Baker v. Butcher

289 P. 236, 106 Cal. App. 358, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 717
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1930
DocketDocket No. 4116.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 289 P. 236 (Baker v. Butcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Butcher, 289 P. 236, 106 Cal. App. 358, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 717 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

THOMPSON (R. L.), J.

This is an appeal from a judgment against the plaintiffs in a suit for declaratory and injunctive relief against the foreclosure of a trust deed on the ground that the note secured thereby was executed in conflict with the usury law of California and void.

The plaintiffs were the owners of lots one and two, block four of Ocean Pier West in Long Beach, Los Angeles County. The complaint alleges that on December 12, 1924, they borrowed $16,200 from the Los Angeles Investment Securities Corporation for which they executed a promissory note for $20,000 payable January 1, 1926, with interest at eight per cent per annum secured by a trust deed on said property; that the premium represented by the difference between the amount of said loan and the principal sum of the promissory note, together with interest thereon, constitutes usury and renders the note and trust deed void to the extent of all interest and bonus in excess of said sum of $16,200, under the provisions of the California “Usury Law” (Stats. 1919, p. lxxxiii; Deering’s Gen. Laws 1923, Act 3757, p. 1384); that the California Title Insurance Company, which is the trustee named in said trust deed, threatens to foreclose said trust deed and sell the property for default in the payment of the principal sum of said note and interest and prays that the foreclosure of the trust deed be enjoined and that it be determined that the note and trust deed are void with respect to the interest and principal sum in excess of $16,200.

The answer controverts the material allegations of the complaint and affirmatively pleads estoppel in pais, and alleges that for a valuable consideration the plaintiffs, on December 12, 1924, executed and delivered in escrow, for the defendant W. H. Butcher a promissory note for $20,000, due January 1, 1926, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, secured by a duly executed trust deed on the Los Angeles County lots above described; that the Los Angeles Investment Securities Corporation, on January *361 23, 1925, purchased said note and mortgage from Butcher, the payee, for the sum of $17,-600, which was paid; that the note and trust deed were duly assigned to said purchaser on the last-named date; that the Los Angeles Investment Securities Corporation was an innocent purchaser of said note and trust deed before maturity for a valuable consideration, Avithout knowledge of the alleged usurious infirmity, and that the makers of the note were in default in the payment of both the principal and interest thereof, whereupon notice of foreclosure was duly given. Judgment of foreclosure and an order of sale were prayed for.

Upon trial the court found that the Los Angeles Investment Securities Corporation was the owner and holder of the note and trust deed as the purchaser thereof before maturity for a valuable consideration without knowledge of the alleged infirmity thereof; that the note constitutes a valid subsisting obligation of the makers duly secured by the trust deed upon the premises described; that the makers of the note were in default of payment of both principal and interest thereon together with money advanced under the terms of the trust deed in the additional sum of $1422.25; that the plaintiffs are estopped from maintaining the defense of usury and that the owner of said note and trust deed is therefore entitled to foreclose the deed pursuant to the terms thereof, and to sell the property to satisfy its lien as prayed for.

The record shows that plaintiffs own the Long Beach lots in question. Prior to December 12, 1924, the lots were subject to a mortgage to secure a previous loan from other parties of the sum of $30,000. About December 1, 1924,. the plaintiffs approached W. H. Butcher, whom they had not before known, and asked him to negotiate a loan for them of $20,000. It was arranged that the promissory note for that sum secured by a trust deed on their Long Beach lots, should be executed in the name of Butcher and placed in escrow with the California Title Insurance Company. These instruments were drawn and dated December 12, 1924, and left with said Title Insurance Company with appropriate, written instructions from the payee. They were, however, not then executed. Mr. Butcher then procured Dora C. Fennell, a real estate agent and loan broker of Los Angeles, to sell the note and trust deed. On January *362 14, 1925, she orally offered for sale to the Los Angeles Securities Company the instruments above mentioned stating that they were placed in escrow with the Title Insurance Company. At the request of the proposed purchaser, the broker Fennell made a written statement of the alleged loan together with the value, the encumbrance on the property and the terms of the note and trust deed. She offered to sell these instruments at ten per cent discount from the face value thereof. Butcher, who was named in the note as payee, was in no way associated with the Los Angeles Investment Securities Corporation, was an entire stranger to it, and had no direct communication with this firm regarding the transaction. The Securities Corporation finally offered to purchase the note and trust deed from Butcher upon specified terms for $17,600. This amount was accepted by the plaintiffs, who, in company with Butcher, visited the escrow-holder on January 21st, at its place of business at Los Angeles for the purpose of consummating the sale. The Securities Corporation sent Mr. Owens, who was its escrow representative, to the Title Insurance Company’s offices to close the purchase. This occurred on January 22, 1925.' He did not inspect the documents and claims not to have seen them until the transaction was closed and the deed was assigned and recorded. In consummating the purchase Mr. Owens conferred only with A. D. Cross, the escrow clerk for the Title Insurance Company. It appears that some of the plaintiffs were present in the place of business of the Title Insurance Company, conferring with Butcher and Cross regarding the transaction, while Owens was also present, and plaintiffs claim to have generally discussed the matter with him, or in his presence. Owens, however, denies that he ever discussed the matter with any of the plaintiffs, or with Butcher. Some controversy at first arose over a provision in the trust deed which required the payment of $250 each quarter on the principal indebtedness. The plaintiffs refused to execute the trust deed in this form. Cross communicated this objection to Owens, who conferred with the Investment Securities Corporation regarding the matter. It was agreed that in lieu of this provision Mr. Butcher, the payee and purported owner of the note, should advance $800 on account of future interest. A new trust deed including this provision was accordingly drawn by the Title Insurance *363 Company. The Title Insurance Company was named therein as trustee. The note and trust deed were thereupon duly executed by Lorin L. Baker and wife, who signed the note and acknowledged the deed on January 21, 1925, and Charles D. Baker and wife did likewise on the following day. The purchase of the note and deed was then consummated on the 22d of January by the payment of $17,600 to Mr. Cross, the clerk of the escrow-holder. The note was thereupon delivered to Mr. Owens for the purchaser, and the deed was recorded. Mr. Butcher testified that he received no money upon the sale of the instruments, but upon the contrary, that it was all paid to the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
289 P. 236, 106 Cal. App. 358, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-butcher-calctapp-1930.