Long v. Newman

102 P. 534, 10 Cal. App. 430, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 216
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 23, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 590.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 P. 534 (Long v. Newman) 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
Long v. Newman, 102 P. 534, 10 Cal. App. 430, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 216 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendant, Pacific Loan Association, is a building and loan corporation, organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of this state.

On the 30th of April, 1901, the plaintiff, having borrowed from said defendant the sum of $4,200, on the general plan of building and loan concerns, executed and delivered to said defendant her promissory note in said amount, payable ten years after date, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum. For the purpose in part of securing the payment of said loan, the plaintiff executed a deed of trust to a certain lot or piece of real property situated in the city of San Francisco to the defendants, Simon Newman and Henry *432 Sinsheimer, as trustees, with full power to sell said premises at public auction to satisfy the loan secured from said Pacific Loan Association, in the event of default by the plaintiff in any of the payments required by her contract with said association.

It is alleged in the complaint that the defendants, claiming that the plaintiff had failed to make the payments required of her under her contract, had taken steps to sell said premises “on the 12th day of March, 1908.” It is alleged that the plaintiff “has,caused to be fully paid and discharged all of the interest due upon said promissory note; but the said defendant, Pacific Loan Association, has disputed such payments and has claimed a larger sum and amount to be due than is actually due under the terms of said instrument, ’ ’ etc.; that the plaintiff has at -all times been and is now ready, able and willing to pay all interest, charges and penalties of “every kind and character justly due from her to said corporation defendant, under the terms of said promissory note, or in any manner whatsoever due from her to said corporation defendant, but the said corporation defendant has at all times refused to accept and still refuses to accept the payment of any other sum or amount than the full amount wrongfully and unjustly claimed by it as aforesaid. ’ ’ It is alleged that the defendants, Newman and Sinsheimer, threaten to sell the said premises; that said property is of the value of $9,000, and that ‘‘ a sale, or purported sale thereof, as threatened by said defendants, will cause great and irreparable injury to the plaintiff, and will cast a cloud upon her title to the premises aforesaid; and that such injury will be of a character for which pecuniary damages will not afford adequate compensation.”

The prayer is that the defendant corporation be required to account “to this court for all moneys paid by and credits due to said plaintiff upon said promissory note,” so that the amount, if any, due from plaintiff to the corporation may be adjudged by the court; that a provisional injunction or temporary restraining order be made, enjoining and restraining the defendants or their agents from publishing the said premises as for sale, and from selling the same, etc.

The complaint is verified, and upon the filing thereof the court below caused to be issued a temporary injunction as prayed for therein.

*433 On the third day of April, 1908, upon motion of the defendants previously noticed, said motion having been made on the pleadings (complaint and the affirmative matter set up in the answer) and an affidavit 'of Emil Gunzburger, secretary of the corporation defendant, the court made an order dissolving the temporary injunction.

It is from said order that this appeal is taken.

The only points made by the^ appellant on this appeal are those involved in the contention that the amount claimed to be due is unliquidated and disputed and that, under the terms of the trust deed, she was entitled at the hands of the corporation to specific notice of the exact amount due it from her before the right to sell the property covered by said deed accrued to said cc'-poration; or, to put the proposition as it is stated in his brief by counsel for the appellant: “That a specific demand for the precise sum due was absolutely necessary as a condition precedent to the publication of notice of, or proceedings by the trustees for, the sale of the property; that before a sale could be lawfully attempted the plaintiff was entitled to have a statement of the amount due, and an account of the items, including the character of the fines and penalties claimed, and also a statement and accounting of the dividends, and accumulations of the stock, to be added as a credit to the payments by her”; that the corporation having failed to so apprise plaintiff of and demand from her the precise balance due it from her, she was entitled to the continuance of the preliminary injunction-until the amount due was determined by the court, and an opportunity presented to her for a redemption of her property. Hence, it is claimed, the court erred in its order dissolving the preliminary injunction.

The facts as alleged in the answer and as disclosed by the affidavit of the secretary of the corporation do not, in our opinion, support the contention of the appellant.

By the provisions of section 1 of article XV of the by-laws of the defendant corporation, the same being set forth in full in the answer, there are two plans upon which said corporation makes loans—one known as the “gross premium plan,” and the other as the “installment premium plan.” By the former plan, the amount of the premium is deducted from the amount of the loan when made, while under the last- *434 mentioned or “installment premium plan” the whole amount of the premium is divided into one hundred and twenty equal installments, “one of which shall be paid by the borrower monthly, on the first Wednesday of each month, until the whole amount of premium is paid, or the loan has been satisfied. ” Section 2 of said article of the by-laws provides that “each stockholder, for each share of stock he may hold, shall be entitled to a loan of two hundred dollars from the funds of the Association by assigning for each two hundred dollars, or fraction thereof, so loaned, one share of the stock of the Association as collateral security, together with a mortgage on real estate,” etc.

On the thirtieth day of April, 1901, the plaintiff and her husband borrowed from the association the sum of $4,200 on the installment premium plan, the amount of the premium being divided into one hundred and twenty equal monthly installments of $10.50. The plaintiff and her husband executed and delivered to the corporation their promissory note for the amount of the loan, payable ten years after date, with interest at seven per cent, payable monthly, and further promised to pay the monthly premium of $10.50. As security for the payment of the note, the plaintiff and her husband pledged to the association the twenty-one shares of capital stock in the association held by plaintiff, and as further security for the payment of said note, they executed and delivered to the corporation the deed of trust to which we have hitherto referred and covering the property, to restrain the sale of which by the corporation is the object of this proceeding.

It will thus be seen that the plaintiff, under the terms of the loan, obligated herself to make the following monthly payments to the association: $24.50 for interest, $10.50 for premium, and $21 for dues, aggregating a monthly payment of $56.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P. 534, 10 Cal. App. 430, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-newman-calctapp-1909.