Phillips v. Phillips

127 P. 346, 163 Cal. 530
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1912
DocketL. A. 2764; L. A. 2774
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 127 P. 346 (Phillips v. Phillips) 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
Phillips v. Phillips, 127 P. 346, 163 Cal. 530 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

These are actions to foreclose two certain mortgages. Judgments in favor of the plaintiff were rendered in the trial court, but the court declined to include in said judgments a certain amount claimed on account of advances made by plaintiff for taxes, street assessments, insurance, and the like due upon the mortgaged premises. Defendant’s appeal is from the judgments and from an order denying her *532 motion for a new trial. Plaintiff appeals from that part of the judgments which is unfavorable to his claim for advances.

The whole controversy with respect to defendant’s appeal has reference to the alleged bar of the statute of limitations. On November 20, 1888, Jane M. Phillips and Charles M. Phillips, her husband, executed a note in favor of plaintiff, Thomas W. Phillips, a brother of said Charles, for five thousand dollars secured by a mortgage on certain realty in Los Angeles County described as “lots numbered ten (10), eleven (11) and the south half of lot seven (7), all in block ‘P’ San Pasqual Tract, lands of the Lake Vineyard Land and Water Association, as per map of said San Pasqual Tract as the same is recorded in book 3, page 315, miscellaneous records of Los Angeles County, California.” The note was by its terms made payable on or before two years after date. Later, another note supported by a mortgage was executed by the same parties for fourteen thousand dollars. This note and the mortgage were both dated September 30, 1893, but were in reality executed somewhat later. The complaint alleged a written agreement between the parties also dated September 30, 1893. whereby plaintiff promised not to enforce the collection of either of these obligations for at least a period of ten years, and not even then to commence foreclosure proceedings unless the real and personal property of Charles M. and Jane M. Phillips should at that time be of a value of more than sixty thousand dollars above the indebtedness evidenced by the said notes and mortgages; and that if at the end of ten years from the date of the execution of the agreement of forbearance, the wealth of the mortgagors should fall below the value indicated, then a further period of five years was to be allowed for the payment of the debt, at the end of which time, if the property of the mortgagors was still insufficient to leave them at least sixty thousand dollars after the full satisfaction of the notes and mortgages, then only so much of the debt was to be collected as would allow Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Phillips to retain sixty thousand dollars’ worth of real and personal property.

The uncontradicted evidence shows that in 1893 Charles M. Phillips visited his brother, the plaintiff herein, at the latter’s home in Pennsylvania. At that time Charles and his wife were indebted to the plaintiff in a sum exceeding sixteen thou *533 sand dollars, five thousand dollars of which was secured by one of the mortgages here in suit. The remainder of it was unsecured, eight thousand dollars of the indebtedness being represented by the promissory note of Charles M. Phillips and his wife payable to the wife of Thomas W. Phillips. While Charles M. Phillips was at his brother’s home the agreement of forbearance was drawn in duplicate, was signed by plaintiff and one copy thereof was delivered by him to Charles M. Phillips, among whose papers it was found after the latter’s death in 1908. The agreement, which was signed by plaintiff only, was in the form of a contract between him as party of the first part and Charles M. and Jane M. Phillips, as parties of the second part. It recites the execution of the note and mortgage of even date to secure the sum of fourteen thousand dollars, and the prior note and mortgage for five thousand dollars, but states that of the larger note only eleven thousand dollars had been actually paid, the balance being for future advancements. The considerations mentioned for the execution of the contract of forbearance are one dollar and “brotherly love and affection. ’ ’ On the return of Charles M. Phillips to California, he and his wife executed the note and mortgage for fourteen thousand dollars, dating it September 30, 1893. In the three years succeeding such execution plaintiff advanced to defendant and her husband sums aggregating the three thousand dollars necessary to make up the principal sum of the note,, and thereafter continued to make further loans to them. The complaint contains the allegation that at the expiration of the fifteen years contemplated by the contract of forbearance the property of Mrs. Jane M. Phillips exceeded by more than sixty thousand dollars her indebtedness, to plaintiff, but that it had not been worth that much money when the ten-year period was completed. Defendant did not deny the alleged value of her possessions at the time of the ending of the period of fifteen years. On the contrary she alleged that on September 30, 1903, ten years after the date of the contract of forbearance she possessed property worth more than sixty thousand dollars above the debts secured by the mortgages in suit, but as no oral testimony was adduced with refer ence to this matter, as her allegation was on information and belief and as plaintiff’s positive averments that on September 30, 1903, the combined wealth of his brother and Mrs. Jane M. *534 Phillips was less than sixty thousand dollars in excess of the mortgage debts, while on September 30, 1908, his brother’s widow was possessed of more than that amount of property, stand without contradiction, it follows that the finding of the court in favor of plaintiff on this subject is fully supported.

Appellant advances three general statements for our consideration. These are that: 1. The agreement dated September 30, 1893, never became effective because not signed by the parties of the second part; 2. Said agreement was void because executed without consideration; and 3. Knowledge of the existence of said supposed agreement had never been brought home to defendant by the proof in this case. Prom these premises defendant concludes that the agreement of September 30, 1893, never suspended the operation of the statute of limitations and that, therefore, the bar of said statute is available as a defense in this action.

It is not disputed that the note for eight thousand dollars was surrendered to Charles M. Phillips for himself and his wife and that with that note in his possession, as well as with plaintiff’s written agreement to make further advances and to extend the time for the enforcement of the mortgage liens, defendant’s husband returned from Pennsylvania to California. Very shortly thereafter he and his wife executed the note and mortgage for fourteen thousand dollars. Defendant probably had opportunity to see the contract as her husband kept it until the time of his death. But even if she never actually saw it, she was charged under the circumstances, with knowledge of it and its contents. The land in question was her separate property. This is alleged in the complaint, is not denied in the answer, and is found by the court to be true. Therefore, in the negotiations with his brother her husband acted as her ostensible agent. While they lived together in Pasadena her husband continued to borrow money from his brother and to apply it to the payment of debts standing against this land. The unchallenged evidence shows that she, with her husband, executed a mortgage for more money than she had then received, and this mortgage was antedated to correspond with a date when Charles M.

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Bluebook (online)
127 P. 346, 163 Cal. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-phillips-cal-1912.