Lent v. Morrill

25 Cal. 492, 1864 Cal. LEXIS 58
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 25 Cal. 492 (Lent v. Morrill) 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
Lent v. Morrill, 25 Cal. 492, 1864 Cal. LEXIS 58 (Cal. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court, Shafter, J.

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage. The complaint describes a promissory note, and a mortgage executed to secure its payment; it states the amount due, and asks a [496]*496decree of foreclosure and sale of the premises, waiving personal judgment against either of the defendants for any deficiency after applying the proceeds of sale of the land to the satisfaction of the judgment.

William A. Grover, the maker of the note and mortgage, was served with process, but failed- to answer, and a default was entered against him. The other three defendants— Charles Morrill, O. F. Morrill and D. W. Chambers—answered separately, and the plaintiff interposed a demurrer to the greater portion of each of the answers, on the ground that the facts therein stated constituted no defense to the action. The Court below sustained the demurrers, and the defendants failing to amend, and the cause coming on regularly for an assessment of damages, a final decree was rendered for the plaintiff, in conformity to the facts and prayer of the complaint. From this final decree the appeal is taken.

The complaint is verified, and its matter may be briefly stated as follows:

1st. That on the 17th of January, 1855, the defendant, Wm. A. Grover, executed his note to Messrs. Newhaus for four thousand five hundred dollars, payable two years there-' after, at one and three quarters per cent per month interest.
Sd. At the same time, to secure the payment of the note, Grover executed a mortgage upon the described land, which mortgage was duly acknowledged and recorded on the same day in the county where the land lies.
3d. That on January 13, 1857, the principal sum, four thousand five hundred dollars, and five hundred dollars interest, was due on the note and mortgage, when Messrs. Newhaus, the payees, assigned the same to plaintiff, in consideration of five thousand dollars paid therefor, and the deed of assignment was duly acknowledged and recorded at its date. The deed of assignment also recited said sum of principal and interest as then due.
4th. At the time of said assignment, plaintiff and the defendant'"' Grover, the mortgagor, agreed in writing, signed by them, that the above named sum was due, and that Grover [497]*497should pay plaintiff interest on said sum of five thousand dollars, at one and one half per cent per month, and that the time for payment of said note and mortgage should be extended for two years from that date, i. e., two years from February 13, 1857.
5th. Two years thereafter—to wit: February 13, 1859— the accrued interest in arrear, added to the principal, amounted to five thousand nine hundred and twenty dollars, when plaintiff and defendant Grover, by agreement in writing signed by them, stated and agreed that said sum was then due and payable, and that thereafter Grover would pay interest on that whole sum at one and one quarter per cent per month. Grover continued to pay interest up to the month of July, 1860, when he conveyed the mortgaged premises to the defendant, Charles Morrill, with full and actual notice of the note and mortgage, and the extension of time of payment for two years from January 13, 1857, and of the amount due thereon, and the rate of interest which Grover agreed to pay.
6th. That from July 19, 1860, (the date of Grover’s conveyance to Morrill) up to and including August 17, 1862, the defendants Charles Morrill and O. F. Morrill paid plaintiff the accruing interest on said note and mortgage at the rate above stated.
7th. Since July 19, 1860, defendant Charles Morrill has repeatedly promised to pay plaintiff the said sum of five thousand nine hundred and twenty dollars, due as aforesaid, but has neglected, etc.
8th. That O. F. Morrill and Chambers claim to have some interest, which is subsequent and subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage.
9th. The prayer of the complaint is for a judgment against defendant William A. Grover, for five thousand nine hundred and twenty dollars, accruing interest, and five per cent counsel fees and costs, for a sale of the mortgaged premises^ and foreclosure against the defendants, etc.; “ but plaintiff does not ask and hereby waives all claim to a personal judgment against either of the defendants for any deficiency after apply[498]*498iag all the proceeds of the. sale of said premises to the satisfaction of said .judgment,” etc.

A default was entered. against the defendant Grover, for want of answer.

All the defendants answer except Grover. The answers are separate.

For the purpose of passing upon the merits of this appeal, it is unnecessary to consider any of the answers except, that of the defendant Chambers, who is, now, confessedly, the owner of the land, disincumbered of the mortgage or subject to it.

There are six special defenses asserted in the answer of Chambers.- Counsel of the parties respectively have discussed the case as related to all of these defenses; still it is apparent, from the briefs, that they are of one mind as to the point upon which the case must eventually turn—and we may add that, in that matter, our views do not differ from theirs.

Chambers, for the purpose- of defeating the avoidance of the-Statute of Limitations set up in the complaint, alleges:

■ 1. That W, A. Grover, the mortgagor, on the 20th day of August, 1856, conveyed the mortgaged lands. to Lester K. Grover, of-, in the State of Connecticut, which deed was duly recorded on the following day.
2. That on the 29th day of December, 1859, Lester K. Grover and wife reconveyed the lands to his grantor, W. A. Grover, and the deed was duly-recorded December 29, 1859.
3. That W. A. Grover thereafter, on the 19th of July, 1860, conveyed the lands to Charles Morrill. Deed recorded July 20th, same year, and contained a covenant of general warranty.
4. Charles Morrill conveyed to O. F. Morrill, February 10, 1862, by deed duly recorded the 18th of the same month.
,5. -0. F. Morrill conveyed to Chambers, August 26, 1862.

The question is, whether the above facts defeat the effect of the written acknowledgments by W. A. Grover, set up in the complaint by way of avoidance of the Statute of Limitations.

■ L. Disembarrassed of names, places and dates, the question may be stated thus:

. If a mortgagor, before the maturity of the mortgage note, [499]*499conveys the mortgaged lands to a third person; and while the note is yet underdue gives an acknowledgment in writing to the holder that the note is a subsisting contract against him, and he thereafter accepts a reconveyance of the lands before túne has run on the note as extended, and thereafter, but while the note as extended is yet underdue, conveys the land to a stranger —are the lands in the hands .of this last grantee affected by the written acknowledgment of the mortgagor before named ?

In Lord v. Morris, 18 Cal. 484, the Court held that “a mortgagor, after disposing of the mortgaged premises by deed of bargain and sale, loses all control over them.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Cal. 492, 1864 Cal. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lent-v-morrill-cal-1864.