Cambridge Co. v. Moore

144 P.2d 57, 62 Cal. App. 2d 134, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 745
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 1943
DocketCiv. 14258
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 144 P.2d 57 (Cambridge Co. v. Moore) 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
Cambridge Co. v. Moore, 144 P.2d 57, 62 Cal. App. 2d 134, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 745 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

The question for decision is whether the findings and decision in a former action between plaintiff’s assignor and defendants, for nullifying foreclosure proceedings for the sale of a lot and for the recovery of damages by reason of such sale and for quieting title of the lot in plaintiff, is res judicata of the present action by plaintiff to annul the deed by which one of the defendants acquired title to the lot and for the sum received by her at thé sale of the lot in excess of the amount she paid for the note and trust deed.

Prior to the events hereinafter mentioned, Orland Fitch and his wife were owners of lot 31 block 92 of Beverly Hills *136 subject to their deed of trust in favor of Beverly Hills Investment Corporation as trustee for the benefit of Beverly Hills National Bank and Trust Company, hereinafter referred to as the bank. On September 19, 1933, they conveyed the lot to Vitruvian Corporation hereinafter referred to as Vitruvian. On June 19, 1939, Vitruvian deeded the lot to defendant Dow, which deed was recorded on the 30th of the same month. On the very same day his deed was recorded Dow executed a conveyance of the lot back to Vitruvian and it was never recorded. On September 1, 1939, the beneficiary of the deed of trust declared a default in the payment of the Fitch note secured thereby and demanded a sale of the lot in full. Pursuant to such declaration the trustee recorded the declaration and fixed the 8th of January as the day for the sale which was postponed from time to time until January 18, 1940. On the 17th of January Miss W. E. Stowell called upon defendant Bussell, an utter stranger to her and to Vitruvian, and stated that she knew the owner of the lot, one Neal V. Dow, who was about to lose it by foreclosure of the trust deed; that she desired to acquire it for her sister, Mrs. Fitch; that she would procure an adequate conveyance to Bussell if he would protect the lot from the pending foreclosure and resell it to her within 30 days at an advance of $1,500 over the amount due on the trust deed note, to wit: $5,058.64. Miss Stowell did not advise Bussell of Vitruvian’s connection with the matter or tell him that she was an officer of that corporation. But pursuant to his acceptance of her proposal he instructed her to fetch the executed deed from Dow in favor of defendant Moore to his office at 8 o’clock a. m. on the following day. In fulfillment of her appointment Miss Stowell delivered the deed (from Dow to Moore) at the time designated, whereupon Bussell paid the bank the $5,058.64 on behalf of Moore in consideration of the bank’s agreement (1) to assign the note and trust deed to Moore, (2) to rescind the declaration of default and demand for sale and (3) to cause the trustee to cancel the sale scheduled for that very day. After the bank performed according to its agreement, Bussell and Miss Stowell opened an escrow at the Fairfax and Beverly office of the Citizens National Trust & Savings Bank under the terms of which Moore should sell the lot to Stowell within 30 days for the amount paid to the bank by Moore plus the sum of $1,500 or the total of $6,615.64 with interest at seven per cent from date of escrow plus *137 escrow charges, cost of title and fire insurance, and recording fees. No payment on her proposed purchase price was ever made by Stowell within the 30 days or at all.

After Stowell’s failure to make the purchase Moore proceeded to take the necessary and legal steps to perfect her title and to sell the lot by assigning the note and trust deed to defendant Fennell; by having the Beverly Hills Investment Corporation resign as trustee and by having defendant Stockman substituted as trustee by order of court. Such order was recorded in the official records on May 4, 1940. In orderly succession the customary, necessary, and legal acts were performed whereby to effect a valid sale by the substitute trustee. This was accomplished on September 3, 1940, at which time the obligation of the trust deed was in default. One T. C. Laubiseh purchased the lot at the trustee’s sale for the sum of $8,000. Just prior to the sale a paper was read by an agent of Yitruvian advising the persons present that the trust deed of Fitch and wife had been satisfied and discharged on January 18,1940, by the payment of $5,058.64 and that Yitruvian was the owner of the lot 31. By such an act Yitruvian acquiesced in the substitution of Stockman as trustee. Following the sale Stockman delivered his trustee’s deed to Laubiseh who recorded the instrument.

The deed of trust contained the usual provisions of such instruments which authorized all of the acts done by the bank and by Moore and her agents and trustees. It provided that the recitals in the trustee’s deed are conclusive proof of their truth against all persons.

November 20, 1940, Yitruvian filed its complaint in the superior court against the identical defendants named herein to obtain the annulment of 'the deed of trust and for the sum of- $14,719.04 as damages for their acts which divested Yitruvian of its title to the lot, to vacate the decree which appointed Stockman as substitute trustee, and to quiet its title to the lot described in the trust deed.

Although Yitruvian has been in possession of the lot since the trust deed was assigned to defendant Moore, it never made an offer to pay the $5,058.64; never paid taxes and delinquencies for three years prior to filing its action, which exceeded $800 at the time of the trial; never offered to any defendant to do equity in the premises.

In its action Yitruvian alleged that Stowell borrowed the *138 money from Russell to discharge the sum due the bank; that she offered to have the lot conveyed to Russell as security for the loan; and that Russell charged $100 for his services. But the court found against these claims and also determined that Stowell did not employ Russell in connection with any matter mentioned in the findings.

Upon finding the facts as hereinabove recited the court decided and adjudged that Moore paid $5,058.64 for an assignment of the deed of trust and note; that the proceeding to substitute Stockman as trustee under the trust deed was regular and effective; that at the time of the sale to Laubisch the trust deed was a valid lien; that none of the defendants owned the lot after September 3, 1940; that the title of Laubisch be quieted against defendants and that Vitruvian take nothing.

Such findings and decision are sufficiently comprehensive to cover every justiciable claim that Vitruvian might make to the real property which it conveyed to defendant Moore. But after the judgment had been finally affirmed (Vitruvian Corp. v. Laubisch, 49 Cal.App.2d 360 [121 P.2d 784]) Vitruvian conceived the theory that although the trust deed was valid and the sale to Laubisch conveyed a sufficient title to the lot, yet there was no consideration for the deed from Dow to Moore and it should therefore be set aside. Such event would reinstate Vitruvian as owner at the time of the foreclosure sale and entitle it to the surplus over and above the amount paid the bank by Russell.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 P.2d 57, 62 Cal. App. 2d 134, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cambridge-co-v-moore-calctapp-1943.