Raymond v. Glover

78 P. 3, 144 Cal. 548, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 730
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1904
DocketL.A. No. 1282.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 78 P. 3 (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, 78 P. 3, 144 Cal. 548, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 730 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to obtain a decree that a certain note and mortgage were held by the defendant the German-American Savings Bank as trustee for her, or, in lieu thereof, have a decree establishing a vendor’s lien in her favor upon the lands described in said mortgage.

*549 This is the third time this cause has been here on appeal.

"Upon both the former appeals, which were taken by the defendant bank from a decree in favor of plaintiff, the cause was remanded with the same directions to the court below, “to find whether or not the bank took the note as security without notice of the facts showing the equities in favor of the plaintiff. This fact may bo found upon the evidence already taken, with such further evidence as the parties may see fit to submit. If the court finds that the appellant took the note as security without notice of the facts showing such equities, judgment should be rendered' giving to the appellant [the bank] a first lien upon the property for the amount of its claim, and to the plaintiff a second lien thereon to the extent of thirteen hundred dollars and interest, as provided in the contract of sale.” (Raymond v. Glover, 37 Pac. 772, 918; Raymond v. Glover, 122 Cal. 477.)

Upon the last trial of this case in the court below, out of which the present appeal arises, the cause was submitted upon the testimony taken at the two previous trials and the additional testimony of one M. N. Avery, cashier of the defendant bank, a witness called in its behalf, and the court found that the defendant bank took the note and mortgage in good faith, as security from one Munroe, without notice of any of the facts showing equities in favor of the plaintiff, and, pursuant to the direction of this court, on remanding the cause, as to the decree which should be entered upon such a finding, entered one in favor of the defendant bank.

The plaintiff now appeals from an order denying her motion for a new trial, which motion was based solely upon alleged insufficiency of the evidence to justify this finding, and, by stipulation, the bill of exceptions used on the appeal disposed of in 122 Cal., above referred to, which contains all the evidence adduced on the first and second trials, together with the evidence of the witness Avery taken at the last trial, constitutes the statement on motion for a new trial, upon which the validity of such order is to be determined on this present hearing.

The facts, as disclosed by the record, are recited at considerable detail in the previous opinions referred to, particularly in 37 Pae. 772, and stated generally here are, that plaintiff, in July, 1891, then a resident of the state of Massachusetts, *550 owned a tract of land in Los Angeles County, this state. She had as her agent in Los Angeles, one George Munroe, who, in her behalf, contracted a sale of the premises to the defendants Glover for eighteen hundred dollars, the sum of five hundred dollars to be paid in cash, the balance to be secured by mortgage on the property, to be executed by the Glovers in favor of plaintiff. On January 22, 1892, plaintiff acknowledged and forwarded to her agent, Munroe, a deed in favor of the Glovers, to be delivered on payment of the cash and execution in her favor by them of a note and mortgage for the balance of the contract price. Munroe, without authority, and fraudulently, inserted his own name as payee in the note, and as mortgagee in the mortgage, both of which instruments were dated February 11, 1892, and these the Glovers, deceived by him, and supposing that the papers ran to plaintiff, executed without reading, and paid the five hundred dollars. About February 22, 1892, Munroe took the note and mortgage to the respondent bank and applied for a loan of one thousand dollars thereon, which was made to him, the aforesaid note and mortgage being tendered to, and accepted by, the bank as collateral security for the loan.

These facts are practically conceded as correctly presenting the general situation, and are supplemented by considerable evidence offered on the part of both plaintiff and defendant bank, bearing upon the sole question involved in the case, —namely, whether the assignment of the note and mortgage so made was taken by the latter with notice of the facts showing the equities of the plaintiff.

We will not particularly refer to, or analyze, this evidence, because, in the view we take of this case, it is unnecessary. Aside from the evidence which was before this court upon the previous appeals, and particularly the appeal disposed of in 122 Cal., the only additional testimony now presented is that of the witness Avery, the cashier of the bank, who negotiated the loan to Munroe, and who testified that he never heard Munroe state to one TJ. S. Glover, before he took the assignment of the mortgage, that he, Munroe, had bought the mortgage in suit from plaintiff, nor did he know that plaintiff had anything to do with it or any interest in the mortgage until the trial of this action. This was offered in contradiction of the statement of Munroe, who had theretofore *551 testified for plaintiff on these matters. And when this testimony of Avery upon the last trial is compared with his testimony given on the former trial, it will be found to be substantially a reiteration of such former testimony. So that, for all practical purposes, the evidence under which the present finding is attacked is in all respects identically the same as was before this court for consideration upon the last previous appeal.

Upon that appeal, which was taken by the defendant bank, and wherein it assailed the finding then made against it, that it had taken the note and mortgage in question with notice of the equities of plaintiff, the plaintiff (respondent on that appeal), in support of such finding and upon identically the same evidence upon which it is contended for now, claimed that such evidence showed both constructive and actual notice to the bank. Particular stress was not given to the claim of actual notice, but it was elaborately and insistently argued that proof of constructive notice clearly appeared. In disposing of that appeal (122 Cal. 475) the court, in considering the sufficiency of the evidence (either as showing constructive or actual notice) to support the finding, set forth certain portions of it, and then said: “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 case of patent error.”

We think this conclusion of the court, that there was such a substantial conflict in the evidence presented on the former appeal as not to warrant disturbing the finding of the lower court then under review, is controlling in the disposition of this appeal. The same substantial conflict exists now as was found to exist then.

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Bluebook (online)
78 P. 3, 144 Cal. 548, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-glover-cal-1904.