Maddux v. County Bank

62 P. 264, 129 Cal. 665, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1045
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1900
DocketL.A. No. 616.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 P. 264 (Maddux v. County Bank) 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
Maddux v. County Bank, 62 P. 264, 129 Cal. 665, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1045 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Action to recover certain money alleged to have been received by defendant between the filing of a complaint by it on foreclosure and the making of the default decree, and the sheriff’s sale thereunder, for which no credit was given. Defendant had judgment, from which and from the order denying his motion for new trial plaintiff appeals. The complaint sets forth the following among other facts:

Plaintiff and one Branch executed a mortgage on certain lands to First National Bank of San Luis Obispo to secure the payment of their note for eleven thousand seven hundred and seven dollars and eighty-one cents; the mortgagee subsequently, assigned the note and mortgage to defendant bank, and to this latter bank Branch gave an additional mortgage to secure the payment of the same note; when the first note and mortgage were executed, and contemporaneously therewith, the mortgagee entered into a written agreement with the mortgagors by which the mortgagee agreed to release certain of *666 the lands to grantees of the mortgagors upon payment to it of certain amounts per lot of certain lands and a certain amount per acre of certain other lands; this agreement was assigned to-defendant with the note and mortgage and became the agreement of defendant; on June 17, 1896, defendant commenced its action to foreclose the mortgages, at which time there was due on the note a certain sum not now disputed. Branch, this-plaintiff and certain of their grantees were defendants, and Branch and Maddux (plaintiffs here) were duly served with summons, but did not appear in the action and their default was entered, and on April 13, 1897, a judgment of foreclosure-was duly made and entered by default, and on May 15, 1897, sufficient of the mortgaged lands were sold by the sheriff to pay the amount due on the note, principal and interest and costs and charges of foreclosure, and the judgment was satisfied. It is alleged that between the commencement of the suit and the foreclosure sale the sum of five thousand five hundred and sixty-four dollars was paid to defendant by grantees of Branch and Maddux and by themselves for the purpose of obtaining releases of certain of the mortgaged lands, which by the agreement aforesaid defendant agreed to credit on the mortgage note, but that it credited thereon only four thousand one hundred and fifty-six dollars and leaving a balance of fourteen hundred and- eight dollars, for which no credit was given on the note or on the judgment.

The foregoing facts are sufficient to an understanding of the only point presented for decision.

Plaintiff called the cashier of defendant bank as a witness, by whom he sought to prove payments made to the bank after the foreclosure suit was commenced which were not credited on the note or on the judgment before sale. Some of these payments were alleged to have been made both before and after judgment. The evidence was refused by the court upon the objection that plaintiff was estopped by the judgment to prove any such payments. Plaintiff was also sworn as a witness in his own behalf to make similar proof, but the evidence was refused on the same grounds. Both parties seem to agree that the question is' fairly presented and is the only question involved in the appeal, as it is the only question discussed.

*667 No greater effect is imparted by the adjudication of a fact denied than is imparted by an adjudication of the same fact after being expressly admitted, or admitted by implication, as in the case of default. (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 330, and cases there cited.) A judgment by default stands on the same footing as a judgment after answer and trial with respect to issues tendered by the plaintiff’s complaint. Mr. Freeman says that the general expression, often found in the reports, that a judgment is conclusive of every matter which the parties might have litigated in the action is misleading. (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 249.) He says: “It may be that the plaintiff might have united other causes of action with that set out in his complaint, or that the defendant might have interposed counterclaims, cross-bills and equitable defenses, or either of the parties may have acquired new rights pending the litigation, which might, by permission of the court, have been pleaded by supplemental complaint or answer, and therefore might have been litigated in the action. But as long as these several matters are not tendered as issues in the action they are not affected by it.....The defendant must bring forward all the defenses which he has to the cause of action asserted in the plaintiff’s pleadings at the time they were filed.” In some early cases in Massachusetts it was held that in a suit on a promissory note where the defendant made default he could afterward sue the plaintiff in that action for money paid but not credited on the note (Fowler v. Shearer, 7 Mass. 14; Rowe v. Smith, 16 Mass. 306); and it was so held at one time in New York. (Smith v. Weeks, 26 Barb. 463.) But in the later cases in both of those states the earlier cases were expressly overruled. (Fuller v. Shattuck, 13 Gray, 70; Binck v. Wood, 43 Barb. 315, affirmed by the court of appeals.) Mr. Bigelow cites several cases where it was held that partial payments made before suit cannot afterward be recovered whether the defendant in the original action made default or answered. (Bigelow on Estoppel, 76, 77.) In Binck v. Wood, supra, the court said: “The law cannot uphold the trust and faith that allow a man to lie by, as the plaintiff here did in the first suit, and rest upon the belief that the plaintiff there would not do what in the summons or complaint he had expressly notified *668 this plaintiff he would, do, namely, take judgment for the whole amount of the note, and then maintain an action to recover hack part of the judgment on the ground that his just confidence had been betrayed.” In that case, however, the partial payment claimed to have been made and not credited was made before suit was commenced. Commenting upon this case and the doctrine held in like cases Mr. Bigelow says: “This appears to be the better opinion. The meaning simply is that judgment by default, like judgment on contest, is conclusive of what it actually professes to decide as determined by the pleadings; in other words, that facts are not open to further controversy if they are necessarily at variance with the judgment on the pleadings.”

I find cases decided in other states in support of the rule laid down in Massachusetts and Hew York, where partial payments bad been made both before and after suit brought, and the defendant had appeared in the action but failed to set up the payments in defense. In these cases he was held estopped from recovering afterward by separate action.

But I find no case where the defendant did not appear and plaintiff had a default judgment, that the defendant was es-topped from recovering money received by the plaintiff after the action was commenced that should have been but was not credited on the claim sued upon or taken account of in the judgment.

When the defendant fails to appear to the action, and allows his default to be entered, he admits the truth of the facts alleged in the complaint and all facts necessarily incidental to such facts and to the enforcement of the claim there set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P. 264, 129 Cal. 665, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maddux-v-county-bank-cal-1900.