Proctor v. Pyle

91 P.2d 187, 33 Cal. App. 2d 121, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 197
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1939
DocketCiv. No. 6094
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 187 (Proctor v. Pyle) 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
Proctor v. Pyle, 91 P.2d 187, 33 Cal. App. 2d 121, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 197 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The defendant, Grouse Hill Land Company, has appealed from a judgment foreclosing a mortgage of $9,500 on the “Dawson Ranch” in Sonoma County, consisting of 1938 acres of land, excepting therefrom 213.71 acres which were released from the mortgage lien.

The chief defenses to the foreclosure proceeding were the contentions that plaintiff was not the owner or holder of the note and mortgage, and that the note which was secured by the mortgage was previously paid and the indebtedness completely extinguished.

[123]*123The transactions culminating in the execution of the note and mortgage are complicated.

The defendant, Ira D. Pyle, resides at Santa Rosa and is engaged in a real estate business. In 1924 he owned a large ranch in that county, called the “Cooper Ranch”, subject to a mortgage of $23,000. With the agreement to purchase and operate this Cooper ranch as a hunting club, the Grouse Hill Land Company was incorporated in September, 1924. The directors and officers thereof were the defendant, Ira D. Pyle, Howard Ladd and Dr. B. J. Stickel. Pyle was the secretary, treasurer and manager of the company. The corporation claimed an equity in the land valued at the sum of $13,000, together with a further uncertain sum expended for improvements on the land. Contrary to the agreement, Pyle failed to deed or transfer the land to the corporation. In 1926, he informed the stockholders of the corporation that the holder of the $23,000 mortgage on the Cooper ranch threatened to foreclose it, but that he could sell their equities and advised investing the receipts thereof in an adjoining ranch of 1938 acres, called the “Dawson Ranch”, which the corporation could purchase for $9 an acre. This was agreed upon. Pyle sold the equities of the shareholders in the corporation to his brother C. C. Pyle and Red Grange for $13,000 in cash. The Cooper ranch transaction is not involved in the present mortgage foreclosure suit except that it furnishes evidence of the source from which a portion of the funds were derived with which the Dawson ranch was subsequently purchased.

The Dawson ranch was owned by three Dawson brothers. That 1938-acre tract was purchased by Ira D. Pyle for $9 an acre, aggregating the sum of $17,442. Mr. Pyle took title to that ranch in his own name, paying the grantors $7,942 in cash, and executing and delivering to them his personal note for the balance of the purchase price, to wit: $9,500, due March 27, 1931, at 6 per cent interest payable semi-annually, secured by a mortgage on the entire ranch. Mr. Pyle failed to account to the Grouse Hill Land Company for $5,058 received from the sale of the Cooper ranch. He subsequently deeded to the corporation only 1724 acres of the Dawson ranch, retaining in his own name title to 213.71 acres thereof. The controversy over the title to this last-mentioned tract of land was not in issue nor was it determined by the court [124]*124in this action. The shareholders in the corporation claim they did not discover the withholding by Mr. Pyle of the sum of $5,058 of the proceeds of sale of the Cooper ranch nor the retaining of the record title to the 213.71-acre tract of the Dawson ranch until December, 1930.

Mr. Dawson had no knowledge of any dispute between Pyle and the corporation regarding the proceeds derived from the sale of the Cooper ranch, or of the title to the 213.71-acre tract retained by him. Mr. Dawson dealt only with Mr. Pyle in the transaction involving the purchase of the note and mortgage. He had no knowledge of any interest claimed by the corporation.

The Pyle note for $9,500 matured March 27, 1931. Prior to its maturity, and on December 13, 1930, the note and mortgage were assigned to W. O. Dawson, one of the original owners thereof who thereby became the sole owner and holder of the instruments. In the first part of May, 1931, Dawson demanded of Pyle the immediate payment of the note threatening to foreclose the mortgage if he did not do so. Pyle then attempted to persuade the plaintiff, George A. Proctor, to purchase the note and mortgage. The plaintiff urged Marion Cooper to buy the note and mortgage. Cooper encouraged the plaintiff to believe that he might raise the money and procure the purchase of the note and mortgage. Arrangements were made to borrow the purchase price of the note, to wit, $9,500 from Mrs. O. K. Cooper (now deceased), the wife of Marion Cooper. Pursuant to that agreement, Dawson, Marion Cooper and Pyle met in the office of Mr. Pyle to close the bargain May 25, 1931. At that time Marion Cooper executed and delivered to W. 0. Dawson his personal cheek for $500 as part purchase price of the note and mortgage, with the agreement that upon the payment of the balance of the purchase price, to wit, $9,000, Dawson would assign the note and mortgage to the plaintiff. Immediately after the $500 check was executed and delivered to Dawson, the parties went to the office of the Abstract Company in Santa Rosa, where an assignment of the mortgage was duly prepared and left to be delivered to the purchaser thereof upon completion of the transaction. The name of the assignee was, however, then left blank.

June 1, 1931, W. O. Dawson, Ira D. Pyle, the plaintiff George Proctor, and Marion Cooper again met in the abstract [125]*125office and the purchase of the note and mortgage by the plaintiff was completed. Both instruments were then assigned by Dawson and delivered to the plaintiff. The $9,000 check for the balance of the purchase price had been previously drawn by P. M. Cooper, who is the same person called Marion Cooper, payable to his wife, Mrs. O. K. Cooper, from whom the money was borrowed. Mrs. Cooper drew the money from her savings account in the Exchange Bank and deposited it in her husband’s account. The check was drawn by him in the name of his wife to preserve a history of the transaction. This cheek was endorsed by Mrs. O. K. Cooper and also by Ira D. Pyle. It was then placed on the counter in that abstract office for Mr. Dawson, who subsequently endorsed the check and cashed it the following day. Marion Cooper took the assignment to the Recorder’s office and had it recorded. Mr. Pyle accompanied him on that occasion. Neither the note, mortgage nor assignment was delivered to Mr. Pyle. The transaction was conducted in the name of the plaintiff, George A. Proctor.

The loan from Mrs. O. K. Cooper was represented by a promissory note dated June 1, 1931, payable to her fifteen months after date with interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum, payable quarterly. It was signed by Ira D. Pyle, George A. Proctor and her husband, Marion Cooper. We may reasonably assume Mr. Pyle signed that note to enable Mr. Proctor to borrow the money with which to purchase the note and mortgage so as to delay the foreclosure proceedings and particularly to secure a release of 213.71 acres from the mortgage lien for the benefit of the defendants. That purpose is clearly expressed in the agreement which was executed by the interested parties on the same date that the Cooper note was made.

On June 1, 1931, as a part of the transaction by means of which the note and mortgage were transferred to the plaintiff, Ira D. Pyle, as party of the first part, and George A. Proctor and Marion Cooper, as parties of the second part, joined in a written agreement with respect to the mortgaged property. It is our opinion this document confirms the findings of the trial court that the plaintiff became the purchaser. of the note and mortgage from W. 0. Dawson, and that he did not borrow the money for and in behalf of Ira D. Pyle, [126]

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 187, 33 Cal. App. 2d 121, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-v-pyle-calctapp-1939.