Lewis v. Hall

176 P. 171, 38 Cal. App. 329, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 204
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 1, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2526.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 P. 171 (Lewis v. Hall) 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
Lewis v. Hall, 176 P. 171, 38 Cal. App. 329, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 204 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

This was an action to foreclose a mortgage given hy defendants John H. Hall, Howard H. Hall, and Emmett H. Hall upon a volunteer crop of barley growing upon land belonging to the defendant San Joaquin Valley Farm Lands Company (a corporation), hereinafter referred to as the Land Company, and for which land they held a contract of purchase. The defendants Hall confessed judgment in the sum of $2,754.20, the amount of the obligation to secure which the crop mortgage was given, for which sum, with interest, judgment was duly awarded against them; but as to the Land Company the court decreed that the plaintiff take nothing, and that the rights of said company in said crop so mortgaged were.superior to those of the plaintiff, and denied to the plaintiff any relief by way of foreclosure. Pending the litigation a receiver was appointed upon the prayer of the plaintiff, and in its judgment the court ordered that the balance in his hands, amounting to the sum of $1,250.88, be paid to the Land Company. The court also, after final judgment, made an order that the compensation of said receiver, amounting to the sum of four hundred dollars, be paid by the plaintiff. The appeal is by plaintiff from that part of the judgment denying her any relief against the Land Company ■ and awarding to the latter the balance in the receiver’s hands, and is taken upon the judgment-roll. Plaintiff also appeals from the order charging her with the payment of the receiver’s fees, and this part of her appeal is based upon a hill of exceptions.

The facts, which are very fully found by the court and as to which there seems to be no dispute, are as follows: The San *331 Joaquin Valley Farm Lands Company on January 15, 1915, was the owner of some seventy thousand acres of land situated in the county of Fresno. It had its principal place of business in the City of Los Angeles, and on said date entered into a contract with Stine & Kendrick (a corporation), doing business in the city of San Francisco, by which Stine & Kendrick was employed to sell some thirty thousand acres of said land in parcels of varying size and upon certain conditions, terms, and restrictions. On April 26, 1915, the Land Company executed to its said agent a power of attorney, authorizing said agent to make, execute, sign and deliver contracts for the sale of the lands authorized to be sold by said agreement. This power of attorney made specific reference to the said contract of January 15, 1915, and to the provisions therein contained by which it could be modified, altered, or terminated. The terms of this contract, and also of said power of attorney, were known to the defendants Hall. Included in said lands so authorized to be sold was a tract of some 640 acres described as follows: The east one-half of section 32 and the west one-half of section 33 in township 15 south, range 17 east, M. D. B. & M. On December 17, 1915, the Land Company leased to one V. P. Snow one-half of this tract, namely, that part described as the west half of section 33, for a term of nine months from said date, and said Snow immediately took possession of said lands, and remained in their actual, open, and exclusive possession and occupancy until the filing of this suit. On December 22, 1915, the Land Company notified Stine & Kendrick of the execution and delivery of this lease, and instructed it to withdraw the land so leased from sale during the term of said lease. On December 27, 1915, said agent assented in writing to said withdrawal and notified the Land Company to that effect. The Hall brothers were never notified of any change or limitation of the authority of Stine & Kendrick to make contracts for the sale of lands included in the authorization of January 15, 1915, and did not know of such change or limitation until after the making and delivery of their crop mortgage hereinafter referred to; nor did they nor the plaintiff ever inquire of the Land Company whether that company had made any change in the authority of their said agent. On January 12, 1916, without the knowledge or consent of the Land Company; Stine & Kendrick, in the name of and for the Land Company, *332 entered into a written agreement with the defendants Hall, by which agreement said agent and attorney in fact attempted to bind and obligate the Land Company to sell and convey to said defendants Hall the 640 acres hereinbefore described, for a price of $150 per acre, of which the sum of nineteen thousand two hundred dollars was made payable two years from the date of the contract, and the remainder in eight equal annual installments thereafter, together with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum on the unpaid purchase price, payable annually. Said contract also contained the following provisions:

“Third: That any crop heretofore planted upon said premises is hereby reserved by the owner, and the possession of such of said premises so planted shall not be delivered to nor taken by said purchaser until said crop shall have been harvested and removed from said premises; . . .
‘ ‘ Twenty-second: The purchaser agrees, forthwith after the execution hereof, to erect on said lands above described and fully pay for suitable buildings and other permanent improvements costing not less than a sum equal to ten per cent of the total purchase price aforementioned, and likewise to immediately commence and continue in good faith the development of said lands and the whole thereof by planting thereon alfalfa, fruit or other crops' acceptable to the owner, and should the purchaser fail so to do, said purchaser shall be conclusively deemed to be in default hereunder, and the owner may exercise either of the options hereinabove granted providing for the termination of this agreement or the specific enforcement of the same.” .

The contract in all respects as to form complied with the requirements of the Land Company. At the time of the making of this contract the land covered by it, except that part of it leased to Snow, was in the actual occupancy and possession of the Land Company, and so remained up to the time of the commencement of this action, and neither of- said defendants Hall ever' demanded or sought to take possession thereof. At the time of the execution of said contract to them they were insolvent, and so have been ever since, and they have at no time attempted to comply with their contract'in any respect. At that time also there was growing upon said land a volunteer crop of barley which had sprung up from grain lost by the Land Company in harvesting the previous crop. .On *333 April 5, 1915, and for a long time prior thereto the defendants Hall had been indebted to the plaintiff, as executrix of the estate of E. F. Kellner, deceased, in the sum of $2,754.20, represented in large part by a promissory note given by them, and the balance being upon an open account; and on said day they executed and delivered to the plaintiff, as such executrix, a promissory note in said sum, payable on demand, and bearing interest at the rate of one per cent per month, and at the same time made and delivered to the plaintiff a mortgage upon the said crop of barley as security therefor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 171, 38 Cal. App. 329, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-hall-calctapp-1918.