Brichetto v. Raney

245 P. 235, 76 Cal. App. 232, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 400
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1926
DocketDocket No. 2969.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 245 P. 235 (Brichetto v. Raney) 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
Brichetto v. Raney, 245 P. 235, 76 Cal. App. 232, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 400 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HART, J.

This action was brought to foreclose a mortgage upon a certain tract of land of 963 acres, more or less, and executed by one F. A. Raney, to secure a promissory note made by him in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $45,000. The note and the mortgage were made and executed on the fourth day of September, 1920, the note to become due and payable five years from the date thereof. It provided for the payment of interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, said interest to be paid semi-annually, and if not paid as it became due, was to be added to the *236 principal and become a part thereof and bear interest at the same rate. It was further provided in said note that if default be made in the payment of interest as provided therein, “then this note shall immediately become due and payable at the option of the holder thereof.”

The mortgage provided, among other things, that it “is also intended to secure, and does hereby secure, the payment of all liens, encumbrances, charges and the counsel fee herein mentioned, said counsel fee to become payable and be allowed if suit be commenced to foreclose this mortgage”; that the mortgagees, their heirs, successors, and assigns, may lawfully pay and discharge at maturity “all liens or other encumbrances now subsisting or hereafter to be laid or imposed upon said lot of land and premises, and which may be in effect a charge thereupon, and to insure and keep insured the buildings now or to be erected on said mortgaged premises for at least $1,000.00, and to pay the premiums on such insurance; and such payments shall be allowed, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum; and such payments and interest shall be considered as secured by these presents and shall be a charge upon said premises, and shall be repayable on demand,” etc. The mortgage also contained a release clause by virtue of which every acre of land embraced within the tract described in any subject to the mortgage upon which the sum of $75 has been paid is to be released from the operative effect of the instrument.

The complaint is in the form usual to actions for the foreclosure of the liens of mortgages. In addition, it alleges that the defendants were in default in the payment of certain county and irrigation taxes assessed against the land, the same aggregating the sum of $6,969.79; that, in accord with the terms of the mortgage, the plaintiffs paid said taxes. It is further alleged that there became due and payable on the fourth day of September, 1921, as for interest on the said note the sum of $1,350, and a like sum as for interest due on the fourth day of March, 1922; that defendants had defaulted in the payment of said interest, and continued to be so in default to the time of the commencement of this action, to wit, the twenty-second day of July, 1922.

*237 It is further alleged that the defendant Bank “is now the owner and holder of said property by bargain and sale deed from F. A. Raney, and assumed the mortgage at the time of receiving said deed and agreed to pay the same, said bank having paid the first installment of interest on said note.” It is alleged that “there is now being harvested from said land a wheat crop,” of which a one-third part will be delivered to the defendant Bank as its share of said crop; that if defendant Bank “receives said rental from said land they will apply it to their own use and will not apply it to the liquidation of said note; that it is absolutely necessary that the court appoint a receiver ex parte to take possession of the premises and receive the rents, incomes and profits thereof pending the litigation and to apply the proceeds thereof under an order of this court.”

It is further alleged by plaintiffs that the defendants have breached the covenants and conditions of said note and mortgage and that they (plaintiffs) “have elected and do now elect to exercise the option by said note provided and to declare and do declare all of said note, etc., due and payable. ’ ’

The prayer is for judgment against Raney and the defendant Bank for the sum of $45,000, the principal sum of the note, together with interest falling due from time to time according to the terms of the note, for taxes paid by plaintiff by virtue of assessments levied by the county of Stanislaus and the Oakdale Irrigation District upon said land, in the payment of which defendants are alleged to have defaulted, for any deficiency which may be found to exist in the amount necessary to satisfy the judgment, interest, and costs upon the sale of the property, and for an order appointing a receiver, pendente lite, to take possession of the property and to receive the rents and profits thereof, and to hold the same subject to the disposition thereof to be made by the court.

By a supplemental complaint, the plaintiff stated that, subsequent to the institution of this action, taxes assessed upon the land for county and irrigation purposes became due and payable, said taxes totaling the sum of $4,186.47, and that plaintiffs, by reason of the default of the defendants in the matter of the payment of the same, and to prevent the sale of the property for the satisfaction of said *238 taxes, paid all said taxes; that the same were and are a lien on the mortgaged premises, and prays judgment for the said sum of $4,186.47 in addition to the sum asked in the original complaint.

The larger portions of the complaint are denied by the defendant Bank on information and belief. Said defendant, however, directly denies that.it breached the covenants and conditions of the note and the mortgage, or those of either of them, and alleges that, while the defendant, Raney, by deed, dated September 4, 1920, conveyed to it the land described in the complaint and that thus it acquired the legal title thereto, it took said title in trust for W. W. Stan-forth and Hugh Blair, who were, therefore, the equitable owners of said land and beneficiaries of said trust. The said defendant, in its answer, explains its connection with the lease of said land to the plaintiffs herein, and of which more will be said later on in this opinion.

The defendant, Raney, filed a separate answer, in which he also denies, on information and belief, nearly all of the allegations of the complaint; directly denies that (as the complaint alleges) from the sale of the land under the decree of foreclosure there will not be realized a sufficient sum to satisfy the judgment or that there will be such a deficiency in the amount for which the land is sold as to require or justify the entering of a deficiency judgment against the defendants and in favor of plaintiffs.

Raney also filed a cross-complaint and thereafter amended the same. Therein he sets forth in detail an account of all the transactions culminating, in the conveyance by him to the Bank of the land described in the complaint, and alleges that said Bank, at the time the transfer of the land was made to it, agreed to assume and pay the debt to secure which the mortgage herein involved was given.

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Bluebook (online)
245 P. 235, 76 Cal. App. 232, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brichetto-v-raney-calctapp-1926.