Everts v. Matteson

132 P.2d 476, 21 Cal. 2d 437, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 466
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1942
DocketL. A. 18408
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 132 P.2d 476 (Everts v. Matteson) 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
Everts v. Matteson, 132 P.2d 476, 21 Cal. 2d 437, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 466 (Cal. 1942).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

— The appellants have been held liable for the difference between the amount due and unpaid upon a promissory note made by their predecessors in interest and the sum for which the real property securing the indebtedness was sold under the provisions of a deed of trust. The important question for decision concerns their right to limit the amount of any judgment by the fair value of the property at the time of the sale.

In 1934, the defendants Matteson borrowed $22,500 from Bank of America. To obtain this loan, which was made at the Whittier branch of the institution,- the Mattesons executed their promissory note in favor. of the bank and also a deed of trust, in which the bank was named as beneficiary, to certain real property owned by them. The note provided for monthly payments of principal at the rate of $100 or more and that on October 28, 1935, “the entire balance of principal and interest then unpaid shall become due and payable. ’ ’

*440 Early in 1935 the appellants agreed to buy the real property from the Mattesons. To consummate the transaction, the Mattesons deposited in escrow, with the same branch of the bank which had made the loan, their deed dated February 6, 1935, in which the appellants were named as grantees. The deed recited that the real property described in it was conveyed subject to the “deed of trust of record in the amount of $22,500.00 in favor of Bank of America N. T- & S. A., which the grantees herein assume and agree to pay.” ■

In addition to the deed, there was delivered to the escrow department of the bank an agreement executed by the bank and the appellants under date of February 7, 1935, providing as follows: “For and in consideration of the extension for two (2) years and four (4) months of the maturity of the last installment, said maturity date being October 28, 1935, of that certain promissory note dated August 28, 1934, executed by C. A. Matteson and Martha Daley Matteson, which extension is hereby granted by Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, I hereby guarantee the payment of the aforesaid note, together with all interest due or to become due thereon, and any renewal or extension thereof, and this guaranty shall not be affected by any forebearanee to any successors in interest of the undersigned. And I hereby promise to pay the sum of . . . [$100.] or more, on the principal of said note on the 28th day of March, 1935, and . . . [$100.] or more, on the 28th day of each and every •calendar month thereafter until the 28th day of February, 1938, on which said date the entire balance of principal and interest then unpaid shall become due and payable as herein above provided.”

The principal of the note was not paid at its maturity as extended and, pursuant to the power of sale contained in the trust deed, the trustee sold at public auction the property described therein to the beneficiary for $19,000. The note was then assigned to the respondent who commenced •this action against the original makers and the appellants to recover the difference between the amount realized by the sale and the unpaid principal and accrued interest due on the nóte.

In his original complaint, the respondent set forth in haec verba the note and the instrument signed by the appellants. He alleged the execution of the trust deed as security for *441 the payment of the note, and the sale of the property subject to the deed of trust after default by the defendants, and demanded judgment for the deficiency. The Mattesons having failed to appear, their default was entered. Shortly thereafter, the respondent filed an amended complaint with the same allegations as those in the original complaint but, in addition, charging that the reasonable value of the real property at the date of its sale under the deed of trust was $19,000. No service of the amended complaint was made upon the Mattesons and they did not appear in the action.

The appellants, by answer, admitted the execution of the agreement of February 7, 1935, but denied that the reasonable value of the real property when sold by the trustee was $19,000. On the contrary, they asserted its reasonable value was then $28,000. They also presented additional defenses.

By the first of these, the appellants alleged that the agreement was executed by them and the bank through a mutual misapprehension of law. According to their pleading, the officer who signed the agreement for the bank represented to them that he was familiar with the law with respect to deficiency judgments and that if they signed the agreement they would not, under any circumstances, be liable for a deficiency judgment. It was in reliance upon this representation, the answer continued, that they signed the agreement.

As a second defense, the appellants pleaded that the bank officer fraudulently induced them to execute the agreement by falsely representing that they would never be liable to pay a deficiency judgment. He told them, according to the answer, that in the event of foreclosure, an appraiser would be appointed by a court and the property would have to be bid in at the appraised value which would not be less than $54,000, this sum representing the bank’s own appraisal of the property and the value at which the property was carried on its books. It was also alleged that the respondent is an officer and employee of the assignor bank who paid no consideration for the assignment to him, took the note with notice of all its infirmities, and became the holder of it after maturity.

Prior to trial, the respondent’s motion to strike the defenses of fraud and mistake of law was granted. Upon trial, the respondent moved the court to strike the denial by the appellants of his allegation of reasonable value and the alie *442 gation in the answer that the property had a reasonable value of $28,000 at the time of the trust deed sale. As a part of the motion, the respondent sought a ruling of the trial court excluding all evidence offered by the appellants to establish the reasonable value of the real property on the ground that they were guarantors of the note sued upon and, as such, are not entitled to invoke the provisions of section 580a of the Code of Civil Procedure. This motion was granted and the court denied the appellants’ motion for leave to file an amended answer, which in substance was essentially similar to the original answer. But the proposed pleading included a more extended recital of the facts relating to the negotiations between the officers of the bank and the appellants, with the statement that, because of friendly business relations with the bank, they had confidence in it and its officers at the time they executed the extension agreement. Upon the same facts a defense of estoppel was tendered.

To prove his cause of action, the respondent offered in evidence the promissory note and the deed of trust securing it, the agreement executed by the appellants, and the trustee’s deed. The deed executed by the Mattesons was received as evidence in behalf of the appellants. But the court sustained the respondent’s objection to the admission of the report of an appraiser, appointed by it at the request of the appellants, fixing the value of the property at $24,000 as of the date of the sale under the trust deed. And the court also refused the appellants’ offer to prove the other allegations of the proposed second amended answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P.2d 476, 21 Cal. 2d 437, 1942 Cal. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everts-v-matteson-cal-1942.