First National Bank of Los Angeles v. Maxwell

55 P. 980, 123 Cal. 360
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1899
DocketL. A. No. 316
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 55 P. 980 (First National Bank of Los Angeles v. Maxwell) 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
First National Bank of Los Angeles v. Maxwell, 55 P. 980, 123 Cal. 360 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

Suit to remove a cloud and quiet title to real estate. Findings and judgment were for the defendants, and the plaintiff appeals from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial. Walter S. Maxwell, the husband of Amelia, their three children, all minors, and Charles A. Baskerville, as trustee, were the other defendants. The property involved was the separate property of Mrs. Maxwell.

The facts, briefly stated, are as follows: On and prior to August 23, 1893, Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell were indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of nine thousand three hundred dollars, and plaintiff had instructed its attorneys to commence proceedings by attachment against them to collect, said indebtedness, and to attach the property here in controversy. Before commencing suit plaintiff sent for Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell and informed them that an immediate settlement must be made, or proceedings would be taken for its collection; that said defendants requested delay, saying they had reasonable prospects of settling in a few days. Plaintiff then agreed, “on condition that Mrs. Maxwell would make no disposition of her property and make no change in the situation of it, that proceedings would be postponed until Saturday”; that Mrs. Maxwell then promised, “on her honor, using those words,” that she would make or suffer no change in the situation of her property; whereupon plaintiff instructed its attorneys to delay proceedings until the following Saturday; [364]*364that Mrs. Maxwell, the same day, went to her attorneys and executed a deed to the defendant, Baskerville, conveying to him the .property here in controversy in trust for her three minor children, by the terms of which the trustee was to pay the rents •and profits thereof, not exceeding three hundred dollars per month, to Mrs. Maxwell, for the clothing, support, education, et cetera,, of said children, and any surplus over that sum to be deposited in a savings bank in the name of the children, to be accumulated until the youngest should arrive at majority, when it should be distributed to them.

This deed was recorded the same day, and on the next plaintiff was informed of it, and with knowledge that it had been executed and recorded the plaintiff took from the Maxwells their promissory note payable one year after date, with interest payable quarterly, and if not so paid the principal to become due and payable upon such default, and a mortgage upon the interest of Mrs. Maxwell in the Lanfranco block, in the city of Los Angeles, to secure said note. Default was made in the payment of the first quarter’s interest, and plaintiff thereupon foreclosed the mortgage, and, after exhausting the mortgaged property, on April 7, 1894, docketed a deficiency judgment for the sum of five thousand one hundred and sixty-seven dollars and five cents.

At and prior to the execution of said trust deed one Etchepare held the promissory note of Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell, then past due, upon which he brought suit in December, 1893, and obtained judgment for seventeen hundred and twenty-three dollars and thirty cents and costs, and an execution issued thereon was levied upon the property described in said trust deed, and the interest of Mrs. Maxwell therein was sold to Etchepare on February 19, 1894.

Upon the plaintiff’s deficiency judgment being docketed (April 7, 1894) an execution was issued thereon, which was returned nulla bona, and thereafter the plaintiff performed all the acts necessary to redeem the said premises from Etchepare, and in due time the sheriff executed and delivered to the plaintiff, as such redemptioner, a deed for the said premises, and said deed was duly recorded prior to the commencement of this action.

The foregoing facts are shown by the evidence without conflict, and, excepting the directions of the plaintiff to its attor[365]*365neys, and the interview between Mr. Elliott, the president of the bank, and Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell, are incorporated in the-findings.

The court, however, made some additional findings, which azoto the effect that prior to the execution of the mortgage to the-plaintiff upon the one-fourth interest in the Lanfranco block,, the French Bank had taken a mortgage upon all the interests therein for sixty thousand dollars upon which Mrs. Maxwell had paid twenty thousand dollars; that at the time of the execution-c.-f the mortgage to the plaintiff she owned other real estate bathe city of Los Angeles “aggregating several thousand dollars-over encumbrances, and was possessed of a large amount of personal property, unincumbered, aggregating in value between five- and six thousand dollars.”

The seventeenth finding is as follows: “The plaintiff knew of the execution of the said trust deed and the financial condition of the said defendants, Walter S. Maxwell and Amelia C. Maxwell, his wife, at the time of the execution, and delivery of the-said note and mortgage by them to the plaintiff on the twenty-fourth day of August, 1893.”

From these findings the court drew the following conclusions of law: “1. That plaintiff waived its right to attack said trust deed;: that no legal redemption in this case was had, and that plaintiff" did not become substituted to the rights of the purchaser at the-sheriff’s sale on the Etchepare judgment, and is not the owner of the property and not entitled to have the same removed as a cloud thereon, or to quiet its title thereto”; and that defendants-are entitled to judgment.

The complaint alleged that said trust deed was made with the-intent to delay and defraud creditors, and especially the plaintiff, and that the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell, were insolvent, and these allegations were denied.

After the findings were filed, but before judgment was entered' thereon, the plaintiff, upon due notice, moved the court to amend" and supplement its findings in several particulars, among them to find upon the question of fraudulent intent in making the-trust deed, and to find that the Etchepare note was made before-the deed of trust was executed. The motion was denied, and plaintiff excepted.

[366]*366As to the latter request, it need only be said that it was so alleged in the complaint, and not denied in the answer. A finding is unnecessary where a fact is admitted by the pleadings.

The other proposed amendments and additions to the findings will be noticed, so far as material, in another connection.

Two principal questions were presented to the trial court: 1. Was said trust deed made by Mrs. Maxwell with intent to delay or defraud her creditors? 2. If so, did the plaintiff waive its right to attack it and to have it declared void?

It is conceded that if the plaintiff is estopped from attacking said trust deed upon the ground that it was made with intent to delay or defraud creditors, it is immaterial to the plaintiff whether it was so made or not.

Appellant contends, however, that the conclusion of the court “that plaintiff waived its right to attack said trust deed,” if regarded as a conclusion of law, is not sustained by the findings; and, if regarded as a finding of an ultimate fact, is not justified by the evidence; and this contention I think must be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P. 980, 123 Cal. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-los-angeles-v-maxwell-cal-1899.