Brice v. Walker

194 P. 721, 50 Cal. App. 49, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 87
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2983.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 194 P. 721 (Brice v. Walker) 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
Brice v. Walker, 194 P. 721, 50 Cal. App. 49, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 87 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

CONREY, P. J.

The plaintiff, claiming to be the owner and entitled to the possession of a certain automobile, brought this action to recover possession thereof. Judgment having been entered in favor of the defendant, the plaintiff appeals therefrom.

On the seventeenth day of November, 1916, the plaintiff’s father, Charles P. Brice, being then and there the owner of said automobile, made and delivered his note of that date at Los Angeles, California, due six months after date, for the sum of three hundred dollars, to the Western Union Life Insurance Company, together with a mortgage of the automobile, as security for payment of the note. The note and mortgage passed by assignment to the defendant, First State Bank of St. Joe, Idaho. On the eighteenth day of March, 1918, the First State Bank commenced an action in the state of Arizona in a court of competent jurisdiction against Charles P. Brice on sundry obligations, including " said note. Thereafter, and after the commencement of the present action but prior to the trial thereof, defendant bank so amended its complaint in the action in Arizona that the count on the said note was omitted from that action. After the thirty-first day of May, 1918, but prior to the tenth day of June, 1918, Charles P. Brice, by *51 gift inter vivos, presented to the plaintiff herein all of his right, title, and interest in and to the said automobile. This transfer was without consideration and without the knowledge or consent of, and without notice to, the defendant bank. At the time of said transfer the plaintiff knew of the existence of the chattel mortgage. Defendant has been in peaceable possession of the automobile ever since the twenty-first day of May, 1918.

Appellant contends that by bringing- the suit on the note in Arizona the defendant bank waived its mortgage lien. [1] In general terms, waiver by election occurs when a party having two or more different and coexisting modes of procedure and relief allowed by law on the same state of facts and the one being inconsistent with the other elects to pursue one of those remedies. Appellant calls attention to section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as found in the chapter on actions for foreclosure of mortgages, and providing that “there can be but one action for the recovery of any debt, or the enforcement of any right secured by mortgage upon real or personal property, which action must be in accordance with the provisions of this chapter”; and argues that by electing to proceed in an action at law on the note alone in a court foreign to the situs of the mortgaged property, the defendant bank waived not only the right to foreclose the mortgage but abandoned the lien itself. She therefore contends that, since the automobile was given to her by the owner thereof while the action on the note was pending in the state of Arizona, she took the property free from the lien of the mortgage; and that this is true, although such action in Arizona was thereafter dismissed, so far as said note was concerned, and never proceeded to judgment.

In the case of Ould v. Stoddard, 54 Cal. 613, the payee of the note, which was secured by mortgage on property in this state, first obtained a judgment upon the note against the maker, in a court of competent jurisdiction in the state of Ohio, and then prosecuted an action in this state to foreclose the mortgage. The Ohio judgment had not been paid and an execution issued thereon had been returned wholly unsatisfied. In the foreclosure ease it was decided that by electing to bring the action on the note alone in the state of Ohio, the plaintiff waived the security *52 of the mortgage. Referring to section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the court said: “It is not difficult to discover the policy which dictated the enactment of this statute. The tendency of modern legislation is to prevent a multiplicity of suits, and no one doubts the wisdom of it. In order to give to this statute the force and effect which the legislature intended it should have, we must hold that by prosecuting an action upon the note secured by the mortgage to final judgment, the plaintiff has exhausted his remedy upon both the note and the security. To hold otherwise would be to hold that there may be two actions, where the statute declares there can be but one.”

Counsel for appellant insists that the. mere commencement of the action on the note in the Arizona court was a complete and irrevocable election to substitute that remedy for the remedy by foreclosure of the mortgage. Our attention is called to several decisions relied upon as supporting this proposition. These were conditional sale contracts in which, upon default in payment by the purchaser, the vendor had the right to bring an action for the purchase money, and had the alternative right to retake possession of the property. It was held that the vendor could not retake the property and also sue for the purchase price thereof. In George J. Birkel Co. v. Nast, 20 Cal. App. 651, [129 Pac. 945], the court said: “The legal effect of such an election was, immediately upon the filing of the complaint, to transfer to and vest in defendant title.” In Holt Mfg. Co. v. Ewing, 109 Cal. 353, [42 Pac. 435], referring to a similar contract and the same alternative remedies, the court said: “These remedies being inconsistent, the plaintiff should elect which he would pursue, but he cannot have both.” Parke etc. Co. v. White River L. Co., 101 Cal. 37, [35 Pac. 442], referred to the same alternative remedies, and the court said that “the pursuit of one remedy necessarily excluded the other. It was not entitled to both the purchase price and the property, and an action brought to recover the purchase price, as was done in this case, is a ratification of the sale.” In each of the two cases last above cited it appeared that the alternative remedies first used by the plaintiff had been carried to judgment before the plaintiff commenced his second action. In Geo. J. Birkel Co. v. Nast, supra, the plaintiff was seeking to hold *53 by attachment the property which by conditional sale contract had been delivered to the defendant. In none of these cases was it necessary to determine that the commencement of an action, followed by the voluntary dismissal thereof by the plaintiff without any judicial action by the court, and without any special proceeding by attachment or otherwise against the defendant’s property, constituted an irrevocable election of the prior remedy. In J. I. Case Threshing Machine Co. v. Copren Bros., 45 Cal. App. 159, [187 Pac. 772, 775], referring to the doctrine of election between remedies, the third district court of appeal said: “The cases where that principle has been successfully invoked are generally where a party, having two different and distinct remedies available to him for the enforcement of a single right or obligation, has adopted one of the remedies and through it has pressed his action to final judgment, and, finding that he has failed to adopt the course or the remedy which would have rendered the execution of his judgment the more effectual, attempts to invoke the other remedy.”

In Frost v. Witter, 132 Cal. 421, [84 Am. St.

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Bluebook (online)
194 P. 721, 50 Cal. App. 49, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brice-v-walker-calctapp-1920.