Kammerer v. Woodson
Kammerer v. Woodson
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs have appealed from a judgment relieving the defendants, under section 3275 of the Civil Code, from their alleged default of payments due upon a contract for the purchase of real property. Plaintiffs brought suit to quiet title to the land. Defendants answered the complaint, setting up their written contract with plaintiffs to purchase the property for the sum of $15,000, upon which they had paid the sum of $2,700 pursuant to the terms thereof, and alleged equitable grounds upon which they asked to be
The appellants assert in their opening brief that the only point in issue is whether the court may relieve parties to a contract for the purchase of real property from their default in payment of stipulated installments, under section 3275 of the Civil Code, where time is made the essence of the contract. It reads: “Only one point is involved in this Appeal, that is: Can the trial Court in an action to quiet title to real property, under Section 738 of the Code of Civil Procedure, relieve defendants of their default, under Section 3275 of the Civil Code, where the Court finds that time was made the essence of the Contract, and that defendants were in default in their payment as provided and required in the agreement to purchase, at the time the forfeiture was declared?”
The contract contains the following clause:
“. . . In case of a default in the payment of any of said sums or any installment, or interest due thereon, for a period of two months after the same becomes due, that all money previously paid by the Purchasers shall, at the option of the Sellers, become forfeited to the Sellers, and retained as settled and liquidated damages; the parties hereto agreeing that it is impossible to estimate the actual damages, and thereupon the Sellers shall be released from any obligation in law and equity to convey said real property to the Purchasers, and the Purchasers shall forfeit all right thereto, and shall immediately deliver the possession of the same to the Sellers; and herein it is agreed that time is the essence of this contract.” (Italics added.)
The court adopted findings to the effect that on January 2, 1946, plaintiffs and defendants executed a written contract. Under the contract the former agreed to sell and the latter agreed to buy real property in Sacramento County for the sum of $15,000, on the following terms: $1,000 cash, and the balance to be paid in installments of $100 per month until $5,000 had been paid, at which time plaintiffs agreed to execute their deed of conveyance upon delivery to them of defendants’ note for $10,000 and interest at 5 per cent per annum, secured by a trust deed. The court found that de
It will be observed from the fourth paragraph of the complaint that the monthly payments of $100 became due on the first of each month of July, August and September, and that notice of failure to pay the sums was served on defendants on September 6th. But, under the provision of the contract, “at the option of the Sellers,” the money previously paid could not be declared forfeited “for a period of two
On the authority of the recent case of Barkis v. Scott, 34 Cal.2d 116 [208 P.2d 367], and the California cases therein •cited, we are convinced the trial court was authorized, under section 3275 of the Civil Code, to relieve the defendants in this case of the default and forfeiture of money previously paid on their contract to purchase the real property, on condition that they pay to plaintiffs the sum of $1,198.54, as specified. This appeal was heard on the judgment roll only. The evidence adduced is not before us. We must assume the findings are adequately supported by the evidence, and that the defendants were not guilty of gross negligence, or of wilful or fraudulent breach of duty under the contract. Certainly the judgment is supported by the findings. The facts of the Barkis case are almost exactly like those of the present case. In both cases substantial sums were paid by the vendees of the properties, and in both cases the contracts provided that “time is of the essence of the contract.” Both contracts also provided that in the event of default in any installment or interest, at the option of the vendors, all previous pay
In reversing the judgment quieting title in the plaintiff in the Barkis case, the Supreme Court said, after reviewing numerous California cases, that:
“[W]henever its [Civ. Code, §3275] conditions have been satisfied relief has been granted whether or not time has been made of the essence by the contract involved.”
Numerous authorities are cited in support of that statement. The Supreme Court recognizes the fact that under circumstances where the vendee has wilfully, deliberately or fraudulently breached the contract or deliberately withheld substantial sums of money due, or is unable to perform his contract, relief from default or forfeiture and restoration to the full benefits of a contract may be properly denied. But, in the present case, the court found that defendants promptly and repeatedly tendered to plaintiffs the entire amounts which they claimed were due and unpaid, which were refused, and that defendants, at all times, were willing to do equity. Moreover, the sums, for nonpayment of which the defendants were in actual default, are small compared with the substantial amount of $2,700 which has been paid on the contract, and the court relieved defendants of their default and forfeiture conditioned upon their fully compensating plaintiffs by payment of the sum of $1,198.54 before they may be restored to the enjoyment of their contract. Any other judgment, under the circumstances of this case, would appear to be inequitable.
In commenting on the cases of Glock v. Howard & Wilson Colony Co., 123 Cal. 1 [55 P. 713, 69 Am.St.Rep. 17, 43 L.R.A. 199], and Henck v. Lake Hemet Water Co., 9 Cal.2d 136 [69 P.2d 849], upon which the respondent in the Barkis case relied, the Supreme Court said:
“. . . [Tjhere is nothing in either the Block or Henck cases that prevents the granting of relief for the breach of the provision requiring that payments be made strictly on time. ’ ’
The judgment is affirmed.
Adams, P. J., and Peek, J., concurred.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.