Lichty v. Whitney

182 P.2d 582, 80 Cal. App. 2d 696, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1009
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1947
DocketCiv. 3647
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 182 P.2d 582 (Lichty v. Whitney) 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
Lichty v. Whitney, 182 P.2d 582, 80 Cal. App. 2d 696, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1009 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

Plaintiff brought this action in declaratory relief to determine and declare his rights under a second deed of trust on San Diego property.

The complaint alleged that on or about October 18, 1934, Oscar Boswell and Della Boswell, his wife, executed a deed of trust in which Robert J. Gardner was trustee and Frances A. Whitney beneficiary. The deed of trust was a first incumbrance on the described property and secured payment in monthly instalments of a promissory note in the sum of $1,900, with interest at 5 per cent per annum. The deed of trust contained the usual powers of sale. It was duly recorded.

It was further alleged that on or about October 25, 1934, the Boswells executed a second deed of trust with like powers of sale on the same property with J. B. Coker trustee, and Southern California Home Building Company, beneficiary; that plaintiff became the owner of that deed of trust; that after plaintiff became such owner he offered to pay, and tendered to Frances A. Whitney and Robert J. Gardner the full amount of the indebtedness, including interest, secured by the first deed of trust, which tender and offer to pay was refused by them; that after such tender defendants commenced proceedings to foreclose their deed of trust; that thereupon plaintiff again tendered and offered to pay such indebtedness and interest in full which was refused; that defendants proceeded *698 with such foreclosure and recorded a deed conveying such property thereunder. It is also alleged that defendants, although requested so to do, refused to disclose the amount of principal and interest unpaid on the promissory note necessary to pay the same in full.

The principal defense was based upon a judgment by the Superior Court of San Diego County entered in favor of defendants on April 7, 1945, in consolidated actions, wherein it was decided that plaintiff was not then the owner of the second deed of trust and the note it secured because he claimed title under an assignment purportedly executed by the Southern California Home Building Company after it had failed to pay its corporation franchise tax on January 6, 1941, and had forfeited its right to do business in this state.

In the instant ease the trial court found that on or about May 1, 1945, plaintiff became the owner of the second deed of trust and succeeded to the interest of the Southern California Home Building Company thereunder; that plaintiff “offered to pay to the defendants, Frances A. Whitney and Robert J. Gardner, the entire amount due them on their first trust deed; that at the time he made such offer of payment he did not know the exact amount that was due upon the said first trust deed, but offered to pay whatever was justly and properly due thereon, and that neither of the said defendants informed plaintiffs of the amount due on said trust deed, nor accepted any payment from him thereon.”

•It was further found “that in the month of May, 1945, at the time plaintiff tried to redeem from and pay off the said first trust deed, as aforesaid, he did not inform the defendants that he had procured a good and valid title to the aforesaid second trust deed and note by proceedings other than the aforesaid void assignment from the original beneficiary.”

It was also found that at all times mentioned plaintiff was ready, able and willing to pay defendants in full; that since the trustee’s sale on June 30, 1945, Mrs. Whitney was the owner of the property; that after that date Mrs. Whitney entered into an escrow agreement with a third party to sell the property to her.

The trial judge drew the following conclusions of law: That plaintiff was the owner of the second deed of trust on and after May 1, 1945, but was not entitled to “redeem” the property from the first deed of trust incumbrance; that his tender and offer of payment was “incomplete and insufficient by reason of his failure to inform defendants that he had be *699 come the owner of said second trust deed by reason of another and different transfer” from the assignment from the Southern California Home Building Company held void in the previous action; that the contract of sale between Mrs. Whitney and the third party, which was in escrow, created an equity in the property which could not be defeated by “redemption” by the plaintiff.

It is at once apparent that the judgment in favor of defendants is based solely on (1) the fact that plaintiff failed to inform defendants that he had acquired a good title to the second deed of trust and note after the judgment against him in the consolidated superior court action, and (2) the purported equity in the property created in the purchaser by the escrowed contract of sale signed by Mrs. Whitney. This must be true because all other findings made are in favor of plaintiff and would have supported a judgment in his favor unless overcome in the two particulars mentioned.

The finding that plaintiff did not disclose the nature of his new interest in the transaction after the judgment against him in the superior court action and after he had acquired title to the second deed of trust on May 1, 1945, and that this failure to disclose defeated his right to pay the first indebtedness cannot be sustained either factually or legally.

Under date of May 15, 1945, plaintiff wrote Mrs. Whitney in part as follows: “As owner and holder of the second trust deed covering the above property I hereby tender and offer you the correct amount due on your first trust deed covering this property.” As the letter informed Mrs. Whitney that plaintiff was the owner as well as the holder of the second deed of trust the inference is clear that he held some title to the instrument other than the one held void in the superior court action. This should have put defendants on inquiry before failing to accept the full amount due on the indebtedness. Mrs. Whitney failed to act at her peril. The tender was no more specific than the one held sufficient in Wiemeyer v. Southern Trust & Commerce Bank, 107 Cal.App. 165 [290 P. 70]. As defendants here made no objection to the form of the tender, any objection to it on that ground was waived by them.

Plaintiff was not required to disclose the capacity in which he was acting in making the tender. The same argument was made in Miller v. Lanktree, 34 Cal.App. 293 [167 P. 195], and was rejected. It was there said:

*700 “We think there is no merit in this contention. If the defendant, Ella M. Murphy, in the former action was entitled to redeem in any capacity, and tendered to the purchaser at the foreclosure sale the amount required by the statute to effect such redemption, the holder of the certificate of sale was bound to accept such tender, and was not entitled to be informed in what particular capacity the redemptioner was acting. (Pollard v. Harlow, 138 Cal. 390 [71 P. 454, 648].) ”

In this connection it should not be out of place to note that the record indicates that Mrs. Whitney seemingly was interested in making a substantial profit on the transaction. The trial court found that there was due her $1,271, principal, together with accrued interest at 5 per cent per annum, from April 1, 1943, together with any taxes and costs she may have paid prior to May 1, 1945.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 P.2d 582, 80 Cal. App. 2d 696, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lichty-v-whitney-calctapp-1947.