Grattan v. Wiggins

23 Cal. 16, 1863 Cal. LEXIS 177
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 23 Cal. 16 (Grattan v. Wiggins) 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
Grattan v. Wiggins, 23 Cal. 16, 1863 Cal. LEXIS 177 (Cal. 1863).

Opinion

Crocker, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court-Norton, J. and Cope, C. J. concurring.

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage upon the undivided one-half of the “ Rancho de los Capitaneillos,” in Santa Clara County, executed by Wiggins to one Cook, dated July 22d, 1850, to secure the payment of the sum of $50,000, payable in ten equal installments of $5,000 each, due every six months from the date of the mortgage, with power to the mortgagee to foreclose the mortgage if any one of the payments should not be duly paid. Notes were given at the same date for the several installments. The suit was commenced on the twenty-second day of January, 1859, and the Court held that the action as to all the notes, except the two last, which fell due the twenty-second of January and July, 1855, was barred by the Statute of Limitations, and rendered a judgment, which, after reciting that there was due on these notes for principal and interest the sum of $17,097 24, ordered the mortgaged premises to be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of this debt and the costs of suit, and if the same should be insufficient to pay the debt, then a judgment should be docketed in favor of the plaintiff Hall, administrator of Cook’s estate, against the defendant Wiggins, for such deficiency, and foreclosing the equity of redemption as to the defendants Wiggins, Foster, Laurencel, and Eldredge, and all persons claiming under- them, after the twenty-second day of January, 1859, the date of the filing of notice of the pendency of the suit. From this judgment the plaintiffs have appealed, on the ground that the Statute of Limitations was no bar to any of the unpaid notes. The defendants Laurencel and Eldredge, who claim to be the owners of the mortgaged premises, also appeal from the judgment and the order refusing a new trial, on various grounds.

[23]*23The record shows that the first of the notes executed by Wiggins to Cook, and which fed due January 22d, 1851, was paid. The second note, which fell due July 22d, 1851, was, on the fifteenth day of May, 1851, assigned by Cook to Foster, one of the defendants, together with the mortgage, which was also delivered, to secure Foster in the payment of the $5,000 called for by the note. The third, fifth, sixth, ninth, and tenth notes have been lost or destroyed. The fourth note, which fell due July 22d, 1852, was, on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1851, assigned by Cook to the defendant Smith, to secure a note for seven hundred and seventy-one dollars and thirty cents, bearing interest at ten per cent, per month, executed by Cook and one McKinney; and Cook also assigned by deed the $50,000 mortgage as further security. The seventh and eighth notes, due January and July 22d, 1854, are in the possession of the defendant Laurencel; but the Court found that he had no interest in or title to them. Cook died February 15th, 1852, and at that time he had all the notes in his possession, except the first, second, and fourth, the two last having been assigned to Foster and Smith. On the ninth day of August, 1858, the defendant Smith assigned the fourth note and the mortgage to Laurencel. The original mortgage was lost by Foster some time about November, 1851.

On the twenty-fifth day of April, 1851, Wiggins conveyed by deed, duly executed, acknowledged, and recorded, all his interest in the mortgaged premises to one Berrian, who, on the thirtieth day of October, 1858, conveyed the same to Laurencel and Eldredge, two of the defendants. On the first day of December, 1851, Foster commenced an action in the proper Court against Wiggins, who was the sole defendant, to recover judgment on the second note, which had been assigned to him, and to foreclose the mortgage ; and on the eighteenth day of December, 1851, he recovered a personal judgment therein against Wiggins, and a decree for the sale of the mortgaged premises to pay that judgment and foreclosing the equity of redemption. Under this judgment the mortgaged premises were duly sold by the Sheriff to the defendant Fossatt, and on the twenty-sixth day of January, 1852, he executed to Fossatt a deed therefor. Fossatt paid $5,500 for this purchase, [24]*24which was applied to the payment of the judgment against Wiggins, and the small balance remaining was applied upon an execution in favor of Eossatt against Wiggins; and Fossatt afterward conveyed the premises to Laurencel and Eldredge.

Cook died on the fifteenth day of February, 1852, leaving his wife' Rebecca surviving him, and one infant child, who died in June, 1854—and Rebecca intermarried with C. Grattan, August 17th, 1854. The Public Administrator of Santa Clara County was appointed administrator of Cook’s estate, June 17th, 1852, and resigned the trust May 26th, 1853, and letters of administration were issued to Hall & Huggins, December 4th, 1856. Huggins died November 19th, 1861. This action was commenced January 22d, 1859, by Rebecca Grattan, as heir at law, and Hall & Huggins as administrators of the estate of Cook.

Fossatt, at the date of the Sheriff’s deed, January 26th, 1852, took possession of the mortgaged premises under his deed, and he and Laurencel and Eldredge, his grantees, have been in possession ever since, claiming to be the owners of the premises under the Sheriff’s sale and deed. The title of the premises mortgaged by Wiggins was under a Mexican grant, and Fossatt, after his purchase, filed a claim as the owner of this undivided half of the rancho, before the Board of United States Land Commissioners, and prosecuted the same at great expense, and procured a final confirmation of the same to himself on the 18th day of October, 1858. This claim, which also included another undivided one-fourth interest in the rancho, was prosecuted at the request of Laurencel and Eldredge, and at a cost of $200,000.

We will first examine the questions raised by the appeal taken by the plaintiffs. They complain of the judgment, because it was not rendered for the amount of the principal and interest due on all the unpaid notes, to wit: all but the first and second; the first they admit having been paid Wiggins, and the second by the sale under the decree of foreclosure. They claim that none of these unpaid notes are barred by the Statute of Limitations, and that the Court below erred in holding the contrary.

The complaint in this case prays for a personal judgment against Wiggins for the amount of these unpaid notes. Wiggins appeared [25]*25and demurred to the complaint upon several grounds, but the Statute of Limitations is not one of them. The demurrer was overruled, and no answer appears to have been filed by him, nor does it appear that any default for failing to answer was ever entered against him. The defense of the Statute of Limitations is a personal privilege of the debtor, which he may assert or waive at his option, but it must be set up in some form, either by demurrer or answer, or it will be deemed to have been waived. Under the pleadings in this case, the plaintiffs were entitled to a personal judgment against Wiggins for the whole amount of the unpaid notes, and the Court erred in not rendering judgment accordingly.

The defendants Laurencel and Eldredge, however, set up the Statute of Limitations both by demurrer and answer, but the plaintiffs insist that the right to plead the statute is personal to the debtor, and that therefore they have no right to set it up. It is 1 true, that so far as relates to the personal liability of Wiggins to pay the debt, they cannot plead the statute so as to affect that right.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Cal. 16, 1863 Cal. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grattan-v-wiggins-cal-1863.