Robson v. O'Toole

187 P. 110, 45 Cal. App. 63, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 319
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2966.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 187 P. 110 (Robson v. O'Toole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robson v. O'Toole, 187 P. 110, 45 Cal. App. 63, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 319 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the defendant Hoyt after an order by the trial court sustaining said defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s third amended complaint.

Said complaint is in two counts, in the first of which the facts upon which the plaintiff relies for a recovery are set forth in detail. The second count is an ordinary common count for moneys paid out and expended within two years for said defendant’s use and benefit and at his special instance and request. Both of these counts, however, admittedly refer to the same transaction.

The facts of the ease, as set forth in the first count of said complaint, and which are taken to be true for the purposes of this appeal, are the following: On December 12, 1905, one Theresa Levin executed a note to the Hibernia Savings and Loan Society secured by a mortgage upon certain premises for the sum of eighty thousand dollars, payable one year after the date thereof. In January, 1906, said Theresa Levin sold and conveyed the mortgaged premises to Kernan Robson, the plaintiff and appellant in this action, subject to said mortgage debt, of which a balance of thirty-three thousand dollars remained due, and which said Robson assumed and agreed to pay. In July, 1906, said Robson sold and conveyed the said premises to one Michael O’Toole, the same balance being still due and which said O’Toole assumed and agreed to pay. In October, 1906, O’Toole sold and conveyed said premises to one Curtis Hillyer, and he in turn assumed and agreed to pay said balance which still remained due. In December, 1906, said Hillyer sold *65 and conveyed said premises to John G. Hoyt, the defendant and respondent herein, who also assumed said mortgage and agreed to pay the balance still remaining due thereon. In September, 1908, the said balance due on said note and mortgage not having been paid by any of said parties, the Hibernia Savings and Loan Society commenced foreclosure proceedings against the said Theresa Levin and also against said Robson, 0 ’Toole, Hillyer, and Hoyt, her subsequent and successive grantees of the premises covered by said mortgage. In September, 1911, judgment in said foreclosure proceeding was rendered and entered against all of said defendants thereto for the sum of $44,006.21. The said premises were ordered to be sold under said judgment and were sold for the sum of thirty thousand dollars, which, having-been credited thereon a deficiency judgment for the sum of $14,799.09, was docketed against each and all of said defendants. In the meantime said defendant John G. Hoyt had made a motion for a new trial, which said motion was at first denied by the trial court, but subsequently said order denying the same was set aside and a new trial granted to said John G. Hoyt by the trial court in April, 1913, upon the production of an agreement theretofore entered into between said Hoyt and the Hibernia Savings and Loan Society, by the terms of which it had consented and agreed to the granting of said new trial as to said defendant Hoyt. Thereafter and on or about August 15, 1916, the Hibernia Savings and Loan Society, by the issuance of an execution in said action and by the levy thereof upon and threatened sale of the property of said Robson, compelled the latter to pay the sum of $18,350.81, the then amount of said deficiency judgment in full, and thereupon and upon such payment by him a satisfaction of said judgment was entered against all of said defendants and a dismissal of said action. Shortly thereafter the said Robson commenced the present action against Michael O’Toole, Curtis Hillyer, and John G. Hoyt, his codefendants in the former action, setting up the foregoing facts and seeking to recover from them, and each of them, the said sum of $18;350.81, the amount which he had been compelled to pay upon said deficiency judgment. The defendant Hoyt appeared and demurred in said action, and his said demurrer being by the trial court sustained, judgment was accordingly entered in his favor. *66 From this judgment the plaintiff herein prosecutes this appeal.

The contention of the appellant herein, briefly stated, is that as between himself and the subsequent and successive grantees of the premises covered by said mortgage, and who in their turn assumed and agreed to pay the same, a contract existed by which each of said persons agreed to pay whatever deficiency judgment he, the said Robson, was properly and legally compelled to pay in the course of the foreclosure of said mortgage. It is this contract which he is seeking to enforce against the defendant and respondent Hoyt in this action.

A number of interesting questions present themselves in ,the course of the determination of the merits of this question. The first of these is as to- just what legal relations between the original mortgagee and the said several grantees of the mortgaged premises arise by virtue of their, and each of their, respective agreements with their immediate grantors of said premises to assume and pay the mortgage thereon. It seems to be practically conceded by the parties hereto that this relation was one by which the said mortgagee, if it was so disposed to accept the benefit of such several agreements as against each, any or all of said persons making the same, could in its foreclosure of said mortgage make each or any or all of said persons defendants in such foreclosure proceedings, and could obtain a deficiency judgment against such of said persons as it so elected to make parties to such proceedings. This right existing in the mortgagee was entirely several as to each of said persons, none of whom would-have a right, as against said -mortgagee, to insist that any of the others should be made parties defendant to said foreclosure proceeding or be embraced in any judgment in the mortgagee’s favor to be rendered therein. It would seem to be also conceded that the relation of each of said successive persons agreeing with their immediate grantors to assume and pay said mortgage became, by virtue of said agreements, that of principal debtors thereon upon said mortgagee’s acceptance of the benefit derivable to it by their said -several agreements.

The next question which presents itself in the course of this determination is as to what legal relations arose and existed between the said successive persons acquiring said *67 mortgaged premises and each in turn agreeing to assume and pay the mortgage thereon. [1] Upon this question also the parties hereto seem to he in practical accord; hut even if they are not so, the law seems to us to be well settled that the person who, in taking over mortgaged premises, agrees to assume and pay the mortgage becomes by virtue of said agreement the principal debtor, while the person with whom he makes such agreement becomes, as to such agreement and as to such mortgage, his surety that he will perform the same. This agreement as to his immediate grantor is express; but there arises out of it also an implied agreement to the same effect as to the several predecessors of his immediate grantor back to the original mortgagor. The following authorities fully sustain this view as to the law defining these relations: Hopkins v. Warner, 109 Cal. 133, [41 Pac. 868]; Williams v. Naftzger, 103 Cal. 438, [37 Pac. 411]; Roberts v. Fitz Allen, 120 Cal. 482, [52 Pac. 818]; Wood v. De Oca, 120 Cal. 102, [52 Pac. 130].

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 110, 45 Cal. App. 63, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robson-v-otoole-calctapp-1919.