Green v. Butler

26 Cal. 595
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 Cal. 595 (Green v. Butler) 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
Green v. Butler, 26 Cal. 595 (Cal. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court, Sawyer, J.

A large portion of the briefs on both sides is devoted to a discussion of the evidence. But no appeal has been taken from the order denying a new trial, and the parties must be presumed to have been satisfied with the facts as found. Whether they were or not, the appeal is from the judgment alone, and, on such appeal, we cannot review the evidence. The practice is the same in all cases, whether at law or in equity. (Allen v. Fennon, post.) Whatever doubt there might formerly have been on this point as to cases in equity, there can be none since the passage of the Act of 1861, the first section of which provides “that no distinction as to the mode of taking or perfecting appeals, or as to the [600]*600effect of them, shall be made between cases at law and cases in equity, but the provisions of the Practice Act shall apply in like manner to all cases of appeal.” (Laws 1861, p. 589.) Nor did the parties, when the appeal was taken, seem to contemplate that we should re-examine the evidence. It is stipulated that certain papers on file shall constitute the statement on appeal (there does not appear to have been any statement on motion for new trial), and the grounds of appeal specified in the statement are, substantially, that the referee erred in his conclusions of law, and, as a consequence, that the judgment is erroneous. No error as to the facts found is alleged in the statement as a ground of appeal.

The referee finds, among other facts, that, prior to the 14th of August, 1854, the plaintiff was in possession of the lands described in the complaint; that on that day, for a valuable consideration, he conveyed the said lands and improvements thereon by a deed, absolute on its face, to the defendant, Butler; that,-although the deed was absolute on its face, it was intended-as a mortgage, to secure to said defendant certain'"nnoi)e.'ys) d'tie and to grow due, for erecting buildings and improvements -thereon, for a firm composed of plaintiff and defqridant, Leavitt; That on the 20th of October, 1854, the said ',firm óf-;Gréen ¿ti Leavitt had an accounting with defendant', Butler,.’apd that upon said accounting it was found and agrebd'ji.y- all parties that said firm was indebted to said Butler for constructing said improvements in the sum of eight thousand five hundred dollars; that on said 20th day of October, said Butler executed and delivered to said Green & Leavitt, a written defeasance, whereby he bound himself, upon the payment by them to him on or before March 1, 1855, the said sum of eight thousand five hundred dollars, to convey, by quitclaim, to said Green & Leavitt, the said premises, and covenanted in said defeasance that if, after said 1st day of March, he should sell said premises he would pay over to said parties any surplus that might arise over his debt and costs; that said defendant, Butler, on the 1st of February, 1855, with the consent of said plaintiff and said defendant, Leavitt, [601]*601entered into possession of said premises, and continued in possession till the 27th day of February, 1855.

*• That on the said 27th day of February, A. D. 1855, at said city and county, the said plaintiff and the said defendant, Joseph E. Butler, had an accounting and settlement of and concerning the said plaintiff’s interest in and to the land described in said complaint, and the improvements then thereon, and of the furniture then in said ‘Ocean House;’ on which accounting and settlement the said defendant, Joseph E. Butler, paid to the said plaintiff the sum of two thousand dollars, in four promissory notes, for said plaintiff’s interest in and to said land and the improvements thereon, and the furniture then in said house, which said notes were subsequently paid; and the said plaintiff then and there, in consideration of said sum of two thousand dollars, surrendered the said written defeasance to the said defendant, Joseph E. Butler, for cancellation, and the same was thereby cancelled as against the said plaintiff.”

The only question arising on the record tiae'eiiei upon the rights of the parties as to the rapa ÉSugljein rnis’l action, of the surrender of the defeasance tqfüe ^nceljjgde under the agreement found by the refer®, j^h^rincijjel stated in the numerous cases cited by app&lbMt’s ^hns^a generally admitted to be correct. But thef&*an In? ntodqn&t that a mortgagee can make a bona fide purchase of tmWKjuity of redemption—if, indeed, w^e may use these terms in the present condition of the law as to mortgages in this State— and thereby acquire an absolute title. The principle is well stated in Remsen v. Hay, 2 Edw. Ch. Rep. 535, in the following terms: “ There is nothing in the policy of the law to prevent a mortgagee from acquiring an absolute ownership by purchase from the mortgagor at any time subsequent to the taking of the mortgage, and by a fresh contract to be made between them.- Courts view with jealousy and suspicion any dealings between the mortgagor and mortgagee to extinguish the equity of redemption ; but if it be fair and honest on the part of the mortgagee, the purchase will not be disturbed. [602]*602The law only prohibits a mortgagee from availing himself of a stipulation contained in the mortgage deed, or of some covenant or agreement, forming part of the same transaction with the loan and the taking of the security, by which he shall attempt upon the happening of some future event or contingency to render the estate irredeemable and obtain an absolute ownership. In such cases the maxim applies of once a ‘mortgage always a mortgage.’ (Henry v. Davis, 7 John. Ch. R. 40; Clark v. Henry, 2 Cow. 332.) But it cannot interfere with the right to foreclose when the mortgage has become forfeited, nor with any fresh contract which the mortgagor may choose to make with the mortgagee for a sale or relinquishment of the equity of redemption and vesting the latter with an irredeemable estate.” There are numerous authorities to the same effect. (1 Wash. Real Prop. p. 496, Secs. 23, 24; Dougherty v. McColgan, 6 Gill. & Johns. 275; Russell v. Southard, 12 How. U. S. C. R. 154; Adams v. McKenzie, 18 Ala. 698.)

Independent of authority, no argument is necessary to show that, upon principie, a mortgagor has the same capacity to contract with reference to his interest in the mortgaged property that he has in respect to any other property. Nor has section two hundred and sixty of the Practice Act, or any of the former decisions in this State relating to mortgages, placed any restriction upon the authority of the mortgagor to make other and further contracts affecting his title to the land, subsequent to the execution of the mortgage. The language of Mr. Justice Field, in McMillan v. Richards, cited by counsel, thatli The owner of a mortgage in this State can in no case become the owner of the mortgaged premises, except by purchase upon sale under judicial decree, consummated by conveyance,” must be limited to the question then under discussion. He was simply endeavoring to show that no title passed by the mortgage alone, either before or after default, or could be acquired under it by strict foreclosure, or in any other mapner than by a sale under a decree of a Court, and that in such case the title did not vest till consummated by a convey[603]*603anee, after the period for redemption had expired. He had no reference to a contract affecting the title, made by the mortgagor himself subsequent to the making of the mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Cal. 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-butler-cal-1864.