Mitsuuchi v. Security-First National Bank

229 P.2d 376, 103 Cal. App. 2d 214, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1148
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 2, 1951
DocketCiv. 17804
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 229 P.2d 376 (Mitsuuchi v. Security-First National Bank) 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
Mitsuuchi v. Security-First National Bank, 229 P.2d 376, 103 Cal. App. 2d 214, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1148 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

HANSON, J. pro tern.—

This case, which is an outgrowth of an escheat action instituted in 1944 by the State of California, is not in and of itself in any aspect unusual, but the action of the representatives of the state in the case upon which it is based seems to us to have violated the public policy of this state. While we shall have more to say concerning that observation it is sufficient at this point to concede that the ease before us presents a very simple question for solution. That question, stripped of unnecessary details, is whether the appellant bank under an indemnity provision in a trust deed was entitled to recover reasonable attorney’s fees and costs from respondent by reason of its defense of the validity of its trust deed lien in the escheat action.

A statement of the facts addressed to the point under consideration will suffice. Sometime prior to the year 1936 one Arnold was the owner of the property here involved, generally *216 known as “Arnold Ranch,” subject to a trust deed lien in favor of the defendant bank. The property consisting of 71 acres was located at the corner of Sawtelle and National Boulevards in the city of Los Angeles. Arnold failed to comply with the terms of the trust deed, and hence, the bank foreclosed it and bid in the property. Thereupon the bank leased the property to the son of Arnold, for a year at a time, subject to sale with the right of immediate possession. The bank upon acquiring the fee title promptly listed the land for sale with brokers but it was not until March, 1938, that it received an acceptable offer for the land from the respondent, an American citizen of Japanese ancestry.- As a result of negotiations between the parties, it was agreed that the bank should convey the land to respondent upon the payment of $10,000 in cash and the execution and delivery of a purchase money note for $78,562.50 to be secured by.a purchase money deed of trust.

Thereupon the appellant bank opened an escrow with the Title Insurance and Trust Company for completion of the transaction. The bank’s instructions required the delivery to it of a title insurance policy guaranteeing the validity of the proposed trust deed lien. A few days later the tenant Arnold called at the bank with respect to a renewal of his lease and was informed the land was being sold. Arnold had been hopeful of purchasing the land himself and upon learning respondent was the purchaser intimated to the bank that respondent was not purchasing the property with her own money and in her own behalf, but in trust for persons of Japanese ancestry who were barred by the Alien Land Law and accordingly, that the purchase was but a subterfuge to evade the law.

The bank promptly relayed this information to the title company. As the title company was not only under a duty to the bank to satisfy itself that the purchase was not being made to evade the law, but in its capacity as an insurer of titles was being called upon to insure the validity of the proposed trust deed, it concluded that, under the circumstances, it did not desire to undertake the possible liabilities involved. Accordingly, it so advised the appellant bank. Immediately thereafter, the respondent who had not been advised of the position taken by the title company visited it for the purpose of proceeding with her part of the escrow. By her answers to various questions put to her by the title company and from data and affidavits she supplied, the title company *217 became convinced that she was entitled to take and hold the land without in any respect violating the Alien Land Law. The bank upon being so advised by the title company entered into a new escrow. This escrow resulted in a conveyance of the land by appellant bank to respondent and the execution and recording of the trust deed executed by the respondent in which the bank was named as the beneficiary and the Los Angeles Trust and Safe Deposit Company as trustee.

Approximately six years later, i.e., in 1944, while the grantee of the land, an American citizen of Japanese descent, was interned with a host of other like citizens the attorney general of the state concluded that the grantee had acquired the land contrary to the Alien Land Law and thereupon instituted an action against the respondent grantee, along with the trustee and the bank as beneficiary of the trust deed seeking to have the realty escheated to the state as of the date when in 1938 respondent acquired the property by conveyance from the appellant bank. In that action the state charged that not only had the respondent acquired the property in violation of the provisions of the Alien Land Law but that the bank as beneficiary of the trust deed and as the grantor in the grant deed to respondent “had been informed of and knew that the defendant (respondent) Fumiko Mitsuuchi was taking the purported fee title to the aforesaid property in her name for the use and benefit of another person who was in fact an alien Japanese, a native of the Empire of Japan, and one ineligible to become a citizen of the United States of America.”

The beneficiary (appellant bank) and the trustee of the trust deed elected to defend jointly against the escheat action and employed counsel of their own choice to represent them. Not only did the trustor of the trust deed by her answer deny the charges of the state, but the appellant bank and the trustee did likewise.

At or about the close of the evidence on the last- day of the trial, an assistant attorney general of the state accepted in behalf of the state an offer by the defendant Mitsuuchi (respondent here) that the state would upon the payment by her to it of $75,000 stipulate to a judgment quieting title in Mitsuuchi and that the judgment would adjudicate that the trust deed lien of the appellant bank was in all respects valid. Pursuant to the acceptance of that offer respondent paid $75,000 out of her own funds, despite the fact that six years before she had purchased the entire tract from the bank for *218 a total consideration of only $88,562.50. The reasons which impelled her to do so are not shown by the record, but the inferences from the facts of which we take judicial notice are crystal clear. We note that Mitsuuchi, a native-born American citizen entitled to all the guaranties of the federal and state Constitutions had been placed in a detention camp by the military authorities. In view of all this, perhaps she feared that her property rights would be treated in the same manner, without regard to her constitutional rights. Accordingly, it undoubtedly appeared advisable to her to make the offer she made, in view of -the fact, of which we take judicial notice, that the property she purchased in 1938 was in 1946 worth several times what she had paid for it. On the other hand we note that it was the public policy of the state to prevent title to agricultural lands to vest directly or indirectly in persons of Japanese ancestry who were not American citizens. That being true it would seem that the representatives of the state were not entitled to compromise the policy of the state by in effect having the state sell agricultural lands to such persons.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P.2d 376, 103 Cal. App. 2d 214, 1951 Cal. App. LEXIS 1148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitsuuchi-v-security-first-national-bank-calctapp-1951.