Kent v. San Francisco Savings Union

62 P. 620, 130 Cal. 401, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 851
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1523.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 P. 620 (Kent v. San Francisco Savings Union) 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
Kent v. San Francisco Savings Union, 62 P. 620, 130 Cal. 401, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 851 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

This appeal is from a final judgment for respondent and from an order denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial. The facts, as admitted, and as shown by the findings, are substantially as follows;

*403 On the twelfth day of April, 1888, the plaintiffs, being the owners of certain real estate in Oakland, Alameda county, made a written contract with one Williams, by which they agreed to sell him said real estate for the sum of twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars, for which Williams gave them his promissory note, payable on or before April 12, 1891, and plaintiffs agreed to give to said Williams a conveyance of said property upon the payment in full of said note. The time for the payment of said note was afterward extended by plaintiffs to October 12, 1891. The said written contract contains this clause: “The said party of the second part [Williams] ■agrees to deposit with the First National Bank of Oakland, 'California, a deed in escrow in favor of said parties of the first part, of an undivided one-quarter interest in seventeen hundred and thirty acres, covering the greater portions of sections 31, 28, and 33, in township 13 south, range 23 east, in Fresno county California, and apply the proceeds of all sales of said land to the payment of said promissory note/’ Williams paid five hundred dollars upon said note, and by agreement of the parties went into possession of the Oakland property, agreeing to pay for the use of the same sixty dollars per month until the note should be paid. He afterward failed to pay any other portion of the note and became insolvent. The said written contract was recorded in Fresno county, and the deed which Williams agreed to execute was executed and deposited with the said First National Bank, and was afterward delivered by said bank to plaintiffs.

After the recording of said contract, but before the recording of said deed, and on the tenth day of January, 1889, the said Williams, with others, borrowed from the respondent, the San Francisco Savings Union, the sum of sixteen thousand dollars, and as security therefor executed to said savings union a deed of trust upon certain specifically described lands in Fresno county which are claimed by plaintiffs to be a part of the lands agreed to be conveyed to them in said contract between them and Williams.

In January, 1893, the plaintiffs commenced this action to enforce a lien upon the lands in Fresno county for the pay *404 ment of the said note, without any offer to first enforce any lien which they have upon the Oakland property.

The prayer of the complaint was for a sale of the Fresno-property, and the application of the proceeds of the sale to the payment of the note so made by Williams to plaintiff. The summons followed the complaint as to the nature of the action and the relief demanded. The action was against Williams,, and respondent San Francisco Savings Union, and others. Judgment was rendered for plaintiffs for a sale of the Fresno-lands as prayed for in the complaint. The San Francisco Savings Union, which will hereafter be designated as respondent, made a motion for a new trial, which was granted. From the-order granting the new trial the "plaintiffs appealed to this court, and the order was affirmed. (Kent v. Williams, 114 Cal. 537.) This court affirmed the order upon the ground that the plaintiffs had a lien upon the Oakland property and also upon the Fresno property, and the respondent had a subsequent lien upon the Fresno property only; and, having such subsequent lien, it had the right to have -the plaintiffs resort first to the Oakland property, upon which they held the exclusive lien. In the opinion it is said: “Therefore, in the case at bar, the lien which the plaintiffs reserved on the property in Oakland was not waived by taking the collateral security on the land in Fresno; and the respondent had the clear right to demand that the plaintiffs should first proceed upon their security on said Oakland property.” The decision has become the law of the case, so far as the questions therein decided. Upon the case being remanded to the court below plaintiffs amended their complaint, and asked in the prayer thereof that the court might adjudge and find the amount due to plaintiffs, and that the Oakland property be sold first, and if the proceeds should not be sufficient to pay the plaintiffs the amount due them, then, upon a report of the deficiency, that the lands in Fresno be sold to satisfy such deficiency. The amended complaint was filed in April, 1897. No summons was issued upon the amended complaint, and the court found that it was never served upon defendant Williams.

*405 Upon the new trial the court below held that the original ■complaint was not filed for the purpose of foreclosing the plaintiffs’ lien upon the Oakland property, and that, as the first judgment had become final as to Williams, the court did not have the power to make a different decree and order the Oakland property sold first. In this we think the court erred. 'The main contention of the respondent on the former appeal was that the decree should have provided first for a sale of the property upon which it had no lien, but upon which plaintiff had a lien, so that respondent might have the full benefit of •all the security held both by it and by plaintiffs. This court •adopted the view for which respondent contended, and affirmed the order of the lower court granting a new trial. It was evidently intended that upon the new trial the court would proceed to make its decree in accordance with the law as laid doAvn by this court. But upon the new trial the respondent •contended, and, it seems, convinced the court below, that no •decree could be made directing a sale of the property in Oakland, for the reason that such relief was not prayed for in the original complaint, and, the original judgment had become final. It seems that respondent, after contending for a decree in a certain form, and obtaining a new trial upon the theory that the decree should have been as contended for by it, finally concluded on the new trial that it did not want such decree. It is really attempting to blow hot and cold at the same time. The original complaint contained a statement of all the-facts connected with the transaction. It described the Oakland property and the Fresno property. It set forth the note and -claimed the amount due upon it for the purchase price of the property in Oaldand. And while it asked for a foreclosure of the mortgage and a sale of the premises in Fresno county, it also asked “for such other and further orders, judgments and •decrees as may be equitable and just.” Respondent, by its an-SAver, claimed that as to it, it would be equitable and just to have the decree provide first for a sale of the Oakland property. The court held that it was entitled to such decree, and noAv it is Here, claiming that the court had no power to make such decree. It is not necessary to decide whether or not it *406 was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to amend their complaint or to have served Williams with the amendment. He had appeared in the action, and had not denied any allegations of the complaint, but pleaded that since the making of the note-he had been adjudged insolvent.

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Belmont v. Belmont
188 Cal. App. 2d 33 (California Court of Appeal, 1961)
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79 P. 527 (California Supreme Court, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 620, 130 Cal. 401, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-v-san-francisco-savings-union-cal-1900.