Dobbins v. Economic Gas Co.

189 P. 1073, 182 Cal. 616, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 555
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 6171.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 189 P. 1073 (Dobbins v. Economic Gas Co.) 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
Dobbins v. Economic Gas Co., 189 P. 1073, 182 Cal. 616, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 555 (Cal. 1920).

Opinions

OLNEY, J.

This is an action to recover the mesne profits of certain real property in the possession of the defendant, a public utility gas company, and used by it as a part of its gas plant. The plaintiff had recovered a judgment foreclosing a mortgage upon the property, to which mortgage the defendant was not a party, and had bought in the property at the foreclosure sale and claims to be the owner by reason of such foreclosure. The profits sought to be recovered are for the period subsequent to the foreclosure sale. The defendant had judgment and the plaintiff appeals. The ultimate question in the case is, Did the foreclosure decree affect the defendant’s interestÍ

The plaintiff, Mrs. Dobbins, was the original owner of the property. In April, 1903, she conveyed it to a corporation known as the Los Angeles Suburban Gas Company, which for brevity we will call the Suburban Company. In consideration of this conveyance the Suburban Company gave Mrs. Dobbins fifty thousand dollars in par value of its bonds, part of an authorized issue of three hundred thousand dollars secured by mortgage or trust deed previously executed and recorded and which in anticipation of the conveyance from Mrs. Dobbins described the property involved here as a part of the property mortgaged. It was this mortgage which was subsequently foreclosed and under the decree foreclosing which Mrs. Dobbins purchased and *620 now claims. ■ The deed hy Mrs. Dobbins to the Suburban Company was never recorded' and was apparently lost. [1] The result was that the Suburban Company was on the record not connected with the'title; the mortgage by it, although recorded, * did not come into the record chain of title and constructive notice of it was not given by its record to subsequent purchasers, and Mrs. Dobbins remained as the record owner of the property free of any encumbrance.

In this state of affairs Mrs. Dobbins in ’June, 1906, conveyed the property by quitclaim deed to a company known as the Peoples Gas Company, which, in turn, conveyed the property to the Peoples Gas and Coke Company. The latter was really nothing but the former under another name, and for the purposes of discussion the two may be treated as one. The effect of the conveyance by Mrs. Dobbins to the Peoples Company was, of course, so far as the record is concerned, to put the title in the latter free and clear of any encumbrance, and, in particular, of the mortgage by the Suburban Company. In fact, however, the quitclaim deed was not intended by the parties to put the title in the Peoples Company free of that mortgage. The Suburban Company was merely a subsidiary of the Peoples' Company, all of its stock practically being owned by the latter, and the latter having taken over the Suburban plant. This was represented to Mrs. Dobbins, together with the fact that her original deed to the Suburban Company had been lost without being recorded, and the quitclaim deed was executed by her upon the understanding that it was to confirm to the Peoples Company the title conveyed by the lost deed to the Suburban Company. According to this understanding, the record title which the Peoples Company obtained by the quitclaim deed was to be subject to the mortgage securing the bonds taken by Mrs. Dobbins in original payment for the property.

[2] This understanding would, of course, be effective as between the parties. The result was that while the quitclaim deed had the effect of putting the record title in the Peoples Company free and clear of all encumbrances, yet the mortgage by the Suburban Company was as to the record owner a valid and subsisting lien, although not one of which the record would give anyone purchasing from the *621 record owner constructive notice. In other words, the ease was one where the record title was subject to what was, in effect, an unrecorded mortgage. It follows that anyone subsequently purchasing for value from the Peoples Company would take free of the mortgage if he purchased in good faith and without notice, but otherwise he would not. The Peoples Company did sell to one Hayes, and Hayes in turn sold to the defendant. Both purchased for value, and if either purchased without notice, the record title acquired by such purchaser was at once freed of the latent equity of what was in effect the unrecorded mortgage by the Suburban Company. The question, therefore, which is determinative of the real merits of the case as between Mrs. Dobbins and the defendant is, Did either the defendant or Hayes purchase without notice, actual or constructive, of her mortgage?

The evidence that both Hayes and the defendant had actual notice of Mrs. Dobbins’ claim when they purchased is ample and conclusive.. It is unnecessary, however, to state the facts showing such notice, for constructive notice was plainly given them by the record. • Prior to the purchase by Hayes suit had actually been begun to foreclose the Suburban mortgage. It was originally begun by one Gallagher, who claimed to own some bonds secured by it. Mrs. Dobbins and the Peoples Company were both made defendants. Mrs. Dobbins appeared and filed a cross-complaint seeking for herself as the owner of fifty thousand dollars of bonds to secure the foreclosure of the mortgage. The Peoples Company was made a party defendant to the cross-complaint, which alleged that the Peoples Company claimed some interest in the property, but that such interest was subject and subordinate to the mortgage. When Mrs. Dobbins’ cross-complaint was filed a lis pendens was duly recorded, naming the Peoples Company as one against whom relief was sought. It was subsequent to the filing of the cross-complaint and the recording of the lis pendens that Hayes purchased from the Peoples Company, and the defendant, in turn, from Hayes. Hayes and the defendant were, therefore, notified of Mrs. Dobbins’ complaint and of the nature of the cause of action there set up. At the same time they had notice from the record that the Peoples Company was the holder of the record title by deed from *622 Mrs. Dobbins. But of necessity Mrs. Dobbins could not be maintaining a suit tp subject the interest of the Peoples Company to foreclosure except upon a claim that for some reason not appearing on the face of the record the unencumbered title which she had apparently conveyed to the Peoples Company was, in fact, encumbered. [3] In other words, the nature of the suit, taken in connection with the record chain of title, was unmistakable notice to Hayes and the defendant of her claim. It follows at once that if her claim was valid, as it was, they took subject to it, and their interests were subordinate to the mortgage. This being the case, the interests of the defendant were foreclosed by the foreclosure and sale, and Mrs. Dobbins is now the owner of the property.

Our discussion so far has been concerned with the underlying facts which go to the real merits of the matter as between the parties.. It is also claimed, however, on behalf of Mrs. Dobbins that the very question as to whether or not the interest of tlie Peoples Company was subject to the .mortgage was litigated in the foreclosure suit itself and there determined adversely -to that company, and that the defendant here is bound by that adjudication as a purchaser pendente lite.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 1073, 182 Cal. 616, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbins-v-economic-gas-co-cal-1920.