Raymond v. Glover

55 P. 398, 122 Cal. 471, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 614
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1898
DocketL. A. No. 344
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 55 P. 398 (Raymond v. Glover) 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
Raymond v. Glover, 55 P. 398, 122 Cal. 471, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 614 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

SEARLS, C.

This action was brought by Ellen D. Raymond, the plaintiff, to procure a decree that the defendant, the German American Savings Bank, holds a certain note and mortgage as the trustee of the said plaintiff, or that in lieu thereof she be decreed to have a vendor’s lien upon the land covered by said mortgage.

Plaintiff had a decree in her favor, from which defendant, the German American Savings Bank, appealed to this court, where such proceedings were had that the cause was finally remanded, with directions to the court below to find whether or not the defendant bank took the note as security without notice of the facts showing the equities in favor of the plaintiff. Such fact to be determined from the evidence already taken, with such further evidence as might be adduced, et cetera. (Raymond v. Glover, 37 Pac. Rep. 772, 918.)

"Upon the return of the cause to the superior court, additional evidence was taken, whereupon it was found as follows: “The [473]*473defendant, German American Savings Bank, at and before the time of the assignment by defendant George Munroe to it of the note and mortgage from defendants George W. Glover and Sarah J. Glover to said Munroe, mentioned in the pleadings and original findings herein, and at and before the time of the payment by said defendant bank to said defendant Munroe of any part of the money loaned by said bank to said Munroe on the security of said note and mortgage, had notice that the plaintiff, Ellen D. Raymond, had sold the land described in the complaint to said defendants, Glover and wife, and that there was, at the time of said assignment, owing and unpaid to plaintiff from said defendants;, Glover and wife, on account of the balance of the purchase price of said property on said sale, the sum of thirteen hundred dollars, with interest from the eleventh day of February, 1892, and the court finds that said defendant, German American Savings Bank, took the assignment of said note and mortgage with notice of the facts showing the equities of plaintiff in the premises, as alleged in her complaint.” And judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff.

The defendant bank again appeals from the judgment and supports its appeal by a bill of exceptions. By stipulation the record on the first appeal to this court (except the bill of exceptions contained therein) is made a part of the record here. A synopsis of the facts as found in such record may be stated thus:

Ellen D. Raymond, the plaintiff, a resident of the state of Massachusetts, was the owner of a tract of say ten acres of land situate in the county of Los Angeles, state of California. About July, 1892, plaintiff contracted with defendants, George W. Glover and Sarah J. Glover, to sell to them said ten-acre tract of land for eighteen hundred dollars, to be paid for as follows: five hundred dollars cash, and thirteen hundred dollars by note, payable in three years, with interest at nine per cent per annum, to be secured by a mortgage on the premises, executed by Glover and wife to the said plaintiff. The defendant George Munroe was the agent at Los Angeles of plaintiff and conducted the negotiations leading up to the sale.

Under date of January 11, 1892, plaintiff executed a deed to Glover and wife of the land in question, which was duly acknowledged January 22, 1892, and forwarded to Munroe, with [474]*474instructions to deliver the same to Glover and wife upon the execution, to her of the note and mortgage aforesaid. Munroe, without authority, fraudulently inserted his own name as payee of the note and as mortgagee in the mortgage, and Glover and wife, being deceived by Munroe and supposing the papers ran to plaintiff, signed the same without reading them and paid the five hundred dollars in cash. The date of the note and mortgage is February 11, 1892.

About February 22, 1892, Munroe presented the note and mortgage to the appellant bank and applied for a loan of one thousand dollars, offering said note and mortgage as collateral security for the payment thereof. The offer was accepted, the money loaned to him, and the note and mortgage taken as such security. Upon this state of the case the question is, Was the evidence at the second trial sufficient to uphold the finding of the court that the defendant, “German American Savings Bank, took the assignment of said note and mortgage with notice of the facts showing the equities of plaintiff?” Appellant attacks this finding as being unsupported by evidence.

1. The deed from plaintiff to the Glovers was of record, and imparted constructive notice to the appellant that plaintiff had conveyed the property to said Glovers.

2. Munroe, when applying to appellant for a loan, produced to it a certificate of title to the mortgaged premises, showing, among other things, that on February 15, 1892, the plaintiff was the owner of the premises, and that on the sixteenth day of the same month the defendants, Glover and wife, held the title thereto, and that on February 23d it was still vested in the latter.

3. Munroe, the agent of the plaintiff, in his deposition, testifies that he informed the bank he was the agent of plaintiff in selling the property to Glover and wife, and that the mortgage offered as security was for the unpaid balance of the purchase money, and was made payable to him (the witness) in settlement of accounts between him and the plaintiff.

4. U. S. Glover and G. E. Glover, sons of defendant George W. Glover, testified in substance that Munroe and Moses FT. Avery, agent and cashier of the defendant bank, visited the mortgaged land, where it was stated that the bank was about to loan Munroe money on the mortgage, and that Munroe then [475]*475said, while sitting in a buggy with Avery, that he, Munroe, had purchased the mortgage of Mrs. Raymond, the plaintiff.

We think this evidence, taken together, was sufficient, if believed by the court, to warrant it in finding that the defendant bank was put upon inquiry, and having failed to probe the facts was, as a matter of fact, to be deemed as taking the mortgage with notice. In other words, that there was such a substantial conflict in the evidence as to preclude us from disturbing the finding of the court that appellant took the mortgage with notice of the equities in favor of plaintiff. The court below was the judge of the credit to be given to the several witnesses, and we cannot disturb its conclusions in the premises except in cases of patent error. At the last trial of the cause, counsel for plaintiff, for the purpose apparently of proving that Mr. Avery, the cashier of the defendant bank, heard the declaration of Munroe that he had purchased the note and mortgage from the plaintiff, asked of his witness, IT. S. Glover,Where was Mr. Avery at the time that Mr. Munroe made that statement to your father?” Counsel for the defendant bank (appellant) objected to the question upon the ground that on the former trial there had been a finding upon that question, and that it was incompetent to again go into the matter. We may here state that the finding of the court on the first trial was that the declaration in question was made by Munroe without the hearing of Avery. The court admitted the evidence, reserving its ruling as to its admissibility, and so far as appears from the record failed to decide the question. The witness answered that Avery was with Munroe in the-when counsel for plaintiff said: “And he was within hearing of the remark made by Mr. Mun-roe?” Counsel for the bank objected, which objection was overruled and an exception noted.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P. 398, 122 Cal. 471, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-glover-cal-1898.