Martin v. Becker

146 P. 665, 169 Cal. 301, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 503
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1915
DocketS. F. 6122; S. F. 6106; S. F. 6300
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 146 P. 665 (Martin v. Becker) 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
Martin v. Becker, 146 P. 665, 169 Cal. 301, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 503 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

The defendant Becker was a building contractor who became bankrupt. At the time of his bankruptcy he had completed for Mrs. Careaga and for Mr. Martin each a separate dwelling-house under valid statutory contracts. The final payments becoming due, Mrs. Careaga and Mr. Martin deposited the amounts of their payments in court with appropriate averments, asking the court to call in the lien claimants to the funds, apportion the money, and dismiss plaintiffs, respectively, without further costs or charge. In the case of Hubbard v. Brinker, Becker, because of his bankruptcy, abandoned the incompleted building which he was constructing for Brinker, and Hubbard and Hart sued Brinker to establish liens for materials furnished. Their cases were consolidated. Hubbard admittedly had furnished material to Becker, which material had been used in the construction of the buildings. No question arises over this nor over the validity of his lien claims in the matter of form or substantive proof to sustain them. But Hubbard had taken a mortgage upon real property owned by Becker, the contractor, which mortgage by its terms covered the debts of Becker growing out of these materials so furnished him. Because of the existence of this mortgage security the trial court decided against the validity of his lien claims for materials furnished and decreed that he could not participate in the funds admittedly due to the holders of valid liens. *304 Hubbard’s appeals in all three of the above entitled cases present this as the principal question for determination. What is here said upon it is, therefore, applicable to all the cases. Certain points of minor significance arising separately in the different cases will receive their separate consideration.

The principal inquiry has been thus stated: “May the defendant Hubbard, as the creditor of the defendant Becker, retain and resort to the security of a mortgage lien, and at the same time claim and foreclose a materialman’s lien for the satisfaction of an indebtedness which is found to be clearly covered by both liens?” The trial court and the court of appeals made answer (1) that by virtue of section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure this could not be done. That section declares that “There can be but one action for the recovery of any debt, . . . secured by mortgage upon real or personal property.” (2) That aside from the consideration of section 726, the fact that Hubbard had taken security from Becker for the latter’s debt, even though that security was in the form of a mortgage upon real property of Becker, operated to annul the former’s right to his materialman’s liens.

1. At the outset it is important to note what changes the legislature made in the common-law rule, and therefore what it sought to accomplish in the declaration contained in section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure. At common law a mortgage was a conveyance of title upon condition subsequent. That title became absolute and indefeasible upon breach of the condition. No right of redemption existed. The sole recourse was a resort to equity for relief against the forfeiture. Moreover, the mortgagee had his right to go to law to recover the amount of the mortgage debt and to enforce his recovery by imprisonment of the debtor. Nor did the doing of any of these acts impair his mortgage security. Under our statutory system the first radical change was to declare that a mortgage conveyed no title, but gave only the security of a lien upon the property. (Civ. Code, secs. 2888, 2920, 2923.) This radical change having been established, section 726 became the expression of a natural corollary to that change. To simplify procedure and to relieve the mortgagor (who was usually though not always the primary debtor) it was declared that but one action should be brought to enforce the mortgage debt. The mortgaged property thus *305 became the primary fund which must first be' exhausted before any other remedy or relief could be had against the primary debtor. If this primary fund should prove insufficient to extinguish the debt, then in the same action a deficiency judgment could be docketed against the primary debtor. No longer could the primary debtor be pursued in an action which did not take into recognition the existence of the mortgage security. Otherwise it would be true to-day that if the primary debtor had given a mortgage upon his own property, and subsequently had sold it subject to the mortgage, the mortgagee could enforce the debt against the primary debtor without recourse to the mortgaged property, leaving the primary debtor to his chance of recovery over against his vendee. Or, again, the mortgage might 'have been given as security by one other than the primary debtor and with the understanding between the mortgagor and the primary debtor that the mortgaged property should first be exhausted in payment of the debt. If our existing rule did not obtain, the mortgagee could in like manner pursue the primary debtor without reference to the security. Every reason for the existence of the rule discloses and declares that it was designed for the benefit of the primary debtor, and indeed it is so decided. (Ould v. Stoddard, 54 Cal. 613; Toby v. Oregon Pac. R. R. Co., 98 Cal. 494, [33 Pac. 550]; Hibernia Sav. & Loan Soc. v. Thornton, 109 Cal. 427, [50 Am. St. Rep. 52, 42 Pac. 447]; Commercial Bank of Santa Ana v. Kershner, 120 Cal. 495, [52 Pac. 848]; Otto v. Long, 127 Cal. 471, [59 Pac. 895]; Hellyer v. Baldwin, 53 N. J. L., 141, [20 Atl. 1080].) This provision then, being thus clearly designed for the protection of the primary debtor, is one which he not only can waive (Civ. Code, sec. 3513; Hibernia Sav. & Loan Soc. v. Thornton, 109 Cal. 427, [50 Am. St. Rep. 52, 42 Pac. 447]; Hellyer v. Baldwin, 53 N. J. L. 141, [20 Atl. 1080]), but, still further, is one which has no applicability whatsoever unless the action which is brought directly affects his rights under the mortgage contract. And by that we mean this: that the law never contemplated that because a man had taken a mortgage he could not take other independent security for his debt, and, if the contract for such security permitted it, enforce such contract without reference to the mortgage debt. Indeed, our books are full of cases where the doing of this precise thing has been uniformly *306 countenanced and upheld, notwithstanding the fact that plaintiff’s success in the action has resulted, in the payment of his debt secured by mortgage, without recourse or reference to the mortgage security. Thus in Knowles v. Sandercock, 107 Cal. 629, [40 Pac. 1047], the action was. brought against the stockholders for a liability of the corporation, which corporate liability was evidenced by its note secured by mortgage. ■ It was urged that the mortgagee must first exhaust the mortgage security in the “one action” contemplated by section 726. This court said: “The note was due but the mortgage had not been foreclosed. This fact constitutes no defense for defendants. They are not affected by the fact that because of the mortgage only an action to foreclose could be brought against the corporation. The mortgage only affects the remedy against the mortgagor—the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
146 P. 665, 169 Cal. 301, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-becker-cal-1915.