Jose Realty Co. v. Pavlicevich

130 P. 15, 164 Cal. 613, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 513
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 5971.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 130 P. 15 (Jose Realty Co. v. Pavlicevich) 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
Jose Realty Co. v. Pavlicevich, 130 P. 15, 164 Cal. 613, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 513 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

*615 SHAW, J.

The defendant presents three appeals: One from the judgment, a second from a ruling refusing to vacate the judgment for plaintiff and enter judgment for defendant on the findings, and a third from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. It will be necessary to consider only the appeal from the order denying a new trial.

The plaintiff’s action was to quiet its alleged title to a parcel of land, the complaint being in the usual form, alleging ownership in plaintiff and an unfounded claim by the defendant. The proof showed that on November 30, 1909, one J. A. Cottle, being then the owner of the land subject to a deed of trust by him previously made, conveyed it to one A. B. House and that, on September 21, 1910, said House executed a deed purporting to convey the land to the plaintiff.

The defendant, for answer, alleged that on November 30, 1909, Cottle executed a deed conveying the land to a trustee with power of sale, to hold the same as security for the payment of a note from Cottle to Pavlicevich, dated October 18, 1909, payable one year after date, for three thousand three hundred dollars, with interest at seven per cent per year, payable monthly, and providing that if the interest was not so paid the payee might declare the whole sum due, of which declaration the maker waived notice; that no interest was paid for the months of May, June, July, or August, 1910, whereupon the defendant declared the whole sum due and the trustee, at defendant’s written request, and in the manner prescribed by the terms of the power of sale, offered the land for sale for nonpayment of debt, sold it to Pavlicevich and in pursuance thereof, on September 20, 1910, conveyed the land to Pavlicevich by deed which was duly recorded on the same day, whereby defendant became the owner of the premises.

The note declared that it was payable at the office of Will M. Beggs, in San Jose. The deed to the trustee provided that, in any deed made by the trustee under the power of sale, the recital in such deed of any matter of fact, including the fact that default had been made in the payment of the note or interest thereon when due, should be conclusive proof of such fact against Cottle, his heirs and assigns. The deed executed by the trustee to Pavlicevich recited that the interest on said note was on August 24, 1910, overdue and unpaid and that Pavlicevich had elected to consider the principal as *616 immediately due and payable and had directed the trustee to proceed and that the first publication of the notice of sale was on August 25, 1910.

The plaintiff, on the trial, did not controvert any of these statements, except the statement that the interest on the note, or any part of it, was overdue at or prior to the giving of said notice of sale. Its contention is that it had bought the title of Cottle and had assumed the payment of the note, that it was able and willing to pay it at the office of Beggs at the time the respective monthly payments became due and, consequently, that under the provisions of section 3130 of the Civil Code it was not in default. It also claimed that the trustee’s sale was fraudulently procured by Pavlicevich, the fraud consisting of his conduct in giving the direction to the trustee to sell the land for default in payment of interest, when, by reason of plaintiff’s ability and willingness to pay the interest at the time it fell due at the place of payment, there was no default.

It was not necessary for plaintiff to plead fraud in its complaint. The trustee’s sale was set up by the defendant as a defense to the action of the plaintiff. In such a case proof of fraud sufficient to avoid the trustee’s sale and deed was admissible without further pleading, it being matter in avoidance of the defense set up in the answer. (Moore v. Copp, 119 Cal. 433, [51 Pac. 630] ; Brooks v. Johnson, 122 Cal. 570, [55 Pac. 423] ; White v. Stevenson, 144 Cal. 112, [77 Pac. 828] ; Wendling Co. v. Glenwood Co., 153 Cal. 415, [95 Pac. 1029] ; Peck v. Noee, 154 Cal. 354, [97 Pac. 865].)

The court found that no interest was ever paid on the note for any month after April, 1910, but that at all times since that date “the payer of said note has had sufficient funds at said office for the purpose of paying said interest, ’ ’ and that the defendant had never demanded the payment of said interest. Upon this finding it made a conclusion of law that there was no default in the payment of interest and that the declaration by Pavlicevich that the principal was due, and the sale and deed made in pursuance thereof, were fraudulent and void. There was also a general finding that the plaintiff was the owner of the land, subject to the deed of trust executed by Cottle, and that the interest which the defendant *617 claims, in addition to the rights conferred by said deed of trust, is without right.

The defendant gave notice of intention to move for a new trial, stating that the motion was to be made on the minutes of the court. The notice in effect specified that the evidence was insufficient to justify the following findings: 1. That plaintiff is the owner of the premises; 2. “That the interest which defendant has in the premises is without right”; 3. “That the money for the payment of the interest on said note was at all times ready at the place of payment.” Although these are not in the customary form for such specifications of insufficiency, we think they are sufficient to present the question whether or not the finding on the subject of th§ default in the interest payments is sustained by the evidence.

If the recital in the trustee’s deed is conclusive on Cottle and his successors in interest, it would follow that this finding is contrary to the evidence. That such recital is conclusive, where the deed of trust empowers the trustee to make it, in the absence of fraud of which the purchaser at the trustee’s sale had notice, appears to be settled by the decisions of this court. (Simson v. Eckstein, 22 Cal. 593 ; Carey v. Brown, 62 Cal. 374 ; Mersfelder v. Spring, 139 Cal. 595, [73 Pac. 542.) Respondent, however, claims that by showing that Pavlieevich, knowing that there had been no such default, declared the principal and interest due and caused the trustee to make a sale under the power by falsely informing him that the payer was in default, and that Pavlicevich himself bought the property at the trustee’s sale, and that the owners of the property were not informed of the sale or of the notice given thereof and had no knowledge of it, it has established the proposition that the sale and deed were procured by fraud, and that this is sufficient to let in proof of the falsity of the recital in the deed of the trustee and set aside the sale made by him. We are of the opinion that if these facts were shown the fraud claimed would be sufficiently established. But we think the proof was lacking so far as the facts of there having been no default in payment of interest and of knowledge by Pavlicevich are concerned.

It is admitted that the interest for the four months above specified has never been paid.

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Bluebook (online)
130 P. 15, 164 Cal. 613, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-realty-co-v-pavlicevich-cal-1913.