Court Opinion

ID: 5447906
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:14:07.312919+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:15.948807
License: Public Domain

Henshaw, J.
Appeal from the judgment entered after demurrer sustained to plaintiff's second amended complaint; plaintiff refusing further to amend.
The facts pleaded are that Brown and Beaslin entered into an agreement (set forth in full in the complaint) by which Brown sold to Beaslin, for the sum of sixty dollars to him paid, certain personal property. This property consisted of “all of the goods in and owned by me in my place of business in the town of Azuza”—a retail liquor saloon.
“As a further and separate agreement between the parties,” Beaslin agreed to deposit with the firm of Laventhal & Sons (defendants herein) three hundred dollars, “to be paid to the party of the first part upon the procurement of the right to sell and carry on the business at the place above named; that is, the retail or liquor business within the same.”
Beaslin deposited the money with Laventhal & Sons, who hold it. Brown assigned his interest and rights “as per agreement” to Kiefer; Kiefer, after demand upon Laventhal & Sons, commenced this action to obtain the three hundred dollars, making Tappeiner, who claimed by assignment from Beaslin, one of the defendants.
The complaint nowhere avers that Beaslin procured the right to carry on the business of retail liquor dealer, or that he could carry on the business without procure- • ment of a right (presumably a license), or that by his own neglect or default he had failed to secure the privilege.
*669These averments lay at the foundation of plaintiff’s right of action, and should have been alleged in one or another of the modes indicated. (Lower v. Winters, 7 Cow. 263.)
From the agreement alone it may reasonably be inferred that Beaslin paid Brown sixty dollars for such personal property as Brown owned in the saloon, agreeing to pay him three hundred dollars more when and if he obtained a license to conduct the business. If he succeeded, his liability to pay was complete. If he failed, then he owned the property for which he had paid sixty dollars, and the transaction was at an end.
Judgment affirmed,
McFarland, J., and Temple, J., concurred.