Legal Question in Real Estate Law in California
Release of Business Contract
I have a friend who was in contract to purchase an existing Real Estate office, which is a franchise. The buyer and seller made an agreement and opened escrow. The seller and buyer had some specific hand written details in contract as there was a note to be carried back by seller for buyer. The terms of note were specific monthly payments to seller or his wife in case of sellers death. The seller died during escrow, and the business was thrown into a probate due to kids greed. The kids attorney called the buyer and questioned contract and told buyer the terms of contract we going to be changed. The contract had gone passed escrow close date by two months with no extension signed by either party. The buyer then recieved recods of company info for books, and the business was not worth near the price seller had proposed. The buyer canceled escrow and walked away from purchase. The kids now claim the buyer harmed them as the buyer was the main producer for office and left the office to go elsewhere. The sellers heirs say they are going to sue the buyer for their loss as business value decreased greatly when buyer left. Does the seller have any grounds against buyer since contract was void?
3 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Release of Business Contract
Anyone can sue. That doesn't mean they will prevail. You may have a waiver on the part of the estate to assert that you didn't perform by close of escrow. In addition, the attorney told you they wanted to renegotiate the terms, which would also be a repudiation of the contract and waiver of their right to enforce the contract. Feel free to contact me to discuss further.
Re: Release of Business Contract
I agree with Ms. Barron, but would add that I doubt that the heirs would be able to prevail on a lawsuit claiming your friend damaged them by leaving the business. Involuntary servitude was abolished long ago and as a general rule, employees in California are considered to be "at will," meaning they can quit or be fired at any time and for any reason. Unless your friend had an employment agreement for a specified period of time, I doubt a court would grant the heirs a judgment for business losses simply because your friend left the business.
What may be more problematic is that, depending upon the terms of the agreements your friend and the owner of the business signed for the purchase of the business, your friend may get sued for breaching the agreement to buy the business.
I would strongly suggest that you tell your friend to take all of the documents relating to the purchase of the business to an attorney in his or her area and have them reviewed.
Re: Release of Business Contract
I think the presumption in the last sentence of your question "since contract was void" is a conclusion that cannot be reached so readily. I don't see the contract as "void" based on these facts. The contract may not be enforceable, or it may be enforceable with court-supplied terms based upon interpreting the original intent of the parties, but in any case, there was at one time a valid contract and as a result the parties and their successors have rights and duties that can be enforced through claims for damages and possibly specific performance.
There is a big legal difference between a contract which is "void" and one which is "voidable," or no longer enforceable, or breached so that the other party's performance is excused. All these situations have different consequences.
I doubt that a star salesperson's leaving the business would be of legal significance in the sale-of-business dispute (quitting is a right, as has been pointed out), but if that person were under contract with the employer, quitting could be a ground for a claim for damages for breach of the employment contract.
I'm unsure where fault lies in the entanglement you describe, and the kids would probably have a different version of the facts, but my daughter lives in Chico and I'm a frequent visitor and would be willing to sit down in person with your friend and provide a free consultation where we could go over the details of what happened.