Raun v. Reynolds

11 Cal. 14
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 11 Cal. 14 (Raun v. Reynolds) 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
Raun v. Reynolds, 11 Cal. 14 (Cal. 1858).

Opinion

The above named defendants, appellants herein, assign for error in said cause—

1. That judgment is so rendered that interest is compounded on the judgment.

2. That the judgment is contingent and uncertain.

3. That the portion of the judgment which directs the manner of the sale of the mortgaged property, grants to said plaintiff greater relief than was by him demanded in his complaint, and was greater than the Court could grant in case of default.

And as to the first point. Independently of statutes, the only remedy by which interest can be recovered upon a judgment, is an action of debt upon the judgment. And. Leading Cases, vol. 1, page 501.

At common law, on an execution upon a judgment, interest cannot be levied, because the execution must pursue the judgment, and there is nothing on the record to authorize the collecting of interest.” 11., 6 Johns. 283 ; 2 Vesey, p. 162; 2 Johns. Chy. 172, 180 ; 1 Page, 182 ; Brown and Wife v. Kip et al., 6 Paige, 88.

Our statute provides that when a simple rate of interest is agreed upon, the judgment shall bear the same rate. Wood’s Digest, art. 2838, sec. 2.

In the next section it is provided that parties may agree for the payment of compound interest, but it is not provided that the judgment shall conform to such a contract.

[16]*16A judgment cannot be made to bear compound interest except by virtue of express provision of law. There is no such provision in our statute, therefore the judgment in this cause'was erroneous in this particular.

As to the second point, the Court will find by examination of the record, that the judgment is contingent. The authorities before cited lay down the rule, that a judgment for money is a final determination by the Court of the amount due upon the day of the rendition of the judgment.

The amount of the judgment -in this case is left contingent upon the future act or omission of the defendant. If paid before the seventeenth of February, it is for one sum; if not paid until after that day it is for another sum. Practice Act, sec. 144.

Compound interest is not a rate of interest. Our statute provides that an agreement may be made by which the interest shall, from time to time, be added to the principal, and a rate of interest calculated thereon. There is no provision in the statute for incorporating such agreement into the judgment.

As to the third point. Where defendant does not appear in a suit, no relief can be given except such as is expressly demanded in the complaint. Practice Act, sec. 147.

The order directing the manner of sale of the property, was in this case a portion of the relief granted plaintiff; but no demand was made in the complaint for any such relief, nor was notice given in any manner to defendants that such relief would be applied for. Therefore, the granting of such relief was so far an excess of jurisdiction on the part of the Court below.

It is the universal general rule, that property in separate parcels or lots shall be sold separately. Sales in mass of real estate held in several parcels, are not to be countenanced or tolerated. Allen on Sheriffs, page 188; 1 Binney, 61: Woods v. Morrill et al., 1 Johns. Chy. 502 ; 13 Johns. 132.

When the sale is of real estate, and consisting of several known lots or parcels, they shall be sold separately.” Practice Act, sec. 223. The judgment-debtor, if present at the sale, may direct the order in which property shall be sold.” 15.

[17]*17Chancery follows the law, and the same reason which makes the law as it is, applies in general to Chancery. There being in this case no prayer in the complaint that the property be sold as one parcel, defendants had a right to expect that only the usual order would be made, and that the property would be sold in separate parcels, and that they would be permitted to direct the order in which the property would be sold.

Sanderson & Newell for Respondents.

There is no error in the computation of the interest up to the time of the judgment. The note drew compound interest, and the calculation is in fact correct.

But were it wrong, it is too late to raise the objection for the first time in this Court. Wood’s Digest, 551, sec. 2 ; Guy v. Franklin, 5 Cal. 416.

There was no error in making the judgment draw compound interest. Such a judgment is authorized by the statute, and has been sustained by the decisions of this Court. Wood’s Digest, 551, sec. 2; Guy v. Franldin, 5 Cal. 416; Mount v. Chapman, 9 Cal. 294; Emeric v. Tams, 6 Cal. 155.

There was no error in directing the manner in which the mortgaged property should be sold. The Court had power to do so. Practice Act, sec. 246, 7 and 8 ; 1 Paige, 451; 9 ib. 648; 3 Scammon, 268.

This case does not come within the 223d section of the Practice Act, concerning sale under execution.

Terry, C. J., delivered the opinion of the Court

Baldwin, J., and Field, J., concurring.

The defendant, Reynolds, in January, 1857, executed and delivered to the plaintiff his promissory note for the sum of §32,000, payable six months after date, with interest at the rate of two and a half per cent, per month, payable monthly,' and if not paid, to be compounded.

To secure the payment of this note, at the same time, he executed a mortgage on three-fifths of the South Fork Canal, in El Dorado county.

[18]*18The note not having been paid at maturity, proceedings were instituted for its recovery, and a foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises.

Pending these proceedings, defendants, Reynolds and Kirk, in consideration of thirty days delay, and as further security for the payment of the note, executed a mortgage on their joint interest in a ditch known as the “ Gold Hill ” or “ Smith’s Ditch,” which connected with the South Fork Canal.

At the expiration of the time agreed, the debt not having been satisfied, plaintiffs filed a supplemental bill, setting up the second mortgage, and asking for a sale of the premises therein conveyed.

Defendants were duly served, and having failed to answer, a default was taken against them ; and a judgment was rendered against Reynolds for the amount of the note and interest, with interest on the judgment at two and a half per cent, per month, to be compounded monthly.

The Court also decreed a foreclosure of the several mortgages and a sale of the property conveyed, and directed that the property described in the mortgage executed by Reynolds should be first offered for sale ; but that no bid should be received for a less sum than the full amount of judgment and costs. If this sum was not bid, then the whole property included in the two mortgages—from Reynolds, and from Kirk and Reynolds—was to be sold together. The errors assigned are:

First, The order directing compound interest to be computed on the judgment.
Second, The decree directing the property conveyed in separate mortgages to be sold together.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Cal. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raun-v-reynolds-cal-1858.