Montgomery v. Meyerstein

231 P. 730, 195 Cal. 37, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 190
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1924
DocketDocket No. S.F. 10555.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 231 P. 730 (Montgomery v. Meyerstein) 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
Montgomery v. Meyerstein, 231 P. 730, 195 Cal. 37, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 190 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This appeal is from an order of the trial court denying the motion of the appellants to recall and quash a writ of execution. The history of the transaction and of the litigation between the parties hereto which finally resulted in the issuance of said execution and the motion for its recall, the denial of which led to this appeal, is quite fully set forth by this court upon a former appeal in this case, reported in Montgomery v. Meyerstein et al., 186 Cal. 459 [199 Pac. 800], and the facts as therein recited and the law as therein declared, in so far as they go, are to be taken as the facts and as the law of the case upon this appeal. These may be briefly restated as follows: On February 7, 1916, one Otto A. Brown was the owner of a certain tract of land described as lot 16, block 29, of the Forest Hill Extension, in the city of San Francisco, and which was at that time subject to two encumbrances, viz., a deed of trust executed by him to Alfred Meyerstein as trustee to secure the payment of an indebtedness due by Brown to the Forest Hill Realty Company, and also to a prior mortgage executed by Brown to the Bank of Italy to secure the payment of an indebtedness due by him to said bank. On said February 7, 1916, Brown entered into a contract with the plaintiff herein for the conveyance to her of said tract of land upon the payment by her of certain sums as the purchase price thereof. While the negotiations were pending which resulted in the making of said contract the plaintiff herein, learning of the existence of these two encumbrances, requested that Meyerstein and the Forest Hill Realty Company join in the execution of said contract. In so doing she fully understood that these two latter signers of said contract had no title to the property and that she was buying the same not from them but from Brown. After talcing possession of the property under said contract and making certain monthly pay- *40 meats upon, the purchase price thereof, which aggregated the sum of $1,170, and expending certain other moneys upon improvements and for taxes and insurance, which brought her aggregate expenditures up to the sum of $2,020, she discovered that said Brown had made certain false and fraudulent representations to her as to the original cost of the house upon the premises, and in consequence thereof demanded the return of the moneys she had thus paid, and offered to restore whatever she had received under said contract. This demand and offer being refused, she commenced the present action for the rescission of said contract and for the recovery of the moneys she had paid and expended thereunder, making all of the parties who had signed said contract parties to the action. The material averments of her complaint being put in issue, the cause went to trial and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant Brown alone for the recovery of $2,020, but without declaring any lien upon the property, and to a judgment in favor of the other defendants for their costs. Thereupon the plaintiff moved the court for a judgment on the findings for $1,170' against the Forest TCill Realty Company and for a lien upon the said property for said amount. This motion was denied, whereupon the plaintiff took two appeals, one from the judgment generally and one from the order denying her said motion. Both appeals were considered together, and in deciding the same this court, while upholding the judgment generally in the plaintiff’s favor, reversed the same and remanded the cause with direction to the trial court to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against Brown for the sum of $2,020-, with interest to the date of such entry, and declaring a lien therefor upon the property in question, subject to the liens of the Forest Hill Realty Company and the Bank of Italy. (Montgomery v. Meyerstein, supra,) Upon the going down of the case with this direction the trial court obeyed the direction to the letter in respect to said judgment, and in respect to the plaintiff’s lien adjudged and decreed that “a lien is hereby declared and decreed for the total amount thereof, to wit, Two thousand six hundred and ninety-two- and 60-100 ($2,692.60) on the property described in plaintiff’s complaint” (describing it). The trial court further adjudged *41 and decreed “that said lien hereinabove described is subject, however, to the lien of that certain. mortgage of the Bank of Italy, a corporation, dated September 22d, 1915, and recorded September 25th, 1915, in liber 399 of mortgages, page 379 records of the county recorder of the City and County of San Francisco, to secure the payment of three thousand five hundred ($3500.00) dollars with interest, and all other moneys provided in said mortgage. It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that said lien of plaintiff hereinabove described is subject also to the lien of the Forest Hill Realty Company, wherein Otto Al Brown is the party of the first part, and Alfred L. Meyerstein is the party of the second part, dated September 23rd, 1915, reecorded September 25th, 1915, in vol. 888 of deeds at page 249, records of the county recorder of the City and County of San Francisco, to secure the payment of two thousand one hundred and twenty-five ($2125.00) dollars with interest and all other moneys provided in said deed of trust, less one thousand one hundred and seventy ($1170.00) dollars, paid on said deed of trust by plaintiff to Forest Hill Realty Company, a corporation, prior to September 1st, 1917.” The foregoing judgment was entered on August 23, 1921. On May 24, 1922, the clerk of the trial court, upon the plalintiff’s application and without any further judgment, order, or direction of said court, issued a writ of execution directed to the sheriff of the city .and county of San Francisco, reciting the substantial terms of said judgment and commanding the said sheriff to make levy of said execution for the sums of money due to the plaintiff on said judgment, and to satisfy the same out of the specific real property involved in said action. The said sheriff proceeded to make such levy in accordance with the direction of said writ, whereupon and on May 24, 1922, the defendant Meyerstein and said Linforth appeared and moved said court to recall and quash said writ of execution, basing their said motion upon the following grounds:

“1. That said writ of execution was wrongfully, unlawfully and improperly issued.
“2. That the judgment in the said action does not direct the issuance of the said writ of execution, or of any writ of execution, nor the sale of the property described in the said *42 judgment and writ of execution, and does not foreclose any lien of plaintiff.
“3. That the said writ of execution does not require the sheriff to satisfy the said judgment out of the personal property of the judgment debtor therein if sufficient personal property can be found for that purpose, but instead orders the sale of the specific real property described in said judgment and said writ of execution.
“4. That neither the said judgment nor the said writ of execution contains any direction as to the application of the proceeds of any property sold thereunder.
“5. That no notice of intention to apply for the issuance of the said writ of execution was given to the other lien claimants named in the said judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
231 P. 730, 195 Cal. 37, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-meyerstein-cal-1924.