Haskell v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co.

249 P. 43, 79 Cal. App. 164, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 174
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 12, 1926
DocketDocket No. 4828.
StatusPublished

This text of 249 P. 43 (Haskell v. Title Guarantee & Trust 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
Haskell v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co., 249 P. 43, 79 Cal. App. 164, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 174 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

YORK, J.

This is an action prosecuted to enjoin the sale of certain real estate under a trust deed given to secure the payment of money. The plaintiff and appellant is a purchaser of the property, to whom the property was conveyed subject to two trust deeds, the first of which is the one under which the sale was proposed, which sale the plaintiff asked the court to enjoin. There are no questions of fact involved in this appeal, and there is but one question of law. That is, whether a letter hereinafter set forth in full was an offer and tender of unconditional payment of the obligation referred to therein, or whether it was conditioned that plaintiff should be subrogated to the rights of W. W. Taylor in and to the note and trust deed referred to therein, and all rights thereunder as secured by a deed of trust also referred to in said letter. In other words, whether the payment to the Title Guarantee and Trust Company was intended to be, and actually was, a complete extinguishment of the debt, or whether it was an attempt to place the plaintiff Haskell in such a position that he could urge in his own behalf the lien created by said trust deed as a prior lien to the second trust deed held by W. W. Taylor.

There is no merit in respondents’ contention that there was no assignment of errors. The parties stipulated that the question involved was one of law and clearly set forth what that question was. Under the circumstances, an assignment of error, or specification of insufficiency of evidence, would have been superfluous. The case depends entirely on the construction to be placed on the following correspondence:

*166 “October Seventeenth,
“Nineteen Twenty-two.
“To the Mortgage Guarantee Company, Title Guarantee & Trust Company, W: W. Taylor, General Petroleum Corporation, and all parties interested as owners or claimants in the hereinafter mentioned note and the trust deed hereinafter described.
“Gentlemen:
“I beg to advise you that I am now the owner, by deed executed by Garry G. Layman and Willa N. Layman, his wife, of that certain real property situated, lying and being in the county of Imperial, state of California, together with the 80 shares of water stock in Imperial Water Co. No. 8, appurtenant thereto, which are described in the trust deed, executed by said Laymans to the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, hereinafter mentioned and described.
“As such owner of said property, and holding said property subordinate and subject to the indebtedness hereinafter mentioned, and the trust deed securing the same, I desire to pay all indebtedness secured by said trust deed and, by virtue of said payment, become subrogated to the rights of the owner or owners of said indebtedness secured by said trust deed. Said indebtedness above referred to, and all of which I hereby offer to pay, hereby tendering the amount thereof to you and each of you, is all indebtedness secured by that certain deed of trust,- made and executed by Garry G. Layman and Willa N. Layman, dated October 10, 1918, recorded October 31, 1918, in book 138, page 130 of deeds, records of Imperial county, California; the origin or foundation of which said indebtedness was and is represented by a promissory note, executed by said Garry G. and Willa N. Layman, dated October 10, 1918, to the Mortgage Guarantee Company, which said note is described and set out in said deed of trust, and which said note the above mentioned W. W. Taylor now claims to have purchased from said Mortgage Guarantee Company.
“The above named Title Guarantee & Trust Company, at my request, has this day furnished me a statement showing that the amount now owing on account of the indebtedness secured by said trust deed, including the amount *167 owing on said promissory note, is the sum of $5,924.79, and, acting on such information, I now have in my possession and as now physically tendering herewith said sum of money, legal tender of the United States, and now and at this time, in presenting this tender, I present and offer to pay said above mentioned sum of money. I also now have in my physical possession, and am prepared to pay, any additional sum over and above said above mentioned sum of money, in the event the statement this day furnished to me by said Title Guarantee & Trust Company be not correct, hereby offering and tendering to pay all amounts of money now owing by said Garry G. Layman and Willa N. Layman, and secured by said trust deed; it being my desire and purpose, and the purpose of this tender and offer to pay, to fully reimburse the holder of said note and the owner of the indebtedness secured by said trust deed, for all sums now owing to him which are secured by said trust deed, and, therefore, a lien on and against the above mentioned real property.
“I hereby at the same time also exhibit to you, for the purpose of proof, the deed from Garry G. Layman and Willa N. Layman to me, of the above mentioned real property, together with the appurtenances thereunto belonging.
“Yours very truly,
“Herbert M. Haskell.
“By Edwin A. Meserve.
“Meserve & Meserve,
“Attorneys for Herbert M. Haskell.”

The acceptance of this money by the Title Guarantee and Trust Company is stipulated to, and a copy of its acceptance is as follows:

“Los Angeles, California, “October 17th, 1922.
“Received from Meserve & Meserve for Herbert M. Haskell, fifty-nine hundred twenty-four and 79/100 ($5924.79) dollars, as payment in full of indebtedness secured by trust deed made by Garry G. Layman et ux. to Title Guarantee and Trust Company, to secure a note in favor of Mortgage Guarantee Company, which note was assigned by mesne assignments to General Petroleum Company, a. corporation, as pledgee, which said trust deed was recorded *168 October 31st, 1918, in book 138, page 130 of deeds, records of the county recorder of Imperial county, California.
“Said sum is accepted by Title Guarantee and Trust Company in accordance with a letter of Herbert M. Haskell, dated October 17th, 1922, and subject to the approval of said General Petroleum Company, a corporation, pledgee, and W. W. Taylor, owner of said indebtedness.
“Title Guarantee and Trust Company.
“By J. F. Keogh,
“Trust Counsel.
“Trustees Sale #2967”

Thereafter, on the same day, the plaintiff Haskell, claiming to be the subrogated owner of the note and deed secured by the trust deed, executed the following letter or instruction to the Title Guarantee and Trust Company:

“October 17, 1922.
“Title Guarantee & Trust Company,
“Title Guarantee Building,
“Los Angeles, California.

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249 P. 43, 79 Cal. App. 164, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haskell-v-title-guarantee-trust-co-calctapp-1926.