Rea v. Haffenden

48 P. 716, 116 Cal. 596, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 594
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 139
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 P. 716 (Rea v. Haffenden) 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
Rea v. Haffenden, 48 P. 716, 116 Cal. 596, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 594 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

Belcher, C.

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage upon certain real property, executed by the defendant, Albert Haffenden, to secure payment of his promissory .note for seven thousand dollars. The complaint alleges that the other defendants have or claim some interest in or liens upon"the mortgaged premises, which interests, claims, and liens are all subsequent and subordinate to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage.

Defendant Haffenden suffered his default to be entered. The other defendants ' by their answers admit the execution of the note and mortgage set out in the complaint, and that they respectively have and claim interests in and liens upon the lands described, but deny that their said interests, claims, or liens, or any of them, are subsequent or subordinate to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage, and allege that the said mortgage is inoperative and void as against them, and each of them, for the reason that prior to the commencement of this action they never had any notice thereof, actual or constructive. They also further allege that plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by section 337 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

Upon the issues thus raised the case was tried, and the court found as follows: “1. That the defendants other than the defendant Albert Haffenden, and A. R Schulenburg, as administrator of the estate of Frederick Schulenberg, deceased, claim an interest in the lands described in the plaintiff’s complaint, and the said Frederick Schulenburg acquired a lien on said lands, but that any and all interest, lien, or claim which the defendants or either of them have, or which Frederick [599]*599Schulenburg acquired in his lifetime, in, to or upon the lands, described in plaintiff's complaint, were acquired subsequent to the mortgage set out in plaintiff’s complaint, and with notice thereof, and that the same is subordinate to said mortgage and subject thereto; 2. That the plaintiff’s cause of action is not barred by section 337 of the Code of Civil Procedure of the state of California, or otherwise. Let judgment and decree be entered accordingly.”- The findings were filed July 2, 1895, and on the same day the decree of foreclosure, signed by the judge and containing the usual recitals, was also filed.

From that decree and an order denying a new trial this appeal is prosecuted. Only two points are made for a reversal.

1. It is claimed that no conclusions of law whatever were found or stated, and that this constituted a fatal defect in the proceedings of the court below, and hence there was no basis to support the judgment.

The Code of Civil Procedure contains the following provisions:

“ Upon the trial of a question of fact by the court its decision must be given in writing and filed with the clerk,” etc. (Code Civ. Proe., sec. 632.)
“ In giving the decision the facts found and the conclusions of law must be separately stated.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 633.)

In Murphy v. Snyder, 67 Cal. 451, which was an action for forcible detainer, and involving the same point, the court said: “It is urged that the court below in giving its decision stated no conclusion of law. The record shows that after finding the facts the court adds this direction: 'Let judgment be entered in accordance with the foregoing finding in favor of the plaintiff for restitution of said premises, and for his costs and disbursements in this action.’ This, in our judgment, is in substance a conclusion of law that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the possession of the premises sued for. [600]*600It would be yielding too far to mere form to hold that the above is not a conclusion of law.”

So in Miller v. Hicken, 92 Cal. 229, which was an action to foreclose a mortgage, the court said: “It is objected that the court did not find in terms that the defendants and intervenor had not ‘constructive’ notice of plaintiff’s mortgage; but that followed from the facts found, and it is immaterial that the court did not make an express ‘conclusion of law’ to that effect.

Following in line with these decisions, we think the words added to the findings of fact in this case, “ Let judgment and decree be entered accordingly,” must be held to be a sufficient statement of the conclusions of law. But if it were otherwise, still it is apparent that if more specific conclusions of law had been stated they must have been in favor of the plaintiff, and hence that the error or defect did not affect the substantial rights of the defendants or furnish any ground for reversal.

Section 475 of the Code of Civil Procedure declares: “ The court must in every stage of an action disregard any error or defect in the pleadings or proceedings which does not affect the substantial rights of the parties, and no judgment shall be reversed or affected by reason of such error or defect.”

2. It is claimed that plaintiff’s mortgage was invalid for want of a description therein of any real estate; that in effect it contained no description whatever; that the attempted description was so insufficient that it afforded no basis for a decree of foreclosure, and gave no notice to the defendants, who were subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers.

This claim is based upon the theory that the land attempted to be described was a part of a Mexican grant, and was described as if it had been a part of the public domain which had been legally surveyed and subdivided under the authority of the United States; that the government authorities never sectionize the lands within a Mexican grant, and if the same are surveyed [601]*601and subdivided at all, it is never by government subdivisions, but by numbered lots; and lienee that the attempted description was wholly void.

The description found in the mortgage is as follows: “All that certain piece or parcel of land, situate in the county of San Diego, state of California, bounded and described as follows, to wit: The northeast quarter of section twenty-three (23), the fractional south half of section twenty-three (23), the northwest quarter of section twenty-three (23), the fractional north half of section twenty-four (24), and the fractional northwest quarter of section twenty-six (26), all in township fourteen south, of range one east, San Bernardino meridian, being all that portion of said sections included within the limits of the Rancho Canada de San Vicente y Mesa del Padre Barona.”

At the commencement of the trial, counsel for appellants stipulated that the mortgage described in the complaint was filed for record in the recorder’s office of San Diego county, on a day named, and was thereafter duly recorded, and that any interests which appellants, or either of them, had acquired in the lands described in said mortgage were acquired subsequent to the recording thereof.

It appears that after the making of the plaintiff’s mortgage, the mortgagor, Haffenden, executed to the defendant, Thomas J. Daley, a deed of the same land, and by the same description, containing a recital that the conveyance was “subject to a mortgage of seven thousand dollars, given to J. B. Rea”; and that all of the other defendants subsequently acquired from Daley or his grantees, by deeds or mortgage containing the same description, whatever estate or interest they had in the said premises. To the description in some of these subsequent deeds wure added the words “ as surveyed by Vitus Wackenreuder,’' and to the description in the mortgage to Schulenberg were added the words,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P. 716, 116 Cal. 596, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rea-v-haffenden-cal-1897.