Miller v. Moore
Miller v. Moore
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment in favor of the defendant in an action for damages for refusal to perform an agreement to transfer to the plaintiff a certain business, its goodwill and the personal property used in connection therewith in consideration of the conveyance by plaintiff of a lot of land with the improvements thereon.
The plaintiff’s property was described in the contract of exchange as follows: “That certain lot, 37.6x80, situated on the northeasterly corner of Ninth street and Hayes street, in the city of San Jose, improved with a frame building, containing four apartment flats of 4 rooms and bath each, partially furnished, commonly known and designated as 66 and 70 South Ninth street and 407 and 409 Hayes street, in the city of San Jose.” At the same time the defendant was the owner of a certain business conducted in the city of Oakland. On September 13, 1918, these parties agreed, in writing, to an exchange of their respective properties. It is admitted that the plaintiff’s lot is five feet less in depth than stated in the agreement, and that the apartments in the building situated thereon instead of containing four rooms and bath each were each composed of three rooms and bath only. However, prior to October 2, 1918, the defendant was made aware of this discrepancy in the make-up of the apartments; nevertheless on that date she signed and mailed to plaintiff a *285 letter, prepared by their joint agent, for the exchange of the properties, in which she stated that she was ready, willing, and able and offered to carry out the agreement. Subsequently, on the eleventh day of October, 1918, defendant again inspected plaintiff’s building and apartments and was shown the boundary lines of the property. Later on that day she visited the office of the San Jose Abstract Company, inspected the deed which plaintiff had placed there in escrow after receiving defendant’s letter of October 2d, and then for the first time learned that the depth of plaintiff’s lot was seventy-five feet only. Thereafter, on the same day she stated to the plaintiff that she would return to Oakland, execute a bill of sale of her property and place it in escrow with plaintiff’s deed. Seven days later, however, through a letter written by her attorneys, she refused to consummate the transfer upon the ground “that the size of the property that you proposed to deed to Mrs. Moore is larger than that which is actually included in the deed which you desired to deliver, and in many other respects it is not as you represented it.” It is apparent that after the defendant learned of the size of the apartments in the plaintiff’s building she was still willing to proceed with the trade, and for a time she was even willing to do so, it appears, after discovering that the lot was smaller than represented, but subsequently, and apparently after receiving legal advice, she repudiated the transaction, which, it is conceded in effect, she had a right to do unless it can be said that this was a contract of hazard or a sale in gross, in which both parties assumed the risk of an excess or deficiency in quantity. We are of the opinion that this was not such a case.
Judgment affirmed.
Waste, P. J., and Richards, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on February 24, 1920.
All the Justices concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- C. E. MILLER, Appellant v. GUSSIE H. MOORE, Respondent
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published