Hickox v. Lowe

10 Cal. 197, 1858 Cal. LEXIS 214
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 10 Cal. 197 (Hickox v. Lowe) 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
Hickox v. Lowe, 10 Cal. 197, 1858 Cal. LEXIS 214 (Cal. 1858).

Opinion

Field J., delivered the opinion of the Court

Terry, C. J., concurring.

The principal question to be considered, for the determination of the appeal in this case, is whether the conveyance from Hick-ox to Lowe, and the agreement to re-convey, executed by Lowe to Hickox, taken together, constitute a mortgage. The appellant insists that the two instruments show a conditional sale, and the respondent that they constitute a mortgage. Both instruments refer to the same property, hear date the same day, are executed before the same witnesses, and are acknowledged-before the same officer, and were filed for record together. The one is, in form, an absolute conveyance by Hickox of the mining-claim for the consideration of $4500 j and the other is an agreement by Lowe to re-convey the same property upon the payment, at any time within from two to four months thereafter, of the said sum of $4500, with- $300 per month for its use, and all expenses incurred in taking charge of the claim, and to apply its proceeds, after deducting the expenses of its charge, to the payment of the $300 a month, and any excess to the payment of the said sum of $4500.

The consideration for the conveyance was a precedent debt, on the part of the grantor, to Lowe, and the solution of the question under consideration depends upon the fact whether this debt was discharged by the conveyance or subsisted afterwards. A mortgage is a security for a debt, and, 'of course, the relation of creditor and debtor must exist between its different parties. If the debt continued after the execution of the conveyance, the instruments constitute a mortgage; if, on the other hand, the debt was extinguished by the conveyance, the agreement to re-convey must be regarded as an independent contract, in no" respect affecting the absolute character of the original instrument. This is the true test by which to determine the character [207]*207of transactions in cases like the present. If the deed or conveyance be accompanied,” says Vice-Chancellor McCoun, in Robinson v. Cropsey, (2 Edwards, 143,) “ by a condition or matter of defeasance expressed in the deed, or even contained in a separate instrument, or exist merely in parol—let the consideration for it have been a pre-existing debt or a present advance of money to the grantor—the only inquiry necessary to be made is, whether the relation of debtor and creditor remains and a debt still subsists between the parties. For if it does, then the conveyance must be regarded as a security for the payment, and be treated in all respects as a mortgage.”

The only difficulty which arises in cases like the present, is to ascertain the fact whether the debt subsists or has been extinguished ; and where there is doubt on this point, Courts of Equity lean in favor of the right of redemption, and construe instruments as constituting a mortgage, rather than a conditional sale. (Page v. Foster, 7 New Hamp., 392; Skinner v. Miller, 5 Litt., 392; Secrest v. Turner, 2 J. J. Marshall, 171; Bright and Taylor v. Nagle, 3 Dana, 252.)

There is an allegation in the answer of the defendant, Lowe, that the conveyance was taken in payment and satisfaction of the precedent debt; but no attempt was made to support the allegation by any evidence other than that afforded by the instruments themselves.

The provision in the agreement for a re-conveyance, upon the payment of the precise amount of the consideration of the conveyance, and $300 a month for the use thereof, is a circumstance favoring the conclusion that the debt subsisted. The term use, in this connection, means interest. The payment of the consideration, with a stipulated rate of interest, constitute the usual condition inserted in mortgages, with an additional clause that upon its performance the conveyance shall be void, and the estate conveyed determine.

The fact that Lowe agrees to apply the proceeds of the claim, after deducting the expenses of its charge, to the payment of the monthly interest, and any excess upon the principal sum, is a very strong circumstance to show the existence of the debt; and when taken in connection with the other circumstance above stated, it is difficult to resist the conclusion that the debt was not extinguished by the conveyance, and that the transaction was intended as a mortgage.

In his ninety-sixth note to Co. Litt., Butler mentions, as one of the principal circumstances tending to prove that a conveyance was intended as a security rather than an absolute sale, that the grantee, instead of receiving the rents for his own benefit, accounts for them to the grantor, -and only retains the amount of the interest.

If the sale were absolute, Lowe was the owner of the property [208]*208from the delivery of the deed, and, as such, entitled to the entire proceeds. The agreement to apply such proceeds is inconsistent with the hypothesis that the grantee was the absolute owner. On the other hand, it implies that the grantor retained some interest, by which he was entitled to the proceeds, other than that which would naturally grow out of an independent contract to re-convey.

In Kelleran v. Brown, (4 Mass., 443,) the plaintiff read in evidence an absolute conveyance. The defendant, to prove the conveyance a mortgage, offered the following contract:

“I, Edward Kelleran, the subscriber, having purchased of Timothy Manly a lot of land lying in said Thomaston, containing fifty acres, (being the lot which the said Manly purchased of Ebenezer Bly,) for which I have received a warranty deed; but if the said Manly shall repay me the sum of four hundred dollars, with the lawful interest on the same, in one year from the date hereof, I then will re-convey the same lot of land to him.
“ [Signed] Edward Kelleran.”

The Court, per Parsons, C. J., said: "In chancery, wherever it appears from written evidence that land is conveyed as a pledge to secure the payment of money, the conveyance will be treated as a mortgage, in whatever form the land was pledged. And if we had all the equity powers of a Court of Chancery, I should be satisfied that the conveyance in this case, with the written contract for re-conveyance, would be deemed in equity a mortgage, and that the grantee would be allowed to redeem.”

This case is very similar, in many respects, to the case at bar. Aside from the agreement of Kelleran, there was no collateral obligation, or any evidence whatever of any loan, or of any existing debt; yet it was held that a Court of Chancery would regard the conveyance as a mortgage, from the agreement to re-convey on the payment of $400, and interest. In the case at bar, not only does a similar agreement exist, but with the additional circumstances that the consideration of the conveyance is the precise amount to be paid, with interest and expenses, and that the grantee is to apply the proceeds of the claim upon the interest and principal sum.

In Rice v. Rice, (4 Pick., 349,) it appeared that on the 19th of October, 1807, one “Nathan Dewing, being indebted to Abel Perry, senior, in the sum of $400, conveyed to him the land described in the petition, and on the same day Perry executed and delivered to Dewing a bond, conditioned to re-convey the land in two years, provided Dewing should in that time pay him that sum, with interest.” The Court, per Parsons, C. J., speaking of these papers, said: "It is manifest that the deed to Perry, senior, and the deed of defeasance made by him, constituted a mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Cal. 197, 1858 Cal. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickox-v-lowe-cal-1858.