Pomona College v. Dunn

46 P.2d 270, 7 Cal. App. 2d 227, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 565
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1935
DocketCiv. 1134
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 46 P.2d 270 (Pomona College v. Dunn) 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
Pomona College v. Dunn, 46 P.2d 270, 7 Cal. App. 2d 227, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 565 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant Russell B. Seymour, as trustee in bankruptcy of the estate of Fred B. Dunn, a bankrupt, from a portion of the judgment and decree of foreclosure made and entered in an action instituted by the plaintiff for the purpose of foreclosing the *230 lien of a mortgage executed by Fred B. Dunn and his wife in favor of plaintiff Pomona College, a corporation. That portion of the judgment from which the appeal has been perfected decrees that, if, upon sale of the mortgaged premises, the proceeds thereof are insufficient to pay the amount found due to plaintiff under its mortgage, there shall be applied toward the satisfaction of such deficiency the sum of $5,568 or such part thereof as may be necessary, which sum is in the possession of the defendant Security First National Bank of Los Angeles and is declared to be a part of the security of plaintiff’s mortgage on which sum it is adjudged the plaintiff has a lien by virtue of its mortgage.

The record herein shows the existence of the following facts which are material to this appeal: On September 28, 1925, Fred B. Dunn and his wife Leah Dunn executed a promissory note in the amount of $10,000 in favor of plaintiff Pomona College. The note was payable three years after its date and the payment thereof was secured by a mortgage on real property fronting on Temple Street in the city of Los Angeles which was then owned by the Dunns. On August 8, 1927, the city of Los Angeles commenced an action in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County for the purpose of condemning a portion of the real property which was encumbered by the lien of the aforesaid mortgage. The mortgagee, Pomona College, was joined as a party defendant in this action, was duly served with process therein, and defaulted in appearance. The complaint in this action alleged on information and belief that the defendant Pomona College claimed an interest in the parcel of land sought to be condemned by virtue of the mortgage and further alleged a lack of sufficient knowledge, information or belief to enable the plaintiff to state whether said mortgage constituted a valid and subsisting lien upon the land. Wherefore, basing its denial upon the lack of such information, the plaintiff denied that said defendant had any interest in the said land. The prayer of the complaint was that defendants be required to set forth the nature and extent of their several estates or interests in the land, that such estates or interests may be adjudicated and determined, that the value of each and every such separate estate or interest in the land and the damage accruing to the respective owners thereof by reason of the condemnation in the construction of the improvement in the *231 manner proposed by the plaintiff be ascertained and adjudged, that upon payment to said defendants of the several amounts so ascertained the court make and enter a final judgment condemning the land to the public use for the public improvement described in the complaint. Upon the conclusion of the trial of this action the trial court found that the value of the land taken and of all improvements thereon pertaining to the realty was $5,568 and that no damage would result to the remainder of the parcel by reason of the condemnation of that portion sought to be condemned. The court further specifically found “That the defendant Pomona College, a corporation, has an interest in and to said parcel of land under and by virtue of a mortgage but that the security of said mortgage is not impaired, and therefore said defendant is not entitled to receive compensation herein”. On January 6, 1930, an interlocutory judgment in said action was duly entered. In this judgment it was decreed that, upon payment to the several defendants of the amounts determined as compensation proper to be paid to them, the parcel of land described in the complaint should be condemned to the use of plaintiff, the city of Los Angeles. On November 10, 1931, the plaintiff in said action paid into court the aforesaid sum of $5,568 to meet the award made by the interlocutory judgment. On November 20, 1931, the said sum so deposited was paid to the holder of the legal title of the land affected by the condemnation action. Final judgment of condemnation was thereupon entered. No appeal was taken either from the interlocutory judgment or from the final judgment in said condemnation action. On December 9, 1931, Pomona College instituted the present action whereby it sought to foreclose its mortgage and to have recourse to the aforesaid award of $5,568 in the possession of the Security First National Bank of Los Angeles, holder of the legal title of the mortgaged land or to such part of said sum as should be necessary to satisfy any deficiency that might remain after the mortgaged premises were sold and the proceeds of such sale applied to the mortgaged debt. The principal defense pleaded and urged during the trial of the action by the trustee in bankruptcy of the bankrupt estate of Fred B. Dunn, the mortgagor, was that the interlocutory judgment in the aforesaid condemnation action instituted by the city of Los Angeles in which action Pomona *232 College was joined as a party defendant decreed that the security of the mortgage was not impaired by the taking of a portion of the mortgaged premises, that consequently the mortgagee was not entitled to any compensation for such taking, and that this judgment having long since become final amounts to an adjudication by which the plaintiff in the instant action is bound. This contention did not prevail in the trial court. It constitutes the principal contention urged on this appeal for reversal of the judgment.

The problem which is therefore presented in connection with the contention thus advanced is whether or not the right of the respondent mortgagee to have recourse to the award granted to the land owner for the taking of a part of the mortgaged premises has become res judicata by virtue of the judgment in the prior condemnation action.

In entering upon a consideration of this problem it must be conceded at the outset that the right of a mortgagee in a proper case to subject an award made to the land owner as compensation for a part of the mortgaged premises taken through the medium of eminent domain proceedings to the lien of his mortgage is not open to doubt. Under the familiar doctrine of equitable conversion the award is considered as land and the mortgagee is entitled so to regard it and to have recourse to it in satisfaction of the mortgage lien (Los Angeles T. & S. Bank v. Bortenstein, 47 Cal. App. 421, 423 [190 Pac. 850]). Here, however, the mortgagee was joined as a party defendant in the condemnation action and was served with process therein so that the court in said action had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the mortgagee and found that the security of the mortgage was not impaired by the taking of the land, for which reason no award was made to the mortgagee in such action.

The long-established principle of res judicata is specifically recognized by statute in California.

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Bluebook (online)
46 P.2d 270, 7 Cal. App. 2d 227, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomona-college-v-dunn-calctapp-1935.