Glide v. Dwyer

23 P. 706, 83 Cal. 477, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 713
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1890
DocketNo. 12882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 P. 706 (Glide v. Dwyer) 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
Glide v. Dwyer, 23 P. 706, 83 Cal. 477, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 713 (Cal. 1890).

Opinions

Fox, J.

This is a bill in equity, in the nature of a bill of review, brought to set aside a decree of foreclosure, and proceedings subsequently had thereunder, on the alleged ground of fraud. Defendants demurred to the complaint, that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, or to entitle the plaintiff to relief, and specified many particulars wherein it was insufficient, among others, that as to many of the allegations the plaintiff ivas barred by lapse of time and laches. The demurrer was sustained, the plaintiff declined to amend, and judgment was entered for the defendants, from which plaintiff appeals.

This is a case where the rule that a pleading must be construed most strongly against the pleader clearly applies; but coming up as it does, on demurrer, all the allegations of fact therein, not inconsistent with other allegations in the same count, must be taken as true. The deductions to be drawn from them are for the court, and it does not follow that such as are drawn by the pleader are admitted to be correct.

From the allegations of the complaint it appears that on the fifteenth day of April, 1880, the defendants H. T. Holmes and William Gwynn made and executed to the defendants Frank Miller and Daniel Flint, as trustees, their certain mortgage, covering 2,437.38 acres of land, in Lisbon District, Yolo County, in this state, to hold the same in trust as security for the sum of eighty thousand dollars, to the holders of any and all of certain promissory notes in said mortgage described, to wit: [480]*480thirty-two hundred in number for twenty-ñve dollars each, with interest thereon, at the rate of eight per cent per annum, divided into four series, severally marked and known as series “A,” “ B,” “C,” and “D,” with eight hundred notes in each series. All the notes were to be in the same form, except that those of series A were to be payable on or before the fifteenth day of April, 1881; those of series B on or before the fifteenth day of April, 1882; those of series C on or before the fifteenth day of April, 1883; and those of series D on or before the fifteenth day of April, 1884. All were, or were to be, signed “H. T. Holmes & Co.,” and made payable to “ William Gwynn or bearer.”

The said H. T. Holmes and William Gwynn were partners, doing business under the firm name of Ii. T. Holmes & Co.

There is no averment that all, or in fact any, of the said $80,000 series of notes were ever issued. There is an averment, upon information and belief, that “ of the said 3,200 promissory notes, not more than 1,440 were issued,—that is to say, there were only issued 360 notes of each of said several series, making an aggregate of $36,000.” According to the well-settled rules of construction, we have here an entire failure of allegation that any of the notes were ever issued, with an affirmative allegation putting a limit upon the number, if any, that were issued. This is followed by an averment that “ said notes so issued were by ... . said trustees delixmred to said Holmes and Gwynn, xvho, before the same matured, used them, in whole or in part, in the payment of their debts and liabilities, and in discharging the claims and demands of their creditors.” In another portion of the complaint it is averred that the purpose of the parties to the mortgage was to enable Holmes and Gwynn to pay off their debts, etc., “ and that said promissory notes xvere received by said Holmes and Gwynn, and used by them for said purpose, and other purposes.”

[481]*481The complaint must be construed as a whole. So construing it, the averment last quoted must not be held to refer to the whole eighty thousand dollars of said notes, but only to such of them as were actually issued. Without any direct averment showing that any were ever issued, there is a limitation placed upon the amount, if any were so issued, and no averment is made from which the fact could be found that any were issued before their maturity, or before the trust created by the mortgage was closed by operation of law, under the decree of foreclosure hereinafter mentioned, except a few that seem to have been in the hands of the defendant McCarty before such foreclosure, and which will be hereafter referred to.

There is an averment in the complaint that on the day of the filing thereof, — April 11, 1888, — nearly four years after maturity of the last of the series, the plaintiff is the holder of certain of said notes, and of each of the four series thereof, which are due and unpaid, with interest thereon from the fifteenth day of April, 1880, the day of their date. There is no averment as to when or from whom he received them. Assuming that they were ever executed, all that the complaint shows is, that they were in the hands of Holmes and Gwynn, their makers, until they passed to plaintiff. So long as they remained in the hands of their makers, they were unissued, and were not notes secured by this mortgage. Under every rule of construction of pleadings, we are bound to assume that they passed from the hands of the makers to this plaintiff on the day of the filing of this complaint, and not before. On that day, and for at least fifteen months before that time, if in the hands of the makers, they were mere waste paper, so far as the security of this mortgage was concerned, for the mortgage had already been foreclosed, and the trust under it had ceased. They could not acquire new life by being transferred to plaintiff, and he could not at that time have acquired any rights under them greater than that held by the person from whom [482]*482be received them, whoever that might have been. Of the thirty-six thousand dollars, which he declares was the limit of the notes issued, he claims that at the date of filing his complaint he is the owner and holder of $17,825, nearly equally divided between the several series, but he does not claim that he or the person from whom he received them held them before maturity, or before the foreclosure of the mortgage by which he alleges that they were secured. It is, therefore, apparent that he has not alleged, in this regard, facts sufficient to entitle him to attack that foreclosure, or any of the proceedings anterior thereto.-

The complaint further shows that 846.26 acres of the laud described in the mortgage hereinbefore mentioned was at the time subject to a prior mortgage, made March 28, 1879, by said William Gwynn to William Russell, to secure the payment of a promissory note of even date, made by said Gwynn to said Russell, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum. This note matured two years after its date. It is averred that one half the principal and interest of this note had been paid prior to the execution of the $80,000 mortgage, but it is not stated when of by whom, and as militating against that averment, and inconsistent with it, it is further shown by the complaint that at or about the time of the execution of the $80,000 mortgage, Russell made an assignment of his mortgage to the National Gold Bank of D. O. Mills & Co., of which bank it is alleged said Miller was cashier and manager, which bank agreed to assign the same to the trustees upon payment of $3,500 and interest, and at the same time the trustees gave to Russell a written agreement to deliver to him $4,200 of “the proposed” trust-mortgage notes when received, in full satisfaction of the balance of his claim under the mortgage. It will be borne in mind that the Russell mortgage was not yet due, and that tliene two sums amount to just the principal of said [483]

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Bluebook (online)
23 P. 706, 83 Cal. 477, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glide-v-dwyer-cal-1890.