Jump v. Barr

189 P. 334, 46 Cal. App. 338, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 798
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2071.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 P. 334 (Jump v. Barr) 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
Jump v. Barr, 189 P. 334, 46 Cal. App. 338, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 798 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HART, J.

From a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage on real property in the county of Los Angeles, defendant, Florence A. Barr, prosecutes this appeal.

On the first day of April, 1914, Walter G. McCarty Company, a corporation, executed to plaintiff a promissory note in the sum of four thousand dollars, payable three years after date, with interest at eight per cent per annum, payable quarterly. Said note contained the following provision : ‘ ‘ Should default be made in the payment of any installment of interest when due, then the whole sum of principal and interest shall become immediately due and payable at the option of the holder of this note.” The mortgage in question was given as security for the payment of said note. The only interest payment made on the note was' that which fell due on the first day of July, 1914, which payment was made ten days thereafter.

*340 The complaint in the action was filed on the tenth day of February, 1917, approximately six weeks before the maturity of the note. It stated specifically,and separately the several amounts falling due from time to time as interest on the note, the last item of interest so stated being: “Interest due January 25th, 1917.” Then follows this averment: “That by reason of the nonpayment of said interest which became due as hereinbefore set forth and which is now due, owing and unpaid, plaintiff herein elects to declare and does hereby declare the whole sum of principal and interest ■immediately due and payable.”

The charter of Walter G. McCarty Company became forfeited on the fourth day of March, 1916, by reason of its failure to pay the state license tax required by law. Walter G. McCarty, Margaret E. McCarty, and W. H. McCarty, sued as trustees of said corporation, and Florence A. Barr filed a demurrer to the complaint, which was overruled, and the defendants, the MeCartys, made no further appearance. The defendant Barr answered the complaint, alleging that she was the owner in fee of the property mortgaged by the corporation; that the principal sum of the alleged note is not yet due; that plaintiff had no legal right to declare the whole sum of principal and interest immediately due and payable, and has not done so; that the mortgagee has repeatedly waived the provision of said note giving him such option; “that every installment of interest that was ever paid on said note and mortgage was paid long after same fell due and was received and accepted by the payee long after the same had become due”; that it had become the custom of defendants to pay and the plaintiff to receive said interest long after the same was due, and plaintiff has never notified defendants of his intention to depart from such custom, and that by such conduct plaintiff has waived his right to declare a forfeiture by reason of the nonpayment of interest.

At the trial, proof was received of the execution of the note and mortgage in question, the payment of one installment of interest, the payment of taxes, etc., by plaintiff. A motion for nonsuit was made and denied and defendant introduced no evidence.

*341 It is contended by appellant “that the failure on the part of the mortgagee to declare a forfeiture on the numerous occasions when. that right was open to him, constituted a waiver of that right on his part which could only be reinstated by notice to the mortgagor that in the future prompt payment would be expected. ’ ’ This argument is based upon the fact that the mortgagor never paid any but the installment of interest first falling due, he having failed and refused to pay the ten successive installments falling due prior to the institution of this action.

The action here is not, as appellant seems to suppose, one to declare a forfeiture by reason of the default of the defendant in paying interest on the note -at the time stipulated therein. The action to foreclose the mortgage proceeds entirely upon a breach .of the agreement that the defendant would pay the accruing interest on the note at certain designated times and that upon its failure to comply with that provision of the agreement the payee of the note would be at liberty at his option to treat the whole sum of principal and interest as being due and payable, and, if exercising his right to treat the whole sum as due, 'to proceed to collect or enforce the collection of the principal and the accrued interest. There is no forfeiture to be made or suffered or penalty imposed. The maker of the note loses nothing but the right it acquired under the contract to retain the payee’s money until the expiration of the time during which the note was to run, and this right it has lost because of failure on its part to comply with the agreement as to the payment of interest. The situation is altogether different from where a party has paid his own money in part payment for something under an agreement for a sale, providing that he is, upon a certain or the first payment, to take possession of the thing he proposes to purchase, and that if he fails to make other stipulated payments at other specified times he is to return the thing to the vendor and the latter is to retain the money already paid. The case suggested involves a forfeiture. This is, as stated, simply a case of breaching an agreement whereby one party lends to another certain of his property upon the condition that with respect to the loan the borrower will do a certain thing, which he fails to-do, and thus loses his right further to retain or keep in his possession the thing *342 loaned. [1] In other words, a provision in a note or in a mortgage to secure its payment, or in both, that, upon default in the payment of the interest accumulating upon the note at the time specified, the owner of the note and the mortgage may treat the whole of the principal and interest due before the date of the maturity of the note is nothing more than an agreement as to the time when the debt shall become due and enforceable according to its terms. (Dunn v. Barry, 35 Cal. App. 325, [169 Pac. 910]; Jones on Mortgages, 7th ed., see. 1181; Whitcher v. Webb, 44 Cal. 127; Bank etc. v. Mundy, 162 Ill. App. 138; Curran v. Houston, 201 Ill. 442, [66 N. E. 228].) In Dunn v. Barry, supra, the facts are, mutatis mutandis, precisely the same as those of the case at bar, and therein Justice Burnett, of this court, clearly shows that there is no forfeiture involved or inhering in a contract of the character of the one we are now dealing with. That ease is, indeed, decisive of the point under consideration against the position of the appellant.

The cases -named by the appellant do not support her contention. Two of these cases only involved actions to foreclose mortgages, to wit: Crossmore v. Page, 73 Cal. 213, [2 Am. St. Rep. 789, 14 Pac. 787], and Trinity County Bank v. Haas, 151 Cal. 556, [91 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 334, 46 Cal. App. 338, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jump-v-barr-calctapp-1920.