Muth v. Educators Security Insurance

114 Cal. App. 3d 749, 170 Cal. Rptr. 849, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 1358
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 19, 1981
DocketCiv. 45675
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 Cal. App. 3d 749 (Muth v. Educators Security Insurance) 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
Muth v. Educators Security Insurance, 114 Cal. App. 3d 749, 170 Cal. Rptr. 849, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 1358 (Cal. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Opinion

ELKINGTON, J.

The instant appeal is from an “order discharging an attachment.” It is taken on a clerk’s and partial reporter’s transcripts of the pertinent proceedings and evidence of the superior court. We relate *753 certain of the proceedings, and uncontroverted evidence, as found in those records.

On or about December 6, 1971, plaintiffs Paul L. Muth and Genevieve S. Muth, his wife, deeded to defendant Educators Security Insurance Company, a Nebraska corporation, certain unimproved real property in Tehama County, California, which for reasons as will soon appear we shall refer to as parcel A. As consideration therefor, that defendant executed and delivered to plaintiffs its promissory note for $411,750, payable in installments of $50,000 on the first day of each year commencing January 1, 1982. Interest on the unpaid balance at 7 percent was payable “semi-annually on January 1st and July 1st of each calendar year commencing with January 1, 1972.”

The promissory note also contained a provision that: “If any payment of interest or principal is not made as it comes due, the holder of this note at any time thereafter, may, at his option, elect to declare the entire balance of this note remaining unpaid, to become and be immediately due and payable.”

Sometime in 1972, defendant Educators Security Insurance Company merged with defendant Pioneer Insurance Company (hereafter Pioneer), also a Nebraska corporation, which thereby took title to parcel A, and assumed all of Educators Security Insurance Company’s obligations, including principal and interest of plaintiffs’ promissory note. Such interest payments were made by one or the other of the defendants to and including January 1, 1975. They were, without express complaint or objection, sometimes tardily made.

On or about March 20, 1975, the Nebraska Director of Insurance found Pioneer to be in a financially “hazardous condition.” Pursuant to statutes of Nebraska he took over the management and assets of that company. He then appointed a conservator of Pioneer to act under his direction. The conservator thereafter paid the interest due July 1, 1975, on the promissory note.

On or about January 16, 1976, plaintiffs received a letter, dated January 13, 1976, from Pioneer’s conservator which, as relevant, advised them in this manner (the italics are ours):

“Enclosed please find the check of Pioneer Insurance Company in the amount of $14,411.25 representing the payment of interest on a certain *754 promissory note. This payment, should not be deemed or construed as an acknowledgment of the validity of the obligation or as a waiver of any defense to the obligation that may be available to the Pioneer Insurance Company.
“This letter is to further document our telephone conversations advising you and your counsel, John Burnett, that the Director of Insurance for the State of Nebraska has appointed me as Conservator, under Nebraska law, of the Pioneer Insurance Company and that an agreement for the reinsurance of the life insurance policies of the company is currently being negotiated. As a part of this reinsurance agreement, a change in the ownership of the assets currently held by the Pioneer Insurance Company will occur. After this change of ownership occurs, you will be contacted by representatives of either the Department of Insurance or by representatives of the purchaser.”

As stated in the letter, the interest check (16 days late) was enclosed.

Plaintiffs, through their attorney, rejected and returned the untimely interest check by a letter, dated January 26, 1976, to the conservator which stated, as relevant: “Due to the fact that the letter accompanying said check contained the statement, ‘This payment should not be deemed or construed as an acknowledgment of the validity of the obligation or as a waiver of any defense to the obligation that may be available to the Pioneer Insurance Company;’ and due to the fact that after receiving said letter and check we and our counsel have been informed by a Texas lawyer speaking from the office of the Nebraska Insurance Commissioner, who refuses to reveal the names of his clients, that your company is proposing to sell all your lands in California to some unknown company, and the further contents of said letter, we decline to accept said check and hereby give notice that we elect to demand, and do demand, immediate payment of the entire principal of said note; and we wish to further advise you that we are forthwith taking appropriate action, in the proper Courts, to enforce your obligations to us.”

It will be noted that plaintiffs’ election to accelerate payment of the promissory note was not based upon the January 1, 1976, interest payment’s tardy tender.

On January 26, 1976, plaintiffs filed the instant action on the promissory note seeking judgment for its principal amount and accumulated *755 interest. The complaint recited “that they elect to declare the entire balance of this note remaining unpaid to become and be immediately due and payable,” because the January 1, 1976, interest had not been timely paid “as required by the terms of said promissory note,...” The January 26, 1976, letter’s stated reason for election to accelerate the note’s payment was not alleged. And the complaint prayed only for the promissory note’s principal sum “together with compound interest”; it did not expressly seek judgment for the accrued, and accruing, interest.

Later on the day of the action’s commencement, January 26, 1976, plaintiffs caused a writ of attachment issued therein to be levied upon Pioneer’s Tehama County property consisting not only of parcel A but also of a nearby parcel to which we shall hereafter refer as parcel B.

A principal issue of the trial was whether plaintiffs were legally empowered “to declare the entire balance of [the promissory] note remaining unpaid, to become and be immediately due and payable” by virtue of (1) the January 16, 1976, tardy interest payment, or (2) the conservator’s announcement that its payment “should not be deemed or construed as an acknowledgment of the validity of the obligation or as a waiver of any defense to the obligation that may be available.... ”

By findings of fact and conclusions of law the trial court held against plaintiffs on those issues. We are furnished with no record of the trial’s oral proceedings and testimony; we therefore presume, for the purpose of this appeal only, that such findings and conclusions were supported by substantial evidence and were otherwise in accordance with law. “Error is never presumed, but must be affirmatively shown.” (Carpenter v. Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. (1937) 10 Cal.2d 307, 326 [74 Cal.Rptr. 761] [affd. sub nom. Neblett v. Carpenter (1938) 305 U.S. 297 (83 L.Ed. 182, 59 S.Ct. 170]].)

Upon the above-noted judicial determinations it followed that plaintiffs’ complaint, when filed, stated no existing cause of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 Cal. App. 3d 749, 170 Cal. Rptr. 849, 1981 Cal. App. LEXIS 1358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muth-v-educators-security-insurance-calctapp-1981.