Binney v. San Dimas Lemon Assn.

253 P. 346, 81 Cal. App. 213, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 776
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 7, 1927
DocketDocket No. 4563.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 253 P. 346 (Binney v. San Dimas Lemon Assn.) 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
Binney v. San Dimas Lemon Assn., 253 P. 346, 81 Cal. App. 213, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 776 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinions

HOUSER, J.

The salient facts in this appeal appear to be that George A. Binney was the owner of a citrus grove and that he executed and delivered a mortgage thereon, in- *214 eluding the “rents, issues and profits,” to Edwin 0. Kennard and Flora H. Kennard. The indebtedness secured by the mortgage not having been paid, suit was brought to foreclose the mortgage, and somewhat later a receiver in the action was appointed by the court. Between the time that the suit was commenced and the date of the appointment of the receiver the defendants in that action picked fruit from the mortgaged premises and delivered the fruit to San Dimas Lemon Association (the defendant in this action), which fruit was later sold by said association for the sum of $603.99, and which amount, on demand by the receiver, was paid to him. Thereupon George A. Binney assigned to his son, George A. Binney, Jr., all his interest in the proceeds of the sale of the fruit, and George A. Binney, Jr., commenced the instant action against the San Dimas Lemon Association for the money received by it for the fruit. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff has appealed therefrom to this court. It also appears that the receiver in demanding from San Dimas Lemon Association the amount of money received by it for' the fruit was acting within the express powers attempted to be conferred upon him by the trial court.

The first question for the consideration of this court involves the validity of the order made by the trial court in directing the receiver to collect the proceeds of the fruit already picked from the mortgaged premises at the time of the appointment of the receiver.

Although the exact question here presented has not been ruled upon by the appellate tribunals of this state, the reports are by no means silent on the point affecting the validity of such an order.

In the early case of Montgomery v. Merrill, 65 Cal. 432 [4 Pac. 414], a mortgage which there was being foreclosed, like the one in the instant case, included the rents, issues, and profits, and a receiver who had been appointed by the court harvested and sold a crop which was growing upon the mortgaged premises at the time the receiver took possession. It appearing that at the foreclosure sale a sum was realized insufficient to pay the debt secured by the mortgage, by order of the trial court the money received by the receiver from the sale of such crop was applied to payment of the deficiency. On appeal the court held in effect that *215 (as is stated in the subsequent case of Treat v. Dorman, 100 Cal. 623, 625 [35 Pac. 86, 87]), “not only the land described in the complaint, but the rents, issues and profits thereof were mortgaged, so that the crop which the receiver took possession of was a part of the mortgaged property.”

In the case of Treat v. Dorman, 100 Cal. 623 [35 Pac. 86, 87], the principle announced in Montgomery v. Merrill, supra, as applied to the action between the mortgagor and the mortgagee, is extended so as to apply as between a mortgagee of the land and a subsequent mortgagee (with notice) of the crops alone. (See, also, Locke v. Klunker, 123 Cal. 231, 236 [55 Pac. 993].)

In the case of Simpson v. Ferguson, 112 Cal. 180 [53 Am. St. Rep. 201, 44 Pac. 484], the controversy was between a mortgagee of the land, together with the rents, issues, and profits thereof, and a subsequent mortgagee (without notice) of the growing crop. Touching the point here at issue, in the course of the opinion the following language (in part) was used by the court: “ . . . while it is perfectly true that growing crops may be either personal or real property, according to circumstances, and while, as suggested by respondent, a mortgage of the land gives a lien upon everything that would pass by a grant of the land, which includes crops growing thereon, it is, nevertheless, well established that such lien, so far as the growing crops are concerned, is limited in its effect to the crops growing upon and unsevered from the land at the time of foreclosure. It does not vest the mortgagee with a right to the crops grown intermediate the giving of the mortgage and the foreclosure thereof. Until the latter event, where, as in this state, the mortgage creates no estate in the mortgagee, but confers only a lien upon the property, the mortgagor is entitled to such crops, with the same absolute right and dominion over them as if the mortgage did not exist. This doctrine is thoroughly well settled, with no considerable diversity upon the subject among text-writers and the courts.”

The court then quotes from Jones on Mortgages, fifth edition, section 670, which includes the following statement: “Even if the rents and profits of the mortgaged property are expressly pledged for the security of the mortgage debt, with the right in the mortgagee to take possession upon default, the mortgagee is not entitled to the rents and profits *216 until he takes actual possession, or until possession is taken in his behalf by a receiver.”

The court also recites several other authorities and reaches the conclusion, notwithstanding the cases of Montgomery v. Merrill, 65 Cal. 432 [4 Pac. 414], and Treat v. Dorman, 100 Cal. 623, supra (which, according to the court, are distinguishable), that a mortgage of land, together with its rents, issues and profits, is limited in its effect so far as growing crops are concerned to crops growing upon the land at the time of the foreclosure, and as to crops harvested between the time of the giving of the mortgage and its foreclosure the mortgagor may exercise absolute dominion as if the mortgage did not exist.

In Bank of Woodland v. Christie, 6 Cal. Unrep. 545 [62 Pac. 400], the plaintiff recovered judgment to foreclose a mortgage on certain land, together with the rents, issues, and profits thereof. Either on the same day that judgment was rendered, or on the day following (and before the foreclosure sale took place), the mortgagor sold an undivided one-third of the crop on the land. Thereafter the mortgagee made a motion that a receiver, be appointed “to take possession and charge of the crops that were growing on the land mortgaged and ordered to be sold by the judgment in said cause ... at the time of the foreclosure, for the purpose of subjecting them to the payment of the judgment.” The motion was denied. On appeal it was held that the right of the mortgagor to dispose of crops growing on the mortgaged premises was not divested by foreclosure proceedings until sale under the decree. -

In the case of Modesto Bank v. Owens, 121 Cal. 223 [53 Pac. 552] where the controversy was between the owner of a mortgage covering land, together with rents, issues, and profits thereof, and the owner of a subsequent mortgage on a crop on the land, it was held that the latter mortgage took precedence, even though taken with notice. With reference to that point, the following appears in the opinion:

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Bluebook (online)
253 P. 346, 81 Cal. App. 213, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/binney-v-san-dimas-lemon-assn-calctapp-1927.