Belden v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank

118 P. 449, 16 Cal. App. 452, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 281
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 16, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 818.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 118 P. 449 (Belden v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank) 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
Belden v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank, 118 P. 449, 16 Cal. App. 452, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 281 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

HART, J.

This action was.brought for the purpose of securing a judgment adjudging that certain money, amounting to the sum of $767, and in the possession of the defendant, *454 Olmsted, is the property of one L. 0. Lowrey, and compelling said Olmsted to pay said sum to plaintiff as part satisfaction of a judgment obtained by plaintiff against said Lowrey prior to the institution of this action.

Plaintiff was awarded judgment, from which and the order denying defendants a new trial these appeals are prosecuted.

The facts are: Said Lowrey became, by an assignment from one of the original lessees, the lessee of certain land situated in Sonoma county. Said lease stipulated for the lease of the land to the lessees for a term of five years, beginning with the date of the execution thereof, viz., the twentieth day of February, 1904.

The land so leased embraced about forty acres, and the lessees bound themselves by the covenants of said lease to plant a certain portion thereof in hops. It was further agreed between the parties that the lessees would, for the purpose of carrying on the business of growing hops, “provide all wires, hop-houses, and appliances reasonably required for the cultivation, picking, curing and baling of hops to be raised on said premises during the term of this lease, and to erect such hop-houses in a good and substantial manner.” It was further agreed that, at the expiration of five years from the date of said lease, the first parties to the lease (the lessors) would buy all poles, wires, hop-houses and appliances then upon said premises and pay therefor the reasonable value thereof at that time; that “if said parties hereto or their assigns shall not agree as to the reasonable value of said property or any part thereof, at that time, then and in that event the reasonable value thereof shall be determined by three arbitrators, at the equal expense of the parties hereto. ...”

On the twenty-ninth day of September, 1908, Lowrey, being indebted to the defendant bank in the aggregate sum of $1,075, together with interest, executed an instrument in writing purporting to sell to said bank “ all his right, title, interest, estate and expectancy, of, in and to all that certain personal property, to wit, all hop-poles, wires, hop-houses and appliances of every nature and kind used or employed in or about the cultivation, picking, curing and baling of hops and now situated on the lands and premises of L. C. Olmsted . . . , the same being the improvements placed on said premises under and in *455 pursuance of the terms of a certain lease, dated the twentieth day of February, 1904, ’ ’ etc.

Upon the execution of said instrument by Lowrey and its delivery to the bank, the cashier of the latter addressed a letter to Olmsted notifying him that said bank “was the owner of the Lowrey interest in the property” referred to in said instrument.

On the twentieth day of July, 1909, in an action against Lowrey and' his wife, previously instituted in the superior court of Sonoma county, plaintiff was given judgment for the sum of $1,596.25 and $13.80 costs, said judgment having been duly entered against said Lowrey and his wife. In said action a writ of attachment was issued and executed by attaching all debts owing by said defendant, L. C. Olmsted, to said defendants, R. L. Lowrey and wife, and “all personal property and effects in the hands of L. C. Olmsted, . . . and belonging to said defendants, R. L. Lowrey and Mrs. R. L. Lowrey, or either of them, and due return of same made to court. ’ ’

Olmsted answered the complaint in said action, as he has in this, “stating therein that he had the sum of $767 in his hands belonging to said R. L. Lowrey under a contract with said Lowrey, but that he, said Olmsted, had been notified by the defendant, Farmers and Mechanics’ Bank of Healdsburg, that it, said corporation, was the owner of said moneys and demanded that said Olmsted pay the same to said corporation, and that said Olmsted refused to pay over any of said money under said attachment, or to said Farmers and Mechanics’ Bank of Healdsburg.”

The court found the facts as stated in the foregoing, and further found, in harmony with the cashier’s testimony, that the defendant corporation notified Olmsted that it claimed said money, but found that “said claim was and is without merit, and said corporation defendant did not ever, and does not now, own the said money and has no right whatever to the same.”

Lowrey’s indebtedness to the defendant bank v/as evidenced by five promissory notes, dated, respectively, November . 5, 1906, December 1, 1906, January 15, 1907, June 13, 1907, and July 15,1907, said notes calling, in the order in which they were dated, for the sums, respectively, of $400, $100, $250, $200 and $125, and each note bearing interest at the rate of *456 seven per cent per annum. All these notes were due at the time the instrument was executed purporting to transfer to the hank Lowrey’s interest in the property or in the money to be paid for the improvements on the land leased to him.

The decision in this case hinges on the nature of Lowrey’s “interest,” if any, in the improvements made by him on the leased premises and the nature and effect of the transaction by which he purported to transfer such “interest” to the defendant corporation.

Counsel for respondent in Ms brief deals with the first question upon the assumption that Lowrey owned an interest in or was part owner with Olmsted of the improvements themselves, and upon this assumption argues that, if the instrument purporting to transfer Lowrey’s interest therein was intended as a bill of sale, it was void as against other creditors of Lowrey because possession of the property so attempted to be transferred was not taken by or delivered to the bank contemporaneously with the execution of said instrument or at all. The main contention is, however, that, if anything at all, the instrument is a mortgage, and if so intended, the argument proceeds, it was likewise void, so far as other creditors are concerned, because not executed according to the formalities prescribed by section 2957 of the Civil Code, nor recorded, as required by said section.

Manifestly, if Lowrey sought to transfer to the bank an interest in the improvements themselves—the physical property—or intended, by the instrument he executed and delivered to the bank, to mortgage an interest in said improvements, assuming that he had a mortgageable interest therein, the position of counsel could not be impeached.

Lowrey testified that the value of said improvements, whatever it might be determined to be, was, by the assignment, transferred to the bank, to be by it, when collected, applied on Ms notes. He further testified that it was understood between him and the bank that, if the money found to be due to' him from Olmsted for said improvements proved in amount to be in excess of his indebtedness to the bank, the overplus would be turned over to him. Upon this testimony the argument is erected .that the transaction between the bank and Lowrey as to said improvements amounted to an ineffectual *457 attempt to burden Lowrey’s “interest” therein with the lien of a mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
118 P. 449, 16 Cal. App. 452, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belden-v-farmers-mechanics-bank-calctapp-1911.