Lauer v. Williams

163 P. 687, 32 Cal. App. 590, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 574
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 23, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1408.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 163 P. 687 (Lauer v. Williams) 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
Lauer v. Williams, 163 P. 687, 32 Cal. App. 590, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 574 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage executed by the defendant, C. O. Williams, to the plaintiff, to secure the payment of a promissory note made and delivered to the plaintiff by said Williams.

The defendant, Harter, although duly served with process, did not answer the complaint or otherwise make an appearance.

The findings were in favor of the plaintiff. As to the defendant, Harter, the court found that he had, subsequently to' the execution of the mortgage, purchased the premises described therein and in the complaint, and that the “claim and interest of the said J. P. Harter in and to the said real estate, and each and every part thereof, are subsequent and subject to the lien of plaintiff’s said mortgage.”

By the decree entered upon the findings the mortgage was foreclosed and a sale of the mortgaged premises by the sheriff for the purpose of satisfying the amount due on the note to secure which it was given was ordered and directed.

This appeal is by the defendant, Williams, from said decree or judgment, and is supported by a bill of exceptions.

*591 The appellant contends: 1. That the plaintiff cannot main-, tain this action for the alleged reason that he is not the real, party in interest in the subject matter thereof; 2. That the findings are not sustained by the proofs—that is to say, that while the execution of the note and the mortgage as alleged in the complaint is admitted," it is the contention that the evidence discloses that, prior to the commencement of this action, the appellant paid the principal of and interest accruing on the note in full.

The note was executed in the sum of twelve thousand five hundred dollars, and the balance remaining due thereon, according to the complaint, and to satisfy which foreclosure of the mortgage was sought, is the sum of $3,085.77.

The note and the mortgage were executed and delivered to the plaintiff on the twenty-third day of January, 1909. Contemporaneously with said transaction and as a part thereof, the plaintiff and Williams signed and executed a writing in which it was set forth that the note and the mortgage were given “as collateral security to secure to said mortgagee the payment by said mortgagor of certain promissory notes of the said mortgagor, of dates and amounts as follows”: following which are the dates and amounts, and in which it is further stated and stipulated “that said foregoing note (referring to the note in suit) and this mortgage shall be considered original security for any further advances of cash or merchandise made by said mortgagee to said mortgagor to the amount of the difference between the aggregate amount due upon the above enumerated notes and the amount of the foregoing note (note in suit), secured by this mortgage.”

The note to secure which the mortgage involved here was given provided for interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum, and was made payable on or before the fifteenth day of October, 1909, or approximately nine months from its date. The note was, by indorsement on the back thereof, transferred and made payable by the plaintiff to the Bank of Modoc County.

At the time of the transaction above referred to, Lauer, the plaintiff, was the cashier of the Bank of Modoc County. He was at the same time also a member of the firm of B. Lauer & Sons, doing business as general merchants at Alturas, Modoc County. The Bank of Modoc County carried on its bank *592 ing business in a room of the building in which the store of B. Lauer & Sons was located.

The defendant, Williams, was engaged in the business of raising sheep in Modoc County. He bought his supplies or merchandise from the firm of B. Lauer & Sons. It will be observed that, according to the" written agreement between Lauer and Williams, above adverted to, the note was to cover advances by the mortgagee to the mortgagor made either in cash or merchandise.

Lauer testified that, notwithstanding that he was the named and ostensible payee of the note, as a matter of fact, in the transaction in which the note and the mortgage were made, he was acting only as an agent for the bank and not for himself, individually.

Williams, from time to time, made payments to Lauer until the early part of 1912, when the plaintiff received information that Williams had conveyed by deed the mortgaged lands to the defendant, Harter. The plaintiff thereupon called upon Williams for a settlement and, on the first day of April, 1912, the two men came together and agreed upon a settlement. This agreement was reduced to writing, was signed by Lauer and Williams, and was dated the first day of April, 1912. By said agreement, it was stipulated and agreed that a settlement had been effected with respect to the indebtedness evidenced by the note here in question, and that there was then due and unpaid upon said note and payable to the Bank of Modoc County the sum of $3,085.77. It appears that after the above settlement was made, and about the twenty-third day of July, 1912, the Bank of Modoc County went into liquidation and the assets thereof taken possession of by the state superintendent of banks. The note and mortgage involved herein were among the assets so taken over. “After the depositors of the Bank of Modoc County were paid off, which was done by B. Lauer & Sons,” testified the plaintiff, “these assets and this note and mortgage were turned back and indorsed over to me in lieu of the bond which was given by the United States Fidelity and Guarantee Company for the entire assets of the Bank of Modoc County, which were in the neighborhood of eighty-five thousand dollars, this bond being given to protect Mr. W. R. Williams (the superintendent of banks) against any depositors, known or unknown, that were not on the ledger of the bank. . . . We paid some *593 twenty-eight thousand and some odd dollars, besides the bond, as a consideration for the assets of the bank. This was paid to the depositors of the Bank of Modoc County. ’ ’

Williams testified that the settlement referred to above was effected and agreed to between the plaintiff and himself, but said that it was incorrect and did not accord with the actual figures and facts. He declared that he so told the plaintiff at the time of the settlement, but that finally he was forced into an agreement to the settlement by the threats of the plaintiff that, unless he did so, foreclosure proceedings would at once be instituted against him. He further testified that, prior to the settlement, he at various times paid to the plaintiff certain sums of money, aggregating in amount over fifteen thousand dollars, more than enough, he said, to extinguish that obligation. He enumerated the payments, giving the dates and the amounts. He testified that he supposed the moneys so paid would be credited on the note, but did not say that he gave the plaintiff specific directions, either before or at the times of such payments, that they should be applied to the extinction of the note. He admitted having bought merchandise during the existence of the note at the store of B. Lauer & Sons.

In rebuttal, the plaintiff testified that some of the payments made by Williams were credited on the store account with B. Lauer & Sons for goods and merchandise and that some were credited on the notes.

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Bluebook (online)
163 P. 687, 32 Cal. App. 590, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauer-v-williams-calctapp-1917.