Donald v. Beals

57 Cal. 399
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketNo. 6,880
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 57 Cal. 399 (Donald v. Beals) 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
Donald v. Beals, 57 Cal. 399 (Cal. 1881).

Opinion

McKee. J.:

This case arises out of an action in equity, to obtain a decree that a mortgage, given by the defendant Beals to the plaintiff, is entitled to priority of lien over a mortgage given by him to the defendant Newell, which has been assigned to the defendant Crane, and to compel the recorder of San Mateo County to correct the date of the record of the first mortgage.

The Court below found in favor of the plaintiff, and from the decree, and an order denying a new trial, the defendant Crane brings the case before us on appeal.

It appears, by evidence in the transcript, in which there is no substantial conflict, that the defendant Beals, on the 27th of March, 1878, being indebted to the plaintiff Donald, by a promissory note for the sum of $3,000, payable one year after date, executed to him a mortgage upon certain lands in San Mateo County, to secure the payment of the same; and on the 30th day of March, 1878, being also indebted to the defendant New-ell, by a promissory note for $2,000, payable one year after date, he executed to her a mortgage upon the same lands to secure its payment.

These mortgages were given in renewal of subsisting mortgages upon the same lands in favor of the same parties. But as the causes of action on those were about to expire by limitation, Beals proposed to renew them in the same order in which they had been recorded—the Donald mortgage being the first. To this, the mortgagees assented; and it was expressly understood and agreed between them, that the new mortgage to Donald should be first executed and recorded, so as to constitute a prior lien upon the lands. Pursuant to this arrangement, Beals executed the mortgages as already stated—the Donald mortgage on the 27th and the Newell mortgage on the 30th of March, 1878. Both mortgages were acknowledged by the mortgagor on the 8th day of April, 1878; and on that day Mrs. Newell satisfied of record her first mortgage, by releasing the same on the margin of the record of the mortgage. That being done, both the new mortgages were afterwards—viz., on the 15th day of April, 1878—deposited for record in the recorder’s office of San Mateo County, in the following order of time, [401]*401viz., the Donald mortgage at 4 o’clock p. M., and the Newell mortgage at 5 o’clock P. M. And on the same day, satisfaction of record of the first Donald mortgage was also entered.

Up to this point, the arrangement and understanding of the parties had been faithfully executed. Mrs. Newell had released her old mortgage on the 8th of April, 1878; Donald did not release his until the 15th day of April, but both the new mortgages were deposited in the recorder’s office on the 15th, the Donald mortgage an hour before the other.

When the mortgages were thus deposited, it was the duty of the recorder, under the law, to indorse upon each of them the time when it was received by him, noting the year, month, day, hour, and minute of its reception; and to record the same without delay, in the order, and as of the time, when it was received for record ; and he was also required to note, at the foot of the record of each, the exact time of its reception, and the name of the person at whose request it was recorded. (§ 4241, Pol. Code.) This duty the recorder performed, by indorsing on the Donald mortgage that it was deposited for record April 15th, 1878, at 4 o’clock p. m. But the Court below finds that the notation of the date was “hastily and carelessly written, and may be read for April 18th, instead of April 15th, the true date of the filing, indorsement, and recording of the same.” And, in fact, it was indexed and recorded before the Newell mortgage; but in transcribing it in the mortgage book the recorder, by mistake, noted at the foot of the record that it was recorded April 18th, 1878, and this mistake he carried into the certificate of registration, which he annexed to the mortgage, so that it was made to appear that the mortgage had been recorded on the 18th day of April, 1878, when, in fact, it had been actually recorded on the 15th, an hour before the Newell mortgage. A mortgage of posteriority of date and lien was thus, by the appearance of the record, given precedence to one of priority of date and entitled to priority of lien.

But the Donald mortgage was deemed in law to have been recorded at the moment of time when it was deposited in the recorder’s office with the proper officer for record. (§ 1170, Civ. Code.) Therefore, the indorsement made upon it by the officer at the time of the deposit was as effectual, for the [402]*402purpose of registration, as though the mortgage itself had been transcribed in the proper book of the recorder’s office.

Yet, where there is a conflict between the actual record, as it appears in the record book, and the constructive record by the indorsement made upon the instrument, at the time it was deposited for record, the latter must give way to the former, unless those dealing with the former had notice and knowledge of the latter. For the law protects those who, in good faith, acquire title or security upon land upon the faith of the record, and it would not allow slight circumstances or mere conjecture to overthrow rights bona fide acquired under deeds or mortgages appearing first on record. Courts of equity grant no relief against such purchasers, because they have, at least, equal rights. But where one acquires a right with notice of 'the existence of a prior equity in conflict with the right which he acquires, he is not considered in law an innocent purchaser. Nor can good faith be predicated of a transaction which is merely colorable.

Now the assignment of the Newell mortgage was made under the following circumstances, viz.: Mrs. Newell, knowing that the Donald mortgage had been first deposited for record, had commenced an action against Beals alone to foreclose her mortgage, upon an optional clause in the mortgage that the entire debt should become due in default of the payment of the interest as it became due; and in the action she had filed a lis pendens. But while the action was pending, an attorney, “ who had heard that the Donald mortgage was a prior lien upon the land,” had discovered, by an inspection of the records, that her mortgage, according to the record, was, in fact, first recorded, and suggested to her the discovery by asking her “ why she was so foolish as to go to the expense of changing her mortgage for Donald’s benefit, and whether her mortgage was in fact a second mortgage.” Upon this hint, she answered that “ she did not know whether it was so or not, but she wished he would go and see.” He accordingly took from the records a memorandum in pencil of the recorded dates of the two mortgages, and handed it to her. She then engaged him to make a more formal abstract of the facts for her use, and upon receiving it, she assigned her note and mortgage to the defendant Crane, [403]*403and upon a recordation of the assignment, dismissed her action to foreclose. The attorneys in that transaction are now the attorneys for the assignee in this, and by them it is contended, in his behalf, that in taking the assignment he was an innocent purchaser—bought, in fact, without notice of the prior equity of the plaintiff, and in good faith. But the record does not sustain him in that character. All the circumstances attending the assignment show that he had notice, or, at all events, a knowledge of facts which were sufficient to put him, as a prudent man, upon inquiries which would have led him to the truth existing in the knowledge of his assignor and of her attorney.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Cal. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-v-beals-cal-1881.