Elmore Jameson Co. v. Smith

93 P.2d 1063, 34 Cal. App. 2d 609
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 1939
DocketCiv. 2332; Civ. 2341; Civ. 2342
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 93 P.2d 1063 (Elmore Jameson Co. v. Smith) 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
Elmore Jameson Co. v. Smith, 93 P.2d 1063, 34 Cal. App. 2d 609 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

J.—The above-numbered actions were consolidated on appeal. One action, commenced July 1, 1932, was an ordinary action upon a promissory note and to foreclose a crop mortgage dated July 19, 1929, executed by Leslie Smith, mortgagor, to John J. Elmore, mortgagee, which mortgage was given as security for its payment upon all crops to be grown upon certain premises in Imperial County during the term of a certain lease held by the mortgagor from David N. Barry and George Diddock.

Plaintiff sought a restraining order and applied for the appointment of a receiver. Leslie Smith and Grace Smith, by way of answer, alleged the execution of some independent written agreement between John J. Elmore and Leslie Smith which they claimed was unfulfilled and repudiated and that by virtue thereof the mortgage “has been abandoned by the said John J. Elmore”. T. N. Montgomery set up in a cross-complaint a request for an accounting and also alleged that he did on October 9, 1931, accept from Grace Smith and Leslie Smith two chattel mortgages (duly recorded, but recorded subsequent to the execution and recordation of the Elmore mortgage), upon certain crops to be grown on the same premises, believing that John J. Elmore and his assignee, Elmore Jameson Company, a corporation, had abandoned and repudiated its mortgage and alleged that Elmore Jameson Company, a corporation, assignee, was now estopped from asserting its chattel mortgage lien and claimed that his chattel mortgage was first and a superior lien upon the security. There was also an action in replevin filed by Elmore Jameson Company, a corporation, as assignee, to recover possession of the barley crop which had in the meantime been harvested by *612 T. N. Montgomery, mortgagee, in the subsequent chattel mortgages.

In this second action the same general defense was interposed with the additional allegation of the defendant Montgomery that he had a claim or lien for services in the harvesting of the crop.

The application for the appointment of a receiver was denied by the court but on the first day of July, 1932, the court issued a temporary restraining order to defendants, restraining them from “removing any of said crop of barley ... or from doing anything therewith that will in anywise affect the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage herein”. This restraining order was dissolved July 8, 1932. On July 9, 1932, the present action in replevin was filed and after giving security in the form of a bond in the sum of $3,000, plaintiff took the crop and sold it, as it claims under the terms of the mortgage, at a price higher than the then prevailing market price. Plaintiff also left on the premises sufficient barley to pay all rental charges. The crop sold for $1621.32, which sum was held by the plaintiff. These actions were consolidated for the purpose of trial.

The trial court found that Elmore Jameson Company, a corporation, as assignee, had a crop mortgage upon all of the crops involved in the action and that it was a first and superior lien thereon and prior to the lien of the second mortgages held by Montgomery. The court also sanctioned the sale of the grain made by the Elmore Jameson Company, a corporation, and rendered judgment that it pay to Montgomery $756.08, which represented three-fourths of the reasonable value of his services in harvesting the crop and the reasonable value of the sacks which Montgomery furnished for that purpose. The balance, or one-fourth of the cost, was held to be a charge against the lessee, Leslie Smith. It also held that plaintiff was entitled to all of the proceeds of the sale of the crop, except the amount found due Montgomery as his harvesting and threshing charges set forth, and entered judgment accordingly. Defendants appealed from the judgment rendered in the consolidated actions, excepting that portion of the judgment in favor of T. N. Montgomery. Plaintiff appealed only from that part of the judgment awarding T. N. Montgomery $756.08. The separate appeals are before us solely on the judgment roll alone.

*613 . Defendants contend that under section 2910 of the Civil Code the plaintiff’s lien under its mortgage was lost or destroyed by its action in replevying the barley and then selling it without complying with section 2967 of the Civil Code, and while the barley was in its possession under the levy; that this was tantamount to a conversion and accordingly the mortgage lien was extinguished (citing Steele v. Marborough Hall Corp., 100 Cal. App. 491, 494 [280 Pac. 380]; Bailey v. Security Trust Co., 34 Cal. App. 348, 354 [167 Pac. 409]; Nelson v. Yonge, 73 Cal. App. 704, 710 [239 Pac. 67]).

It is further contended that plaintiff’s lien was also lost because the sale was illegal, not being made after notice, as required by sections 2967, 3000, 3001, 3002, and 3005, Civil Code, citing Metheny v. Davis, 107 Cal. App. 137 [290 Pac. 91]; Blodgett v. Rheinschild, 56 Cal. App. 728, 738 [206 Pac. 674]; and that plaintiff’s lien having been extinguished, defendant Montgomery was entitled to the entire value of the grain crop at the time of trial to satisfy his mortgage and “threshing lien”.

John J. Elmore, in his agreement with defendant Smith, the grower, agreed to pay all harvesting and threshing charges and furnish necessary equipment therefor. Also, sufficient crops were to be released from the mortgage to pay the rental charges on the leased premises.

It must be conceded that a power of sale may be given in a chattel mortgage. (See. 2932, Civ. Code; Sherlock v. Alturas State Bank, 73 Cal. App. 391 [238 Pac. 816] ; Peet v. People’s Trust & Sav. Bank, 56 Cal. App. 46 [204 Pac. 413].) It is also settled that where a chattel mortgage by its terms gives to the mortgagee the right to take possession of the mortgaged property, upon default in payment, the prior election by the mortgagee to foreclose the mortgage does not bar an action of replevin by the mortgagee to recover possession of the property. Such remedy is ancillary and auxiliary to the foreclosure, resting upon the right of possession given by the contract. (Ely v. Williams, 6 Cal. App. 455 [92 Pac. 393] ; Flinn v. Ferry, 127 Cal. 648, 652 [60 Pac. 434].)

We are mindful of the provisions of section 2967 of the Civil Code which provides that “A mortgagee of personal property, when the debt to secure which the mortgage was executed becomes due, may foreclose the mortgagor’s right of *614 redemption by a sale of the property, made in the manner and upon the notice prescribed by the title on ‘pledge’, or by proceedings under the Code of Civil Procedure,” and of the general rule that a power of sale, if given in a chattel mortgage or independent instrument, must be exercised in accordance with the provisions thereof and in the manner provided by law, and if not so exercised the sale is void, and results in the extinguishment of the mortgage lien. (Henderson v. Fisher, 38 Cal. App. 270 [176 Pac. 63]; Helmick v. Holaday, 106 Cal. App. 380, 386 [289 Pac. 224]; Sherlock v.

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93 P.2d 1063, 34 Cal. App. 2d 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elmore-jameson-co-v-smith-calctapp-1939.