Bradford Investment Co. v. Joost

48 P. 1083, 117 Cal. 204, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 639
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1897
DocketS. F. No. 507
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 48 P. 1083 (Bradford Investment Co. v. Joost) 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
Bradford Investment Co. v. Joost, 48 P. 1083, 117 Cal. 204, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 639 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

Chipman, C.

This is an action to foreclose fifty bonds of a railway company, of the par value of one thousand dollars each, exclusive of coupons, and to have the proceeds, after judicial sale, applied to the payment of a certain promissory note made to plaintiff by Behrend Joost, the appealing defendant, for twenty-five thousand dollars. An agreement was made by defendant Joost that the bonds might be sold for payment of the note, and plaintiff’s right to a judicial foreclosure is not denied, but the right to a personal judgment against defendant for a deficiency, if any there be, is questioned.

Upon filing the answer, plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings on the ground that the answer denied none of the material allegations of the complaint. The court granted the motion, and ordered judgment in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, including a deficiency judgment, to which order defendant excepted, and this appeal is from the judgment against this defendant. The other defendants do not appeal. The pleadings are verified.

The answer did not deny the allegations of the complaint, which fully and clearly set forth a good cause of action on foreclosure, but the answer avers: “That [206]*206prior to and at the time of the making and delivery by him, defendant, to plaintiff, of the promissory note and the instrument in writing mentioned, a copy of which is contained in said complaint, it was expressly agreed and understood by and between plaintiff and defendant that it, plaintiff, should and would rely upon and look to said fifty (50) first mortgage bonds of the San Francisco and San Mateo Railway Company, mentioned in said instrument in writing, exclusively for the payment of said note, .... and that no further or personal or general liability or application or judgment should he sought or obtained; .... that it was upon said terms and conditions, and not otherwise, that said note and written instrument were made and delivered to plaintiff.”

The written instrument referred to is the agreement by which the.bonds were placed as collateral security for the payment of the above note, and reads as follows:

“And as collateral security for the payment of the above note, and interest to grow due thereon, I have deposited with Bradford Investment Co. the following property, to wit, fifty first mortgage bonds of the San Francisco and San Mateo Railroad Company of the denomination of one thousand dollars each, numbers from 951 to 1,000, both numbers inclusive, aud should the said note, or any part thereof, or the interest to grow due thereon, remain due and unpaid after the same should have been paid according to the tenor of said note, I hereby irrevocably authorize and empower said Bradford Investment Company, or its assigns, to sell and dispose of the above-described property, or any part thereof, at public or private sale, with five days previous notice to me of such sale, and from the proceeds arising therefrom to pay the principal, interest, charges, and the costs of sale, and the balance, if any, to pay over to me or my representatives upon demand. In case of deterioration of any of the above securities, or fall in the market value of the same, I hereby promise and agree to reduce the amount of said note, or to increase the security in proportion to such deterioration or decrease [207]*207of value, in default of which this note shall be considered due under the above stipulation. On the payment of above note, interest, and charges, according to the terms thereof, this agreement shall be void, and the above-described securities returned to me.
“Bbhrend Joost.”

Defendant’s brief was constructed upon the theory, apparently, that the learned judge who tried the case refused to consider the defense, because the answer did not aver that the agreement relied upon was in writing.

The first point made by defendant is, that it will be presumed that the agreement was in writing, if evidence thereof should be deemed to be necessary. (Citing Reagan v. Justice’s Court, 75 Cal. 255; Emerson v. Bergin, 76 Cal. 202; Broder v. Conklin, 77 Cal. 336; Barnard v. Lloyd, 85 Cal. 132.)

To this point, plaintiff replies that the cases cited are to the effect that, where the statute of frauds requires the agreement to be in writing, it will be presumed that it was so, in order to support the complaint; that at common law the rule applied to the declaration, and not to the plea; that the rule under the code system of pleading applies to the complaint, but not to the answer.

It would seem to me clear, and in every way consonant with reason that, if the rule is that where an agreement, to be valid, must be in writing, it may yet be pleaded without alleging it to be in writing, we certainly may plead a like agreement in defense without alleging whether it is in writing or not.

Both before and after the passage of the statute of frauds, the rule was the same at common law. ( Wakefield v. Greenhood, 29 Cal. 597; Vassault v. Edwards, 43 Cal. 458, and numerous cases since.) But plaintiff says this rule had application to the declaration, and not to the plea (citing 1 Chitty on Pleading, 304, 534; Stephens on Pleading, 331); and he further says it has been expressly so held under our code pleading as to the answer. (Citing Reinheimer v. Carter, 31 Ohio St. 586; Wakefield v. Greenhood, supra; Bliss on Code Pleading, sec. 354 a; [208]*208Maxwell on Code Pleading-, 92; Case v. Barber, T. Raym. 450.) The case cited from 29 California, supra, did not involve this point; it related only to the sufficiency of the complaint, which was held good although it did not allege the agreement to have been in writing.

This court said in Nunez v. Morgan, 77 Cal. 427: “We cannot conceive that the rule held applicable to a complaint would be different when applied to a cross-complaint, and, applying the rule referred to to the cross-complaint, the averments in it are all that the law requires.” The question before us here was decided in that case, unless some difference exists between a cross-complaint and an answer as to pleading an agreement, and I know of none so far as the point before us is concerned. Nor can I see why the defendant should be required to plead more specifically in an answer, than he would have to do if he were setting out the same facts in a complaint, and this would be true whether his answer took the form of a cross-complaint or any other. The reason for the distinction claimed by plaintiff is stated in Case v. Barber, supra (cited with approval in Reinheimer v. Carter, supra), to be as follows: “ When the defendant pleads such an agreement in bar, he must plead it so as to make it appear to the court that an action will lie upon it, for he shall not take away the present action, and not give him another on the agreement pleaded.”

Bliss on Code Pleading, 354 a, states the rule of pleading as does plaintiff, and cites the Ohio case in support of it. The Ohio case is based on the rule as stated in Stephens on Pleading, 331, and this author goes back to the old case in T. Raymond, 450. The rule as stated by Mr. Chi tty has the same origin.

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Bluebook (online)
48 P. 1083, 117 Cal. 204, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradford-investment-co-v-joost-cal-1897.