Rice v. Taylor

32 P.2d 381, 220 Cal. 629, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 580
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1934
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14580.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 32 P.2d 381 (Rice v. Taylor) 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
Rice v. Taylor, 32 P.2d 381, 220 Cal. 629, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 580 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

This appeal presents the single question as to whether plaintiff Rice or defendant Pacific Bond and Mortgage Company has the prior lien upon a residence lot, and improvements thereon, at 101 Cambridge Avenue, San Leandro, California. Admittedly defendant Taylor was indebted to both these parties and was the record owner of said lot.

O'n October 15, 1925, an encumbrance of some $4,000 existed on said property in favor of the Mercantile Trust Company, a banking corporation. On said date Taylor, who was a real estate broker and presumably versed, by both experience and observation, in the art of conveyancing and encumbrancing real and personal property, executed, with his wife, to the plaintiff, W. C. Rice, a document, on' *631 the letter-head of “Taylor Sales Co., Importers and Jobbers, Hardware Specialties, 354 Tenth street, Oakland, California”, in the words and figures following:

“For value received we promise to pay to W. C. Rice, two years from date hereof, the sum of . . . $6,250 with interest at 7% per annum. As security for the above, we pledge our equity in property at 101 Cambridge Ave., San Leandro, Cal., and the Taylor Sales Co., 350 10th St., Oakland, Cal. In the event of the decease of either party we pledge our estate for the amount, (signed) Frank P. Taylor (signed) Antionette H. Taylor.” This document was acknowledged by a subscribing witness, certified by a notary public and recorded, at request of plaintiff, on December 4, 1925, in liber 1209, page 76, of official records of Alameda County.
On March 12, 1926, said Taylor and wife executed another deed of trust on said property to secure the sum of $550, owing to one M. A. Camp, and while still in this precarious financial condition, and on September 13, 1926, they applied to the Pacific Bond and Mortgage Company for a loan to refund the indebtedness shown by the two encumbrances above described, apparently without reference to the claim of plaintiff Rice. Taylor, on said date, of his own account, also applied to the Alameda County Title Insurance Company for a policy of title insurance on said property in favor of a contemplated mortgagee in the sum of '$4,500. He later received from the title company a preliminary report, which contained the following: “NOTE: There appears of record in Liber 1209 of Official Records, page 76, Alameda County Records, the copy of a promissory note, dated October 15, 1925, executed by the above named vestees and payable to W. C. Rice in the sum of $6,250. Said note contains this statement, ‘as security for the above we pledge our equity in the property located at No. 101 Cambridge Ave.’ No opinion expressed as to the effect thereof. ’ ’

Taylor failed to exhibit this report to the mortgage company and said company was not informed, but was without actual knowledge at all times herein, of the existence of said document referring to the $6,250 loan. Naturally it was in the interest of Taylor to conceal it from the loan company, for to reveal the contents of said report would *632 have been to impair or destroy his chance of refinancing his indebtedness. The mortgage company later agreed to make the loan and prepared two promissory notes and two deeds of trust naming itself as payee and beneficiary, the first for $4,000 and the second for $550. On September 16, 1926, it delivered these deeds of trust in escrow to said title company, along with a check, with instructions that the trust deeds, when recorded, should be and become first and second record liens respectively on said property. Said instructions also provided for the issuance of a policy of title insurance, payable to it, in the sum of $4,500, and it agreed with the title company as follows: “It is understood that your liability under the evidence of title herein referred to shall be based upon the RECORD TITLE ONLY and that you shall not be liable for secret defects of title not appearing of record, nor for forgery, nor for false personation, either as to instruments already of record or those involved in this escrow.”

In January, 1930, plaintiff instituted this action to reform the above set out instrument executed to him and to have it construed as a real estate .mortgage on said lot. and foreclosed. Defendant mortgage company answered pleading itself to be a bona fide encumbrancer for value without notice. The court made all findings in favor of plaintiff, reforming the instrument and decreeing its priority and foreclosure as a real estate mortgage. This judgment provoked the present appeal. The other defendants named in the caption are without pecuniary interest in the result thereof.

For a correct understanding of some of the legal questions involved, it is necessary to further state that the recorder of Alameda County keeps but one set of numbered official books, that allowed by section 4131 of the Political Code. He also follows the “general index system” provided by the same code, section 4132, subdivision 26. The documents here in question were noted in said general grantors and grantees indices under the column marked “title”, “note and pledge as security”. If they constituted a real estate mortgage, the proper indexing would have been to note them under a column marked, “title”, “mortgage of real property”; if considered a chattel mort *633 gage, they should have been noted under a column marked, “title”, “mortgage of personal property”.

Appellant makes three basic contentions: (1) That it had no actual notice of said instruments; (2) that it had no constructive notice thereof because of the improper indexing, and (3) that it had no imputed knowledge thereof because the title company, that discovered the documents, was not its agent respecting the condition of title to the property.

We have been led to the conclusion that appellant is correct in all of its said contentions. The first one may be disposed of without further comment as no satisfactory evidence is found in the record to show that appellant at any time prior to taking said encumbrance had actual notice of the existence of said instruments.

Secondly, a conveyance, to impart constructive notice to subsequent purchasers or mortgagees, must be acknowledged, certified and recorded as prescribed by law. (Civil Code, section 1213.) In Cady v. Purser, 131 Cal. 552, 555, 556 [63 Pac. 844, 82 Am. St. Rep. 391], it was held that a compliance with section 1170 of the Civil Code would not alone be effective against subsequent purchasers or mortgagees, but in addition section 1213 of the Civil Code must be complied with. It was further held, with respect to constructive notice: “The principle upon which the rule rests is, that as under the provisions of the recording act, if the grantee of an interest in lands would protect himself against subsequent purchasers or encumbrancers, he must give notice of his interest, and as the statute provides for constructive notice in the place of actual notice, it is incumbent upon him to comply with all the requirements prescribed for such constructive notice, one of which is the correct transcription of the instrument into the appropriate book.” In that case a sheriff’s deed was erroneously recorded in a book entitled “A” of “Bills of Sale and Agreements”, and it was held that such a recordation failed to impart constructive notice of subsequent encumbrancers or mortgagees.

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Bluebook (online)
32 P.2d 381, 220 Cal. 629, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-taylor-cal-1934.