124 Cal. 492 | Cal. | 1899
The defendants appeal from an order denying their motion for a new trial.
The action was to enforce specific performance of an option to purchase, given in a lease from defendants to plaintiff, of a certain 85.45 acres of land.
The complaint alleges-that on July 6, 1891, plaintiff owned a certain three hundred and ninety acres of land in Monterey county; that defendants had a mortgage on said land to secure an indebtedness of plaintiff to them of twenty thousand eight hundred and ninety-eight dollars and seventy-one cents; that on
The complaint also alleges that plaintiff has placed improvements on said 34.61 acre tract to the value of fifteen hundred dollars, and some other allegations necessary in an action for specific performance are contained in the complaint; but there is no allegation therein as to the value of the whole or any portion of the lands described, nor is there any statement in the complaint to show that the contract sought to be enforced is just and reasonable and founded upon an adequate consideration, nor was there any evidence given on these subjects at the trial.
The motion for a nonsuit was denied, and the court subsequently found “that defendants, and each of them, have received an adequate consideration for the option and privilege of purchase contained in the lease.” There seems to be no evidence at all to support this finding, and in the absence of such evidence the motion for a nonsuit should have been granted. Section 3391 of the Civil Code contains the following language: “Specific performance cannot be enforced against a party to a contract in any of the following cases: 1. If he has not received an adequate consideration for the contract; 2. If it is not, as to him, just and reasonable.”
Specific performance is an equitable remedy, and it is incumbent upon the plaintiff in an action of this character to show both in the averments of his pleading and in the evidence at the trial that he is entitled to the equitable relief which he seeks. In the absence of any averment or evidence as to the value of the land involved in the controversy, either as to the whole of it or as to any portion of it, with nothing stated upon which to base any estimate of the value or worth of the option and privilege to purchase, how is the court to determine whether defendants have received an adequate consideration or whether the contract is as to them just and reasonable ? It may be that the 24-.G1 acres, for which'a déed is sought in this case, is worth twice as much as the balance of the three hundred and ninety acres; if so, the contract sought to be enforced is not just and reasonable as to the defendants. It may be that this land is Avorth five hundred dollars an acre; if so, one hundred dollars per acre is not an adequate consideration for it. The following cases seem to support the conclusions reached in this case: Bruck v. Tucker, 42 Cal. 346; Nicholson v. Tarpey, 70 Cal. 608; Morrill v. Everson, 77 Cal. 114; Agard v. Valencia, 39 Cal. 296; Arguello v. Bours, 67 Cal. 447, 451.
The allegations and evidence as to improvements being placed upon the land by plaintiff do not tend to obA'iate or cure
I advise that the order denying the new trial be reversed.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order denying the new trial is reversed.
Temple, J., Henshaw, J., McFarland, J.