Hurt v. Pico Investment Co.

15 P.2d 203, 127 Cal. App. 106, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 1932
DocketDocket No. 979.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 15 P.2d 203 (Hurt v. Pico Investment 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
Hurt v. Pico Investment Co., 15 P.2d 203, 127 Cal. App. 106, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 282 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

Plaintiff instituted this action to quiet title to certain real property. The complaint is in the form usually employed in actions of this character. It alleges ownership in fee in plaintiff and that defendants claim some interest in the property adverse to plaintiff which claim is alleged to be without right. The prayer is that defendants be required to set forth the nature of their claims and that it be adjudged that defendants have no interest in the property and that plaintiff’s title thereto be quieted. The answer of defendant Pico Investment Company denies that plaintiff is the owner in fee of the land, *108 admits that defendants, or some of them, claim some interest in the land which is alleged to be a valid claim and closes with the prayer that plaintiff take nothing by his complaint. Upon the issues thus presented by the pleadings the case was tried. During the trial of the action plaintiff introduced in evidence a deed to the land, dated January 25, 1928, executed to him as grantee by a commissioner appointed by the Superior Court of Los Angeles County in an action instituted for the purpose of foreclosing a mortgage upon the land, and rested his case. The commissioner’s deed recites that in a certain action pending in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County it was decreed that the mortgaged premises be sold at public auction; that the sale was duly held and the premises were sold to the plaintiffs in said action; that thereupon the commissioner made the usual certificate of sale; that more than twelve months have elapsed since the date of the sale and in the meantime the purchasers at said sale have sold and assigned the certificate of sale theretofore issued to them to plaintiff by virtue of an assignment duly recorded; that the commissioner to carry into effect the sale theretofore made by him and in pursuance of the decree grants and conveys the premises to plaintiff. Plaintiff thus established prima facie that he was the owner in fee of the land, title to which he sought to quiet in himself. It was then stipulated by the parties that at the timé the mortgage was made title to the property was vested in the Security Realty Corporation. A deed from this corporation to L. A. Hamilton dated May 6, 1924, was then offered in evidence by defendants and was admitted. Defendant next introduced the entire file in the mortgage foreclosure action referred to in the commissioner’s deed to plaintiff. This evidence shows that suit for foreclosure of the mortgage was begun on June 19, 1926; that the defendants in said suit, exclusive of fictitious defendants, were Security Realty Corporation, D. H. Penny and Jane Doe Penny, T. E. Newlun, and Susan Coe Hamilton (wife of L. A. Hamilton); that an affidavit for publication of summons upon defendant D. H. Penny was presented to the court, whereupon an order for service of summons upon said defendant by publication was made by the court; that affidavits showing personal service of process on defendants Security Realty Corporation and Newlun *109 and service by publication on defendant D. H. Penny were made and filed and the default of said defendants entered; that thereafter on November 5, 1926, the court rendered its decree of foreclosure against defendants Security Realty Corporation and D. H. Penny and ordered that the mortgaged premises be sold at public auction and the commissioner appointed by the court, upon the expiration of the redemption period, should execute a deed conveying the property to the purchaser at such sale; that the commissioner made his return certifying that he had offered the property for sale at public auction and that the plaintiffs in the foreclosure action were the highest bidders thereat and the premises were accordingly sold to them; that thereafter, during the latter part of April, 1928, A. C. Hurt, plaintiff herein, gave notice that on May 3, 1928, he would move the court to set aside the decree made and entered in the foreclosure proceedings on the ground that no service of process was had upon defendants Security Realty Corporation or D. H. Penny and the decree was not effective as to them; that on May 3, 1928, an order was entered in the minutes of the court granting plaintiff’s motion to set aside the judgment; that thereafter plaintiff herein filed an amended and supplemental complaint in said foreclosure action and the same, together with alias summons, was served upon defendants Security Realty Corporation and D. H. Penny; that notice of motion to quash the service of alias summons on said defendants and to strike the amended and supplemental complaint was duly given and the court made its order quashing service of the alias summons and striking the amended and supplemental complaint; that thereafter plaintiff herein moved the court to be substituted in the place of the original plaintiffs in the foreclosure action which motion was by the court granted; that thereupon said plaintiff gave notice that he would move the court for an order vacating the commissioner’s certificate of sale and the deed issued pursuant thereto and the satisfaction of judgment or, as an alternative, for an order directing the issuance and service of a writ of assistance for the purpose of putting him in possession of the property, which motion was denied; that a writ of assistance was granted to plaintiff on March 18, 1929, but prior to the date on which it was to be operative was vacated *110 on the court’s motion and on an order to show cause why such writ of assistance should not be granted, the issuance of the writ was denied. A deed from L. A. Hamilton to D. H. Penny was then offered in evidence by defendants and was admitted. Finally, there was offered in evidence by defendants and admitted, a deed from D. H. Penny to Pico Investment Company, a corporation. The various deeds herein mentioned purported to convey title in fee to the real property which is the subject of controversy herein. Upon the evidence thus presented, the trial court rendered judgment that the defendant Pico Investment Company is the owner, seised in fee, of the real property title to which is, by this action, sought to be quieted by plaintiff and that said real property is subject to the lien of the mortgage dated December 16, 1922, executed by the Security Realty Corporation in favor of James blocking and Ella Hocking and that plaintiff is the owner and holder of said mortgage and of the note whose payment it was given to secure. From that portion of the judgment decreeing that the land is subject to the lien of the mortgage, defendant Pico Investment Company prosecutes this appeal.

Appellant contends that the minute order of the court in the mortgage foreclosure proceedings instituted by James Hocking and Ella Hocking, which order purports to vacate the decree of foreclosure theretofore entered in said action, is void; that the decree of foreclosure is void as to its predecessor, D. II. Penny, for the reason that there was no service of process in said action upon D. H.

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Bluebook (online)
15 P.2d 203, 127 Cal. App. 106, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurt-v-pico-investment-co-calctapp-1932.