Andrews v. Reidy

60 P.2d 832, 7 Cal. 2d 366, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 644
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1936
DocketL. A. 14861
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 60 P.2d 832 (Andrews v. Reidy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Reidy, 60 P.2d 832, 7 Cal. 2d 366, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 644 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The plaintiffs, Charles L. Andrews and Anna L. Andrews, his wife, were the owners of a promissory note for $31,000 secured by a mortgage on real property. They borrowed from a bank the sum of $6,000, and gave said note as security, and made a written assignment to the bank of the mortgage. They defaulted in the payment of their interest on the note to the bank, and the bank instituted foreclosure proceedings on the mortgage. That action proceeded to judgment, and a commissioner was appointed by the court to sell the mortgaged property under the decree of foreclosure. The plaintiffs were without funds to stay the foreclosure proceedings, and they appealed to the defendant, P. M. Reidy, for financial assistance. An agreement was made between them whereby Reidy was to bid in the mortgaged property at the commissioner’s sale for the amount of the judgment against it and hold the commissioner’s certificate of sale as security for the money advanced on behalf of the plaintiffs. Reidy paid to the bank the sum of $12,000 in full settlement of its claim. After the sale of the mortgaged premises and the delivery of the certificate of sale to Reidy, the owner of the mortgaged property redeemed it from the foreclosure sale, and paid to the commissioner something over $42,000 for that- purpose. A disagreement then arose between them *368 as to the proper division of the money in the hands of the commissioner. The plaintiffs contended that under their agreement Reidy was entitled to the sum of $15,000 and no more, and that they were entitled to the balance of said fund. Reidy, on the other hand, claimed that he was entitled to one-half of the balance of the redemption fund after the payment to him of the sum of $12,000. The plaintiffs instituted an action for declaratory relief. The commissioner followed almost immediately with an action in interpleader in which he made each of the parties hereto parties defendants in said action. Other actions were instituted by the several parties but all involved the proper division of said redemption money between the plaintiffs and the defendant. These actions were all consolidated, and on the trial in the superior court were tried as one action. After the filing by the commissioner of the interpleader action and the pleading of the respective parties hereto setting forth their claims to the redemption money then in the hands of the commissioner, the trial court upon the stipulation of the plaintiffs and defendant in this action made what it termed an interlocutory judgment by the terms of which the commissioner was authorized and directed to pay to the plaintiffs and defendant each the sum of $15,000 and to deposit the balance of said redemption money in a certain bank pending the further order of said court. In compliance with the terms of this stipulated interlocutory judgment, $15,000 of said redemption money was paid to the plaintiffs, and a like sum was paid to defendant, Reidy. The consolidated actions were thereafter tried, and a final judgment was rendered therein by which the balance of said redemption money was awarded to the plaintiffs. This judgment was affirmed on appeal. (Andrews v. Reidy, 131 Cal. App. 334 [21 Pac. (2d) 457].) After the entry of said interlocutory judg-' ment and the payment of said sum of $15,000 to the plaintiffs and a like sum of $15,000 to the defendant, and within one year from the date of said payments, the plaintiffs brought this action against the defendant, Reidy, to recover the sum of $9,000, basing their action upon the claim that of said sum of $15,000 paid defendant, $3,000 thereof was interest, and that the contract under which said payment was made was usurious, and, therefore, the payment of interest was illegal, and they asked for treble interest by reason of *369 such illegal payment. The defendant answered and among other defenses set up the prior judgment rendered in the consolidated cases as res judicata and as an estoppel against plaintiffs’ present cause of action. On the trial of this action the defendant contended that by reason of the prior judgment in the consolidated actions, the question of the right of the defendant to receive said sum of $15,000 was finally determined by the court, and if plaintiffs sought to question defendant’s right to said sum or any part thereof on the ground that the contract under which it was paid was usurious, they should have made said defense in the action in which it was determined that defendant was entitled to said sum, and by failure to plead the defense of usury in that action, the plaintiffs waived any and all right to thereafter urge that defense. The trial court decided adversely to defendant on this contention, and rendered judgment in plaintiffs’ favor for treble the amount of interest paid. From this judgment, the defendant has appealed.

Appellant’s contention that the plea of usury should have been made in the prior actions, and that respondents’ failure to do so waived any rights growing out of the usurious payments, we think must be sustained. Had the respondents interposed in the consolidated actions the plea of usury, and had they sustained that plea by proper proof, the trial court would have been compelled to limit thq amount of appellant’s recovery in said consolidated actions to the principal sum advanced by him for the use of respondents, which would have been the sum of $12,000. But, as we have seen, the respondents made no such defense in said actions, nor did they raise the usurious character of said agreement in any manner whatever. Nor did the court, as it might have done upon its own motion, raise the question of usury. The parties in the consolidated action subsequently went to trial for the purpose of determining how the redemption money should be divided between them. Proper pleadings showing that this was the sole issue in said actions were filed by the respective parties. The trial court found, and its final judgment was affirmed on appeal, that the appellant, Reidy, was entitled only to the sum of $15,000 out of said redemption fund, and that the respondents were entitled to the balance of said fund. The *370 legal effect of this judgment was that respondents herein recovered judgment against the appellant for the amount of said fund, less the sum of $15,000, and that appellant, Reidy, recovered judgment against the respondents for said sum of $15,000. The rights of each of the parties to said fund were finally and completely determined and adjudicated by the judgment in said consolidated actions. The failure of the respondents to claim in the consolidated actions, which we will hereafter refer to as the first action, that the contract between them and the appellant was void or illegal, for the reason that the rate of interest charged exceeded that permitted by the usury law, did not permit them to raise this same question in the present action. This principle of law has been definitely determined by an unbroken line of authorities hy the courts of this state. (Quirk v. Rooney, 130 Cal. 505, 510 [62 Pac. 825] ; Bingham v. Kearney, 136 Cal. 175, 177 [68 Pac. 597]; Price v. Sixth District Agricultural Assn., 201 Cal. 502, 511 [258 Pac. 387, 390].) In the last-mentioned case this court states the rule as follows: “Appellants, however, apparently have a misconception of this rule.

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Bluebook (online)
60 P.2d 832, 7 Cal. 2d 366, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-reidy-cal-1936.