First National Bank of Oakdale v. Brashear

253 P. 143, 200 Cal. 389, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 552
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1927
DocketDocket No. Sac. 3774.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 253 P. 143 (First National Bank of Oakdale v. Brashear) 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 Oakdale v. Brashear, 253 P. 143, 200 Cal. 389, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 552 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This appeal is prosecuted by the plaintiff in an action wherein the latter sought to foreclose a chattel mortgage which had been executed to it by the defendants E. E. Brashear and Marie Brashear on October 22, 1921, to secure a promissory note for the principal sum of $6,300, also then executed, and which note provided for interest and future advances. The mortgage in question was in form a crop mortgage, by the terms of which the Brashears mortgaged to the plaintiff the crops growing and to be grown during a series of succeeding years upon a certain tract of land consisting of 1,000 acres which had been subleased to said E. E. Brashear during the year 1920 by two certain parties named Collins and Cathey, who were, in *391 turn, the lessees of a much larger tract of land, which embraced the above acreage, from the Turlock Irrigation District, the owner thereof. The sublease to E. E. Brashear provided that the latter should summer-fallow at least 300 acres of said subleased land each year and that in the event of his failure so to do his lease should become null and void. It was while he was the holder of said sublease that E. E. Brashear and his wife executed and delivered to the plaintiff the note and mortgage above mentioned, and which mortgage purported to cover two-thirds of the crops grown and to be grown upon said land. In July, 1920, said Collins and Cathey assigned their lease of the larger tract to one J. T. Denton, and upon the date thereof the irrigation district executed a new lease to Denton covering the same property for a lengthened term of years and at a reduced rental. Upon the same date Denton executed a new sublease to Brashear for the remainder of the term covered by his former lease and containing the same clause relative to summer-fallowing during the term thereof of 300 acres of the subleased land. During the spring of the year 1922 and while the defendant E. E. Brashear and his wife were in possession of the premises thus subleased he proceeded to summer-fallow approximately 400 acres of said land preparatory to planting the same with grain during the proper planting season of that or the following year. After having done so, and being apparently much involved financially, Brashear applied to the plaintiff for further credit; which application being rather coldly received Brashear concluded to surrender his sublease to his immediate landlord Denton and abandon the premises, and he accordingly on or about September 21, 1922, executed and caused to be recorded a formal surrender of said sublease to said Denton, and shortly thereafter Brashear and his wife abandoned said premises and went to live elsewhere. Thereupon said Denton went into possession of the premises thus surrendered and abandoned and subsequently thereto and on October 22, 1922, made and entered into an agreement with the defendant Huddleson, which agreement was in the form of a cropping lease covering about 360 acres of said 1,000-acre tract, wherein it was provided .that said Huddleson was to plant and cultivate a crop or crops of grain upon said land which had thereto *392 fore been summer-fallowed, and was upon the harvesting thereof to deliver to Denton one-fourth of the crops thus sown and harvested. Huddleson, under this agreement, went into the possession of said 360 acres of land and proceeded to plant, cultivate, and harvest a crop of grain thereon, while Denton proceeded to plant and harvest a crop of grain upon some 50 acres of said already summer-fallowed land of which he retained possession. In August, 1923, while the crops so seeded and cultivated by defendants Huddleson and Denton were in process of being harvested, the plaintiff herein commenced this action, making Brashear and his wife and also Denton and Huddleson defendants therein, seeking to foreclose its aforesaid crop mortgage upon the crops thus grown upon said land. A receiver was appointed in said action, who took possession of the crops and harvested and sold the same under order of said court and deposited the proceeds of such sale with the clerk of the court to await the outcome of said action. The case, when the issues were made up, was first brought to trial before a jury, but the trial court presently concluded that the action was equitable in its nature, and after discharging the jury proceeded to hear and determine the same. By its findings of fact and conclusions of law the trial court found and concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment against E. E. Brashear and his wife upon their promissory note to it for the amount remaining" due thereon, but that as to the crops and the proceeds thereof grown and harvested by Huddleson and Denton upon said premises the plaintiff was entitled to no relief. From the judgment which followed to the same effect the plaintiff has prosecuted the present appeal.

The sole question presented to the court for consideration upon this appeal is as to" whether or not the crop mortgage which had been given by the Brashears to the plaintiff had become so far effective upon the summer-fallowing work upón said premises which had been done by the Brashears in the spring of 1922 as to entitle the plaintiff to enforce its crop mortgage against the crops thereafter sown and grown upon said premises, when it appeared that the same had been sown and grown thereon after the surrender and abandonment of said premises and of his sublease thereof by said Brashear and when the *393 possession of said premises had been resumed by Denton and a new cropping agreement had been entered into as between himself and the defendant Huddleson, and when the latter, in pursuance thereof, had sown and grown the crops which were sought to be subjected to the lien of the plaintiff’s said mortgage. It is the contention of the appellant that when the summer-fallowing of that portion of the said premises had been done by the Brashears a sufficiently decisive step had been taken in the direction of the planting and growing of the crop or crops of grain thereon as would suffice to entitle the plaintiff to assert the lien of its mortgage against such crops as were thereafter grown upon said summer-fallowed premises, even though the Brashears had surrendered the possession of said lands to their lessor, who had in turn executed a new cropping lease to the succeeding tenant Huddleson, by whom the crops sought to be subjected to said mortgage had been actually sown and grown. We are unable to agree with this contention, for while it is true that a crop mortgage may be made to cover the crops thereafter to be sown and grown upon leased land, as was held by this court in the case of Arques v. Wasson, 51 Cal. 620 [21 Am. Rep. 718], and while it is true, as stated in that case, that such a mortgage has a potential existence during the period prior to the actual planting of the seed in said land upon which the crops to be subjected to said mortgage are to be grown, our attention has been called to no case, either in this or in any other jurisdiction, which goes so far as to hold that such a crop mortgage shall pass the point of such potential existence at any time prior to the actual planting with seed of said land.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Watson v. Commissioner
15 T.C. 800 (U.S. Tax Court, 1950)
Campbell v. Sutton
145 P.2d 91 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)
In re Borchert
47 F. Supp. 387 (S.D. California, 1942)
Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank v. Jones
92 P.2d 390 (California Supreme Court, 1939)
City of Los Angeles v. Deacon
46 P.2d 165 (California Supreme Court, 1935)
Callahan v. Martin
43 P.2d 788 (California Supreme Court, 1935)
Albrethsen v. Clements
279 P. 1097 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1929)
Congdon v. G. M. H. Wagner & Sons
278 P. 863 (California Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 P. 143, 200 Cal. 389, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-oakdale-v-brashear-cal-1927.