Forbush v. San Diego Fruit & Produce Co.

266 P. 659, 46 Idaho 231, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 96
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1928
DocketNo. 4791.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 266 P. 659 (Forbush v. San Diego Fruit & Produce Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forbush v. San Diego Fruit & Produce Co., 266 P. 659, 46 Idaho 231, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 96 (Idaho 1928).

Opinion

*237 GIVENS, J.

Plaintiff was the owner of the land on which the potatoes hereafter referred to were raised but had leased it to one Haderlie. In 1921 Haderlie subleased it to two Japanese, J. Oyama and Y. Nakio, taking a crop mortgage covering the 1921 and 1922 crops to secure two notes given by the lessees for $2,000 each, the amount of the annual rental.

In May, 1922, a mortgage covering certain specified crops on this same land was given to the Idaho Agricultural Loan Company to secure a note for $200. This was signed by J. Oyama and Ko Oyama, his wife.

Both of these mortgages were assigned in due course to the plaintiff, Mrs. For bush.

During the fall of 1922, and while Oyama was still in possession of the Forbush ranch, approximately 121,000 pounds of potatoes were hauled from the ranch to a warehouse in Idaho Falls. The mortgagee, asserting her lien under the mortgages after the same were due, demanded the possession of the potatoes. Her demand was refused. Thereafter this action was brought to recover the value of the crops alleged to have been converted. The plaintiff had judgment for the full amount of her claim.

The defendant has appealed, making numerous assignments of error, only five of which it is necessary to notice.

1. It is urged that the trial court has erred in admitting certain evidence showing deliveries after respondent had failed and refused to specify such deliveries in a bill of particulars demanded by appellant.

The office of a bill of particulars is to inform the party demanding the same of the causes of action or defenses to be relied on at the trial not specifically set forth in the complaint or answer. Its purpose is not to compel the adverse party to reveal his evidence. (Intermountain Association of Credit Men v. Milwaukee Mechanics’ Ins. Co., 44 Ida. 491, 258 Pac. 362; Blackburn v. Washington Min. Co., 19 Wash. 361, 53 Pac. 369.)

Furthermore, where the party demanding a bill of particulars has presumably better knowledge than the party *238 from whom it is demanded, the latter will not be compelled to submit such a bill. (Church v. Spiegelberg, 33 Fed. 158; American Transfer Co. v. Borgfeldt & Co., 99 App. Div. 470, 91 N. Y. Supp. 209; see, also, 31 Cyc. 579.)

In the present case, appellant demanded of the respondent particulars in regard to the alleged deliveries of certain potatoes by the mortgagors. Respondent had alleged that these potatoes had been delivered to appellant’s own warehouse. The evidence established such deliveries. Obviously, appellant had better knowledge of these transactions, or was in a better position to secure it from its own books than was respondent. Therefore, even if the appellant was entitled to the information demanded, no prejudice resulted from a failure to give it.

2. It is urged that the crop mortgage given by Oyama and Nakio to Haderlie, and by him assigned to the respondent, is invalid because it was not signed by the wife of Oyama.

Assuming, without deciding, that a third party can question this defect where it appears in a mortgage otherwise valid, it need only be pointed out that nowhere in the evidence does it appear that at the time the mortgage was given, either of the mortgagors was married. It does appear that Oyama was married in May, 1922, but the mortgage in question was given in March, 1921. Rights created by the mortgage at the date of the mortgage could not be destroyed by the subsequent marriage of one of the parties.

3. Appellant contends that respondent erred in bringing an action for conversion. It is urged that under C. S., sec. 6949, there can be but one action for the recovery of a mortgage debt and that the mortgagee should have proceeded to have foreclosed her mortgage and, in the same action, by joining all the parties involved, have recovered any damages which she had suffered by reason of the conversion.

The pertinent part of C. S., sec. 6949, is as follows:

“There can be but one action for the recovery of any debt, or the enforcement of any right secured by mortgage *239 ■upon real estate or personal property, -which action must be in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.”

The statute then provides for the sale of the encumbered property under a court order and the entry of a deficiency judgment for the balance of the debt not covered by the proceeds of the sale.

This statute follows as a natural corollary of the proposition, which is well established in this state, that a chattel mortgage conveys no title to the mortgagee, but gives a mere lien on the property mortgaged as security. (C. S., sec. 6360.) Following default, the mortgagee must take some affirmative action to divest the mortgagor of his title to the mortgaged goods, and it was to protect the mortgagor from the necessity of defending himself against a multiplicity of actions which might be brought both on the debt and for the enforcement of the security that this statute was enacted. (Martin v. Becker, 169 Cal. 301, 146 Pac. 665.)

In the case just cited the supreme court of California was construing a statute identical with the one under consideration herein. The court held that its sole purpose was to protect the mortgagor and that it “has no applicability whatsoever unless the action which is brought directly affects his rights under the mortgage contract.” (See, also, Knowles v. Sandercock, 107 Cal. 629, 40 Pac. 1047.)

On a number of occasions this court has construed the meaning of the “one action” referred to in C. S., sec. 6949, and an analysis of the cases indicates that in its interpretation it has reached the same conclusion as the California court.

In all of the cases where the question has arisen in this state, the facts were somewhat similar to those in the case at bar, involving the conversion of mortgaged chattels either before or pending foreclosure of the mortgage. In each case the mortgagee brought an action in claim and delivery and, where the facts showed the action to have been brought against one other than the mortgagor, recovery was allowed. (Cederholm v. Loofborrow, 2 Ida. 191, & Pac. *240 641; O’Neill v. Whitcomb, 3 Ida. 624, 32 Pac. 1133; First National Bank v. Steers, 9 Ida. 519, 108 Am. St. 174, 75 Pac. 225; Adams v. Caldwell Milling Co., 33 Ida. 677, 197 Pac. 723; Berg v. Carey, 40 Ida. 278, 232 Pac. 904; Portland Cattle Loan Co. v. Biehl, 42 Ida. 39, 245 Pac. 88.)

In O’Neill v. Whitcomb, supra, the court, replying to the contention that an action in claim and delivery was not the “one action” contemplated by C. S., sec. 6949, said:

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Bluebook (online)
266 P. 659, 46 Idaho 231, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forbush-v-san-diego-fruit-produce-co-idaho-1928.