Bank of America National Trust & Savings & Trust Ass'n v. Reidy

101 P.2d 77, 15 Cal. 2d 243, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 211
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1940
DocketL. A. No. 16181
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 101 P.2d 77 (Bank of America National Trust & Savings & Trust Ass'n 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
Bank of America National Trust & Savings & Trust Ass'n v. Reidy, 101 P.2d 77, 15 Cal. 2d 243, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 211 (Cal. 1940).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

This controversy presents only the question whether the appellant, which had a junior lien upon certain real property, is entitled to the income of the property while the respondent bank was foreclosing its senior encumbrance.

*245 The first mortgage was executed in 1925 by the then owner of the property to secure the payment of a note for $80,000 in favor of the respondent Reidy and his wife. About the same time several junior encumbrances were recorded, one being a deed of trust to secure a note of the owner in favor of Hammond Lumber Company. Later, the Reidys borrowed $70,000 from the bank’s predecessor, and to secure the loan gave the $80,000 note and mortgage as collateral security.

Upon default in the payment of the note of which he was a payee, and notwithstanding the fact that the mortgage was still under pledge to the bank, P. M. Reidy commenced a suit for its foreclosure. The bank, which was named as a defendant in this action, filed a cross-complaint against the mortgagor and several encumbrancers, including the Hammond Lumber Company, asking that it be permitted to foreclose the mortgage in order to protect its security as the pledgee thereof. While the cause was awaiting trial, Hammond Lumber Company, which had meanwhile foreclosed its junior encumbrance, a deed of trust, and became the purchaser at the sale, received the trustee’s deed to the property. Later, when the foreclosure action came to trial, the Hammond Company stipulated that the pledged mortgage was prior to any lien or interest in the property which it might assert.

On January 31, 1929, a decree of foreclosure was entered, adjudging that the sum of $70,000 borrowed by the Reidys from the bank was due and owing; that payment thereof was secured by pledge of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed; and that the sum due on the mortgage was $87,512, exclusive of certain items of interest and costs. Among other things, the decree ordered a sale of the property by a commissioner, and application of the proceeds of sale as follows: (1) To payment of costs and expenses of sale; (2) to payment of the amount due the bank from the Reidys; (3) to payment to the Reidys of any amount due them after paying the claim of the bank; and (4) the surplus, if any, to be paid into court. Upon appeal by a junior encumbrancer, the decree was affirmed, with a slight modification not here material. (Reidy v. Young, 119 Cal. App. 322 [6 Pac. (2d) 112].) At the foreclosure sale thereafter held, the bank bid in the property for $70,000 and on March 5, 1930, at the expiration of the period of redemption, received a commissioner’s deed. The present *246 action was commenced by the bank for the purpose of foreclosing this deed as a mortgage.

The complaint alleged that although the certificate and deed were absolute in form, they were accepted by the bank as additional security for the Reidy loan, and constituted “a further mortgage of the real property”, and that payment of the balance due on the loan was in default. The prayer was for foreclosure and judgment against the Reidys in the amount of any deficiency.

Separate answers were filed by the several defendants, and Reidy and the Hammond Lumber Company each filed a cross-complaint. The latter alleged that, unknown to it, the bank had accepted the commissioner’s certificate and deed only as security, and they constituted nothing more than a further mortgage; that, therefore, it, the Hammond Company, was the owner of the property at all times subsequent to April 3, 1928 (the date of the trustee’s deed to it), and as such owner was entitled to recover from the bank all rents, issues, and profits of the property subsequent to March 5, 1929, the date of the certificate of sale under the decree of foreclosure.

The cause was tried in September, 1932, but was reopened several times for the admission of further evidence, with the result that findings and decree were not signed until June, 1936. The decree granted the bank the relief which it sought and directed a foreclosure as prayed.

With respect to the issues made by the cross-complaint of the Hammond Lumber Company, it was conceded that the net income in controversy received from the operation of the property from June 30, 1930, to February 1, 1936, amounted to $15,866, but the court concluded that the Hammond Company was not entitled to this profit. It found that a receiver appointed in the prior foreclosure action had operated the property from a time prior to March 5, 1929, to April 26, 1930; that on the latter date possession of the property was delivered to the bank, and the bank thereafter continued to operate it “as the holder of the first mortgage lien” thereon, and “as agent of said P. M. Reidy”. It is not true, the court expressly found, that the Hammond Company has at all times since April 3, 1928, or at any time since March 5, 1929, been the owner of the property, and it is not true that at all of said times, or at any time since March 5, 1929, that company was entitled to rents, issues, and profits thereof, or that the *247 bank was indebted to it in any sum. The decree adjudged that the company had no right, title, interest, lien, or claim to the property, or right of redemption therein.

The Hammond Company alone appealed from the decree. In support of its claim that it should have been given judgment against the bank for income received from the property it contends that it was not debarred of its rights in the property by the foreclosure of 1929 and the issuance of the commissioner’s certificate and deed, because as to it that foreclosure was collusive, fraudulent, and ineffective for any purpose.

The charge of fraud is grounded upon the following facts which, appellant states, were established on the trial by uncontradicted evidence: At the time of the 1929 foreclosure sale the value of the real property, according to the bank’s appraisal, was from $35,000 to $40,000. The bank planned to bid up to the latter sum for it, and to take a deficiency judgment against P. M. Reidy for the balance due on his loan. On the morning of the sale, however, Mr. Reidy called at the bank and persuaded it to-increase its bid to $70,000 in order to “protect him with reference to possible redemption by other parties that were interested”. In return he agreed to give the bank $10,000 and additional security. The bank carried out its part of the agreement but all of Mr. Reidy’s promises were not fulfilled and the bank was therefore compelled to seek redress by filing the present action for further foreclosure.

The court found that immediately prior to the commissioner’s sale, at the request of P. M. Reidy, the bank agreed that for the benefit of P. M. Reidy it would bid in the property for the sum of $70,000 and that the commissioner’s certificate of sale and the deed to be subsequently delivered would be held by the bank as security for the payment of his indebtedness to it.

The effect of this bid, the appellant urges, was to stifle competition and to deprive it of an opportunity to either bid for or redeem the property; hence the foreclosure sale was irregular and unfair.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 P.2d 77, 15 Cal. 2d 243, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-america-national-trust-savings-trust-assn-v-reidy-cal-1940.