Blood v. Munn

100 P. 694, 155 Cal. 228, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 418
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1909
DocketL.A. No. 2203.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 P. 694 (Blood v. Munn) 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
Blood v. Munn, 100 P. 694, 155 Cal. 228, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 418 (Cal. 1909).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

Two appeals are here presented, one by the plaintiff from part of the judgment, the other by the defendants from an order denying their motion for a new trial. We will first consider the appeal from the order.

The action is to foreclose a mortgage, executed by the defendants Alice F. Munn and O. B. Munn, her husband, to the Union Savings Bank, to secure payment of their note for twenty-two hundred and fifty dollars. The bank assigned the note and mortgage to the plaintiff, after maturity, shortly before the beginning of the action and after the occurrence of the transactions which gave rise to the dispute upon the trial. The court found that there was due on the note, at the time *231 of its decision, the sum of $2319.53. The case depends upon the accuracy of this finding. Two principal questions are presented: 1. Whether or not the defendants are entitled to a credit on the mortgage debt for the value of a part of the mortgaged premises which the mortgagee released without their consent, the part not released being the homestead of the mortgagors; and 2. Whether or not, if otherwise entitled to such credit, they are estopped to claim the same by reason of certain proceedings and orders in the matter of the bankruptcy of Alice F. Munn.

1. With regard to the first proposition, the facts are as follows : Prior to the execution of the mortgage the entire mortgaged premises had become the homestead of the mortgagors by virtue of a declaration of homestead thereon by Alice F. Munn, duly executed and recorded. The property was the separate estate of Alice F. Munn and she then resided thereon with her husband. On November 23, 1904, upon her voluntary petition, she was duly adjudged a bankrupt by the United States district court. In her schedule filed in that proceeding she claimed the premises mortgaged as exempt property and asked that they be set aside to her as her homestead. Thereupon an appraisement and partition of the premises was made by proceedings in the bankruptcy court, in conformity with the provisions of sections 1245 and 1253 inclusive, of the California Civil Code, whereby it was ascertained and declared that a certain described part thereof was worth five thousand dollars and the same was set apart to her as an exempt homestead, and the remainder, which was appraised at five hundred dollars, was declared subject to sale in the bankruptcy proceeding for the payment of her debts. The latter tract was afterwards sold in the bankruptcy proceeding to one Nelson. Thereafter, on April 30, 1906, at the request of the trustee in bankruptcy, and upon payment by the trustee to the mortgagee of four hundred and twenty-five dollars, the same being a part of the price paid by Nelson to the trustee for the purchase of said tract, the bank released the said tract from the mortgage, without the consent and against the will of the mortgagors. The court found that the value of the tract released at that time was nine hundred dollars. This finding is contrary to the evidence. The lowest estimate of any witness as to its value was eleven hundred dollars. The court gave credit on account *232 of the release of the same for four hundred and twenty-five dollars and no more, that being the amount received therefor by the mortgagee.

Upon these facts we think it is clear that the defendants were entitled to have the value of the property released credited upon the mortgage debt.

Both parties apparently concede that it was within the power of the district court of the United States in the bankruptcy proceeding to adopt the mode provided in our Civil Code for the appraisement and partition of the homestead of the bankrupt so as to segregate the portion representing the five-thousand-dollar exemption from the remainder of the premises and thus ascertain what part was subject to the payment of debts. The Bankruptcy Act gives that court jurisdiction to “determine all claims of bankrupts to their exemptions.” (Bankruptcy Act, sec. 2, clause 11; 1 Fed. Stats. Ann., p. 525; 3 U. S. Comp. Stats., p. 3421; Loveland on Bankruptcy, sec. 186.) Under this authority it seems reasonable to conclude that the United States court could adopt any convenient procedure provided by state laws for that purpose. It is suggested that although the appraisement and partition would be binding upon the bankrupt, Alice F. Munn, it could not be binding upon her husband, O. B. Munn, who had not submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court. Upon the trial it was admitted that the orders of the bankruptcy court appointing the appraisers and confirming their partition were duly given and made. Our code provides (Civ. Code, sec. 1248) that “a notice of the time and the place of hearing, must be served upon the claimant, at least two days before the hearing,” in proceedings for the partition of a homestead in such cases. Inasmuch as both the husband and the wife have an interest in the homestead and both must be considered as claimants thereto, and as a proceeding against one would be of no effect whatever unless it was binding upon the other, it must be conceded either that the word “claimant” in the above quotation is to be read in the plural, and that notice must be served on both, or that a notice upon the debtor who is proceeded against is sufficient to bind both. In either case the admission that the orders were duly given and made would be an admission that all the notice which the law requires was given. (See on the general subject, Estate of Delaney, 37 Cal. *233 180; Bank of Woodland v. Stephens, 144 Cal. 663, [79 Pac. 379].) The effect of these proceedings was to subject such excess to sale as part of the bankrupt estate, and to divest it of its homestead character. They did not affect the mortgage lien, however, and the whole tract still remained subject to the mortgage as before. The consequence was that the mortgagee, by its mortgage, thereafter held the lien on two parcels of land, one being the homestead of the mortgagor and the other a tract not having that character.

Under such circumstances, it is held in this state that the homestead claimants, with respect to the enforcement of the lien, stand in the same situation as a surety for the payment of a debt, or in the situation of a third person who had a lien upon or interest in only one of two mortgaged parcels, with respect to a prior mortgage upon both. The latter has the right to demand that the property on which he has no lien or in which he has no interest, be first sold to pay the prior mortgage. The surety has the right to have the principal debtor’s property first sold to pay the debt. And in eithef case, if the creditor, without the consent of the surety or the one holding the lien or interest, release the debtor’s property first chargeable with the burden, it will operate as a credit upon the debt of the surety, or in favor of the person holding the subordinate interest or lien, to the extent of the value of the property so released. The right of the homestead claimants to their statutory exemption is, for reasons of public policy looking to the preservation of homes and families, held to be as sacred as that of a surety or one in the situation of a surety.

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100 P. 694, 155 Cal. 228, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blood-v-munn-cal-1909.