In Re Bangle

201 P. 968, 54 Cal. App. 415, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 543
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 3483.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 201 P. 968 (In Re Bangle) 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
In Re Bangle, 201 P. 968, 54 Cal. App. 415, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 543 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

This proceeding was instituted by the owners of certain lots and parcels of land to have title thereto registered in accordance with the provisions of the law known as *Page 417 the Torrens Land Title Act (Stats. 1915, p. 1932), adopted by the people of the state at the general election held on November 3, 1914.

The lots in question constituted a part of a large tract of land subdivided and conveyed by the owner, Title Insurance and Trust Company, which, as defendant, and claiming that its rights reserved in the grants so executed by it are not protected by the decree rendered, has appealed therefrom in so far as it applies to certain of the lots described in the petition, to wit:

Lot 14, block 45, of tract 1200, city of Los Angeles, as per map recorded in book 19 of Maps, page 35; title to which was vested in Charles Newton Hutton and his wife, Grace Iliff Hutton, which is herein designated as No. 1.

Lots 8, 10, 11, and 12, block 20, of tract 1200, city of Los Angeles, as per map recorded in book 19 of Maps, at page 35, title to which was vested in Samuel Andrus as community property, herein designated as No. 2.

Lot 9, block 20, of tract 1200, Van Nuys district, city of Los Angeles, as per map recorded in book 19 of Maps, page 35, title to which was by the decree declared to be in Adolph John Boulanger and Lillian Maude Boulanger, as joint tenants, herein designated as No. 3.

Lot 348 of tract 1000, in the city of Los Angeles, as per map recorded in book 19 of Maps, pages 1 to 34, herein designated as No. 4.

[1] As to the Hutton lot, description of which we have designated as No. 1, the applicants alleged that the deed from appellant, Title Insurance and Trust Company, to the grantor of petitioners, contained certain restrictions and reservations which were not conditions of the conveyance and had been abandoned and were void, which provisions they asked to have canceled. This allegation was denied in the answer of defendant, and the question presented on the appeal is whether the language of the decree, to wit: "Exceptions, reservations and conditions contained in deed recorded in Book 5018, page 203, of Deeds," to which as declared by the decree the land was subject, is sufficiently broad to include all of the valid and existing covenants, exceptions, reservations, restrictions, conditions, and liens contained in the deed executed by defendant to one Agnes H. Brown, whose title and interest in the lot was by the administratrix *Page 418 of her estate conveyed to applicants. The "deed recorded in book 5018, page 203, of Deeds," was dated May 22, 1912, and among other provisions contained therein was a covenant on the part of the grantee to pay the grantor five dollars per year for each lot described in the conveyance, which sum, with like payments to be contributed by other lot owners in the district, should constitute a fund devoted to the care, maintenance, and replanting of street trees, repair and upkeep of street curbs and sidewalks, and to otherwise keeping up and beautifying the district as far as possible with the fund derived from such source. It was further provided in the deed that the obligation to make such payments should terminate whenever said lot should be permanently occupied, and in any case at the expiration of ten years from January 1, 1911, or, at the option of the grantor, at any time after four years from January 1, 1911; followed by an express provision that "the above sum agreed to be paid shall be and remain a lien upon the land hereby conveyed until paid."

By section 2872 of the Civil Code a lien is defined as "a charge imposed in some mode other than by a transfer in trust upon specific property by which it is made security for the performance of the act." It is created by contract of the parties, or by operation of law. (Sec. 2881, Civ. Code.) By acceptance of a deed the grantees not only promised to pay the five dollars per lot, but by contract in the language quoted created a lien upon the property as security for its payment. We may readily concede, as claimed by respondents, that the covenant cannot be construed as a restriction, condition subsequent, or exception, the compliance or noncompliance with which could work a a forfeiture of the estate. As in other cases of lien, the remedy of the lienor upon nonperformance of the covenant would be an action of foreclosure. Since the deed containing the covenant imposing the charge upon the lot was recorded, subsequent purchasers of the land must be held to have taken title upon constructive notice of the fact that the lien not only existed, but that, subject to permanent occupancy or bar of the statute of limitations, it would continue until the sum agreed to be paid was liquidated. (Van Loben Sels v.Bunnell, 120 Cal. 680 [53 P. 266]; Fresno *Page 419 Canal Irr. Co. v. Rowell, 80 Cal. 114 [13 Am. St. Rep. 112, 22 P. 53].)

[2] While it appears that appellant has not enforced the collection of said sums, no waiver of the provision on its part is shown, nor any action had the effect of which would, as to the whole obligation, terminate or extinguish the lien; and since by the covenant the property was made the subject of a lien to secure the payment of five dollars per year, the decree, in the absence of any showing by respondent, should in express terms, as provided in section 15 of the act, have established the amount thereof not barred by limitation and declared the same to be a lien and encumbrance upon the land, subject to which it should have been ordered registered.

What is said upon this point is likewise applicable to the lots designated herein as No. 2, title to which is vested in Samuel Andrus, and the lot designated as No. 3, title to which is vested in the Boulangers, as to each of which lots the grantees thereof covenanted to pay five dollars per annum, and wherein, as in the Hutton case, it was stipulated that until paid such sums should, subject to the conditions therein expressed, constitute a charge and lien upon the lot or lots so conveyed.

[3] In application No. 2 the deed conveying the lots to Samuel Andrus contained a number of restrictive provisions for the violation of which it was agreed the title of the grantee should cease and revert to the appellant as grantor, and subject to some of which provisions title to the lots was registered in the name of Andrus. The deed also contained a provision, designated "I," that a breach of any or either of said conditions, or any re-entry by reason of the breach thereof, should not defeat or render invalid the lien of any mortgage or deed of trust made in good faith for value as to said land and the improvements thereon. The purpose of this provision clearly expressed was to protect innocent parties, as holders of liens based upon mortgages or deeds of trust, from the penalties imposed upon owners of the property for breach of the conditions. That in addition to the restrictions subject to which the lots were ordered registered, the decree should also have ordered the registration of the property subject to the covenants and provisions designated "I" in the deed, appears to admit of no question, and *Page 420 respondent offers no argument in justification of the action of the court in declaring the same inoperative and of no effect.

[4] It appears that title to lot 9 in block 20, herein designated as No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 P. 968, 54 Cal. App. 415, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bangle-calctapp-1921.