an election because inconsistent counts are permissible
(Haigler
v.
Donnelly,
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
