Hanlon v. Western Loan & Building Co.

116 P.2d 465, 46 Cal. App. 2d 580, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1434
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 1941
DocketCiv. 11697
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 116 P.2d 465 (Hanlon v. Western Loan & Building Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanlon v. Western Loan & Building Co., 116 P.2d 465, 46 Cal. App. 2d 580, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1434 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

R. Y. Hanlon and Martha G. Hanlon, his wife, Thomas D. Aitken individually and as executor of the will of Alice J. Neal, and Harold E. Haven as trustee for Alice J. Neal, appeal from a judgment in favor of defendant and cross-complainant Western Loan & Building Company reforming certain instruments under which the loan company claims title to certain real property, and quieting its title to such property. The same parties also appeal from a special order made after final judgment approving the accounts of a receiver appointed by the trial court.

The action was commenced by the Hanlons against the loan company to quiet their title to a piece of improved property at 1350 Turk Street, in San Francisco. The loan company cross-complained naming as cross-defendants not only the Hanlons but also Thomas D. Aitken and Marian N. Aitken, his wife, Alice J. Neal and Harold E. Haven and others, requesting that certain documents by which it claimed title to the real property at 1350 Turk Street be reformed to set forth the true description of the property, and that its title be quieted as against the cross-defendants not only to the property at 1350 Turk Street, but also as to property located at 1340 Turk Street. The judgment reformed the various instruments as requested by respondent, and quieted its title to both parcels. Appellants assert no title to the property at 1340 Turk Street, but do contend, among many other things, that it was error to quiet title by means of a cross-complaint to property not included in the original complaint.

*585 Both parcels of property were originally owned by a contractor by the name of J. D. Hannah who had constructed an apartment building on each parcel. The Western Loan & Building Company held several promissory notes of Hannah, including one for $33,000 secured by a first mortgage on the property at 1340 Turk Street, and another for $33,000 secured by a first mortgage on the property at 1350 Turk Street. There were also second liens on both parcels, which liens were held by another company. Early in 1930 the holder of the second liens caused the two parcels to be sold under its deeds of trust. One Murphy purchased the two parcels at the trustees’ sales. Murphy’s title, which as to each parcel was, of course, subject to the $33,000 note and mortgage on each parcel held by the loan company, was purchased by Thomas D. Aitken, an attorney at law. Aitken had been Hannah’s attorney, but he admittedly purchased the properties on his own account.

Before Aitken purchased the properties Hannah was having difficulties with the loan company, not only over the two loans on the Turk Street properties, but on some five or six other loans made by that company to him. These difficulties, and difficulties with his other creditors, finally resulted in involuntary bankruptcy proceedings. Hannah had instituted an action in the federal court against the loan company to recover alleged usurious interest and penalties on the various loans made by that company to him. When Aitken bought the two Turk Street parcels he intervened in the usury action, seeking a determination that the provision for interest in each of the two mortgages was void.

Hannah, during this period, was negotiating with the loan company through its Northern California manager, C. H. McEntyre, for a large loan on other property, seeking to rehabilitate himself and to get back into business. Many conferences were had between McEntyre, Aitken and Hannah in which various propositions were discussed. Hannah was apparently somewhat disturbed over the fact that his attorney Aitken had purchased for his own account the title of the Turk Street properties. The loan company was insisting that before any further loans could be made to Hannah, the Turk Street loans had to be cleared up. In November of 1930 a settlement was agreed upon. On November 18, 1930, Aitken and his wife signed two notes for $33,000 each, payable to *586 the loan company, each note being secured by a first deed of trust on one of the Turk Street parcels. The usury actions were dismissed. As part of the same transaction Aitken signed a “Receipt and Satisfaction” acknowledging that “all differences existing between WESTERN LOAN & BUILDING COMPANY, a corporation, and C. IT. McENTYRE on the one hand, and myself on the other hand, from time immemorial to the present time have been fully and completely adjusted and that all claims of whatsoever nature that I may have against the said Western Loan & Building Company, a corporation, and C. H. McEntyre are hereby settled and the new obligation incurred simultaneously with the signing hereof is free from taint of usury, duress or undue influence and is in consideration of the full amount of the obligation expressed therein.” The loan company guaranteed that no deficiency judgment would be taken against the Aitkens on either of the two notes and deeds of trust. A document waiving a deficiency judgment was subsequently executed by the loan company. As part of the same transaction, and as additional security for the two notes, the Aitkens executed assignments of the rent of the apartments located on each parcel to the loan company, and chattel mortgages on the furnishings in each building. As part of the same transaction the Hannah mortgages were released of record.

Thereafter, on September 22, 1931, the loan company recorded notices of default under both deeds of trust, the Aitkens then being in default on both obligations, and at the trustees’ sales purchased both parcels. By virtue of these sales, it'claims that it is the owner in fee of both parcels, and the trial court so found.

There is no controversy over the fact that by such purchase the loan company became the owner of the parcel known as 1340 Turk Street. Appellants claim, however, that the loan company never became the owner of the parcel known as 1350 Turk Street because the property was incorrectly described in the deed of trust on that property, and was incorrectly described in the notice of breach and election to sell filed by the loan company. They urge that, prior to the sales, Mrs. Neal purchased 1350 Turk Street without actual or constructive notice of the Aitken deed of trust. They contend, therefore, that the deed of trust was void, and that all proceedings in connection with the sale were void, and that the *587 loan company has not a good or valid title to that parcel, and that the trial court erroneously reformed the documents, and erroneously quieted the loan company’s title to that parcel.

The deeds of trust executed by Aitken and his wife in favor of the loan company were prepared by employees of the loan company, apparently at its home office in Salt Lake City. The deed of trust covering the parcel at 1350 Turk Street described the property conveyed to the trustee as “all that property in the County of Alameda, State of California, particularly described as follows, to-wit: ...” There then follows an accurate, complete, detailed and legal description of the property, except that no reference is made to the fact that the property was located in San Francisco. This deed of trust was recorded in San Francisco on January 9,1931. The loan company, the Aitkens, and the title insurance company involved, were then ignorant of the mistake in the description.

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Bluebook (online)
116 P.2d 465, 46 Cal. App. 2d 580, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanlon-v-western-loan-building-co-calctapp-1941.