Patten v. Pepper Hotel Co.

96 P. 296, 153 Cal. 460, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 485
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1908
DocketL.A. Nos. 1973, 1993.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 96 P. 296 (Patten v. Pepper Hotel Co.) 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
Patten v. Pepper Hotel Co., 96 P. 296, 153 Cal. 460, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 485 (Cal. 1908).

Opinions

LORIGAN, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs as second assignees and pledgees of a note and mortgage to foreclose said mortgage.

The complaint alleged that on August 25, 1903, Coonrod Smith (not a party to the action) executed to the defendant Abbie E. Barr a promissory note for sixty thousand dollars payable five years after its date and to secure its payment also executed a mortgage in her favor on the property described in the complaint. The note set forth in the complaint provided for the payment of interest quarterly and contained an option in favor of the holder of the same to declare the whole principal and interest due in case of default in payment of the interest. It is then alleged that subsequent to the execution of said note and mortgage, said defendant Abbie E. Barr made two assignments thereof, in pledge however, one to secure the payment of an indebtedness then owing by the defendant Barr Realty Company to the defendant German-American Savings Bank on the promissory note of said company in the sum of thirty-five thousand dollars, the other *462 assignment being in pledge to secure an indebtedness due to the plaintiffs from the said Barr Bealty Company in the sum of $38,340.60 evidenced by a promissory note of said realty company; that said second assignment to plaintiffs was subject to the pledge of said note and mortgage in favor of the defendant bank; that default in the payment of the interest, due on said promissory note of said Smith had been made and because thereof the German-American Savings Bank, as, the owner and holder of the same had elected to exercise the option in said note contained and declared the whole of said note, principal and interest, due and payable; that because of said default, the plaintiffs also had elected to declar.e the whole of said note executed by Smith due and payable. It is then alleged that the defendant Pepper Hotel Company, by mesne conveyances since the execution of said mortgage by Smith, had become and was the owner of the real estate covered by said mortgage. The prayer was for a foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises; and that the proceeds of said sale be applied first to the payment of the note of the Barr Bealty Company to the defendant bank, and second, for the application of the balance of the proceeds to the payment of the promissory note executed by said Bealty Company in favor of plaintiffs.

The defendant Pepper Hotel Company demurred to the complaint, challenging the sufficiency of the facts stated to warrant relief and asserted as a further ground that there was a defect and misjoinder of parties plaintiff and defendant. The demurrer was overruled, and thereafter an answer and cross-complaint was filed by the defendant German-American Savings Bank. The answer admitted all the allegations of the complaint. The cross-complaint set up substantially the same facts that were contained in the complaint relative-to the .assignment and pledge of said Smith note to the bank by the defendant Abbie B. Barr to secure payment of the-note of the Barr Bealty Company; that default in the payment of interest on both notes had been made; that it had elected to exercise the option provided for in the Smith note- and had declared the whole of said note, principal and interest, due and payable, and concluded with a prayer similar-to that in the complaint for the foreclosure of the mortgage- and application of the proceeds.

*463 The Pepper Hotel Company, by its answer, as a defense to-the claim of both the plaintiffs and the cross-complainant German-American Savings Bank, averred that the note and. mortgage from Smith to the defendant Abbie B. Barr were without consideration and that the plaintiffs and the said-bank took their assignments thereof with notice of that fact. By way of a relief against a foreclosure of said mortgage it was averred that the Pepper Hotel Company was willing and. able and intended to pay the interest which fell due on the Smith note on July 12, 1905 (and for default in the payment, of which the option was exercised), but that circumstances oyer which it had no control prevented it from so doing until about the 20th of July, 1905; that on said date said hotel company offered to pay the cross-complainant bank all accrued, interest on said note and that on the 25th of July, 1905, a. similar offer was made by the defendant. It was then averred, that if a foreclosure be ordered it will entail great financial sacrifice on said hotel company to meet the judgment; that, if said note were permitted to run to maturity according to its terms, said hotel company would meet the payments. thereof without such great loss; that the said mortgaged, premises were ample security for said debt, were worth the sum of ninety thousand dollars, and that cross-complainant is. in no danger of loss because of insufficient value of said property. The prayer is that the note and mortgage be declared, void for want of consideration, or that if held to be valid, and. a valid lien against the property of the hotel company that-said company be relieved from the penalty of having the principal of said note declared due and payable; that said, defendant cross-complainant bank be required to accept said interest and that the action be dismissed.

The German-American Savings Bank and the Pepper Hotel Company were the only defendants who answered, the others.making default.

The findings of the court were in favor of the plaintiffs and. the cross-complainant bank, and a judgment decreeing a foreclosure and sale and application of the proceeds as prayed for by them was ordered entered thereon. The Pepper Hotel Company appeals from said judgment and also from an order.denying its motion for a new trial.

*464 The plaintiffs also appeal from that portion of the' judgment which allows them hut six hundred dollars as attorney’s fees.

Both appeals will be disposed of herein.

As to the main appeal by the Pepper Hotel Company. Several grounds are urged by it for a reversal of both the judgment and the order, but there are only a few which we think merit consideration.

It is insisted on the appeal from the judgment that the court erred in overruling the demurrer of appellant to the complaint. Its position in that respect is, first, that plaintiffs had no right to bring the action because not being the holders of the note they could not exercise the option to declare the principal due as it is provided in the note that such option must be exercised by the holder thereof, and that the German-American Savings Bank, and not the plaintiffs, had the actual control and exercised dominion over said note and mortgage as a pledge; second, that plaintiffs and the German-American Savings Bank being united in interest, there was a nonjoinder of parties plaintiff in not making the bank a plaintiff, and a misjoinder of parties defendant in making the bank a defendant without alleging that the bank refused to join as a plaintiff. In support of the second point, appellant cites section 382 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

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Bluebook (online)
96 P. 296, 153 Cal. 460, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patten-v-pepper-hotel-co-cal-1908.