Merchants Holding Corp., Ltd. v. Grey

45 P.2d 253, 6 Cal. App. 2d 682, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 976
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 11, 1935
DocketCiv. 5273
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 45 P.2d 253 (Merchants Holding Corp., Ltd. v. Grey) 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
Merchants Holding Corp., Ltd. v. Grey, 45 P.2d 253, 6 Cal. App. 2d 682, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 976 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

PAULSEN, J., pro tem.

Defendant Grey appeals from a judgment rendered against her and Henry Ramey in an action to recover a deficiency after sale under a deed of trust.

Prior to August 20, 1929, Mrs. O. A. Ramey, the mother of Henry Ramey, owned two contiguous lots in Altadena described as lots 11 and 12 of tract 1627. An expensive, reinforced concrete house had been constructed on each lot, and on each house and lot was an encumbrance for $20,000. The two lots were somewhat small for large houses and in order to make their property conform to the standards desired in. the locality a.nd also to secure some relief from the burden of debt, the Rameys conceived the idea of disposing of one of the houses and reserving both lots for the remaining house. In July, 1929, Henry Ramey telephoned to appellant who owned vacant lots near by, and suggested a plan for the removal of one of the houses to one of her lots. She referred him to Edwin G. Bowen “as her agent and representative who had charge of her property”. After extended negotiations with Bowen, an agreement was reached, according to Ramey, by which the house on lot 11 was to be removed to appellant’s lot and Ramey was then to obtain a new loan for $20,000 secured by a trust deed thereto to replace the encumbrances theretofore on the house and said lot 11. After this was done, Ramey was to reconvey the house and lot to appellant who was to assume payment of the indebtedness. She was then to give Ramey an option to repurchase for $40,000.

In furtherance of this plan, Ramey and Bowen called at appellant’s home. Ramey did not see her at that time but she conferred with Bowen in a separate room where she prepared and signed a deed from herself to Ramey and also filled out in her own handwriting a deed form for the reconveyance from *685 Barney and his wife. After writing in the description she drew a diagonal line through ihe remaining blank space of the form. When an acknowledgment certificate had been attached to appellant’s deed, the two papers were handed by Bowen to Barney. Barney thereafter obtained a new loan for $20,000 secured by a trust deed on this property. He then had his Avife sign the form prepared by appellant and took it to Bowen’s office. Before he signed it himself he called Bowen’s attention to the fact that appellant had “forgotten” to include an assumption clause in the form and thereupon, in Bowen’s presence, he erased a part of the diagonal line drawn by appellant and inserted, immediately after the description, the following words: “Subject to trust deed in amount Twenty thousand Dollars ($20,000.00) which grantee assumes and agrees to pay.” He then signed and acknoAvledged it and delivered it to Bowen who placed it in his safe. An option to repurchase was then given to Barney. The deed Avas delivered to Bowen on August 20, 1929, and remained cither in the hands of Bowen or appellant until January 13, 1930, when appellant had it recorded. On January 15, 1930, appellant conveyed the property to Edwin G-. Bowen Company. On November 6, 1930, the then holder of the note Avrote appellant requesting payment but she denied any knoAvledge of the existence of the assumption clause and attempted to repudiate the Avhole transaction. By the terms of the note no interest or principal had become payable prior to this time and nothing had been paid by either Barney or appellant.

Appellant disputes some of the facts stated above but they are all established by abundant evidence and notwithstanding the conflict the trial court accepted them as true.

Appellant insists that she had no intention of assuming the debt and that she never promised to pay it. A formal promise was not necessary to render her personally liable. Such an “obligation may be made orally or in a separate instrument ; it may be implied from the transaction of the parties, or it may be shown by the circumstances under which the purchase was made, as well as by the language used in the agreement”. (Hopkins v. Warner, 109 Cal. 133 [41 Pac. 868] ; Dutton v. Locke-Paddon, 37 Cal. App. 693 [174 Pac. 674] ; Lick v. Anderson, 29 Cal. App. 491 [156 Pac. 70].) “The doctrine results from the familiar doctrine in equity that a creditor is entitled to the benefit of all securities or *686 collateral obligations that the principal debtor may have given to the surety for the payment of the debt. By the conveyance of the mortgaged premises and the assumption of the mortgage debt by the grantee, the latter, as between him and his grantor, becomes primarily liable to the mortgagee, and his vendor becomes his surety.” (Hopkins v. Warner, stipra; Williams v. Naftzger, 103 Cal. 438 [37 Pac. 411].)

Appellant contends that whatever agreement may have been reached by Ramey and Bowen, the real agreement, as she accepted it, was set forth in the deed form she prepared herself and that neither Ramey nor Bowen had authority to alter it. In her opening brief she propounds the following question: “Has a general agent, without the knowledge or consent of his principal, authority to consent to the alteration of a deed by inserting a clause therein assuming and agreeing to pay a trust deed, and by accepting the deed thus altered, to bind his principal to such assumption?”

No deed was altered by Ramey. At the time the paper was filled out by appellant it was nothing more than a blank form which the grantor could change in any manner he saw fit until the time of delivery. (Dutton v. Locke-Paddon, supra.) The document as finally delivered to Bowen was Ramey’s deed, not appellant’s, and until he signed and delivered it he had the right to alter it at will. Nor is there any question here as to the authority of an agent to consent to the alteration of a deed. The deed did not come into existence, as such, until delivery, and there was no alteration thereafter. Appellant argues, however, that she intended the agreement to be as set forth in the papers prepared by her and that Bowen could not consent to the alteration of such agreement. This assumes that she alone could make an agreement. If there was no meeting of minds at this time on the question of assuming the debt, then there was no agreement at this time to be altered. Moreover, the circumstances attending the preparation of the papers by appellant and her version of the transaction were not conclusive evidence of the terms of the agreement. These were simply facts to be considered in connection with all the other facts in the case to determine what kind of an agreement, if any, had been finally reached.

It is next contended that the contract was one coming within the statute of frauds and that as Bowen had no written authority to consummate a contract appellant was not bound by his acts. In the view we take of the case it is unnecessary *687 to consider the application of the statute of frauds to the making of the preliminary agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
45 P.2d 253, 6 Cal. App. 2d 682, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-holding-corp-ltd-v-grey-calctapp-1935.