Security First National Bank v. Sartori

93 P.2d 863, 34 Cal. App. 2d 408, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 116
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 30, 1939
DocketCiv. 2309
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 93 P.2d 863 (Security First National Bank v. Sartori) 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
Security First National Bank v. Sartori, 93 P.2d 863, 34 Cal. App. 2d 408, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 116 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HAINES, J., pro tem.

It appears that in the year 1921 defendant and appellant Severo Sartori obtained judgment on a promissory note in the principal sum of $350 executed to him by the defendant Bob Beretta. Subsequently he brought action upon this judgment and on April 12, 1926, obtained another judgment in renewal of it aggregating $566.45. Notwithstanding effort to realize on this judgment by execution and various supplementary proceedings the same remained unsatisfied and after five years had elapsed such proceedings were taken under section 685 of the Code of Civil Procedure that Sartori obtained an order permitting execu *410 tion to issue, pursuant to which execution did issue upon said last-mentioned judgment for $1,048.67 on November 27, 1937, and was on December 2, 1937, levied upon certain dairy stock in Imperial County belonging to defendant Bob Beretta and defendant Rufina Beretta, his wife, worth, according to the court’s findings, $2,000.

It appears that in the meantime Beretta, in order to acquire his dairy had obtained from respondent Security First National Bank of Los Angeles certain loans and advances, represented by two promissory notes executed by him on April 28, 1932, in favor of said bank in the respective principal sums of $6,850 and $650, which were secured by a chattel mortgage of even date therewith, wherein there was mortgaged to the bank the dairy stock or the dairy stock from which, by replacement and natural increase, there resulted the dairy stock levied upon by Sartori as above stated. This mortgage, among other things, provided for further advances to Beretta and that the repayment thereof, in addition to the sums represented by the notes, should be secured thereby. In addition to said chattel mortgage Beretta executed to the bank two crop mortgages, as further security for his indebtedness to it, but at the time of Sartori’s execution levy these additional crop, mortgages were of no value as security, and the bank held no other substantial security for its money than Beretta’s original chattel mortgage to it affecting the stock levied upon by Sartori. Beretta was insolvent and had no other resources than said dairy stock. It further appears that the said chattel mortgage to the bank was recorded on May 16, 1932, and that no rerecordation of this chattel mortgage ever occurred pursuant to the provisions of section 2957 of the Civil Code as amended by the legislature in the respective years of 1935 and 1937.

Respondent bank on April 24, 1936, filed in Imperial County the present action against Beretta- to foreclose the said chattel mortgage together with the two crop mortgages and after Sartori had levied his execution, filed in said action an amended and supplemental complaint adding as parties to the foreclosure action Beretta’s wife, Rufina, and also Sartori and the sheriff of Imperial County. Sartori answered, claiming that his rights under his execution lien were paramount to those of the bank under its chattel mortgage in consequence *411 of the bank’s failure to rerecord the latter as provided by said amended statute.

At the time Sartori’s execution was placed in the sheriff’s hands it was accompanied by written instructions to levy on the dairy stock and also by an affidavit made by one Heinrich, an employee of Sartori’s counsel, purporting to be made pursuant to section 2969 of the Civil Code, in which affidavit it was inter alia said “that on the 28th day of April, 1932, judgment debtors gave to the Security First National Bank of Los Angeles their note and mortgage on certain cattle, which mortgage was duly recorded in the official records of Imperial County, State of California, in Book 351, at page 21; that more than four years have now elapsed since the filing and recording of said mortgage. Therefore this affiant alleges the fact to be that the said mortgage is now of no legal effect as to this plaintiff ... ”. This affidavit did not in terms state that the mortgage had not been rerecorded. It did go on to say that Sartori wished to levy on “sufficient personal property, as set forth in said mortgage” to satisfy his judgment, and that he filed with it his indemnity bond under the provisions of said code section. The record shows that this bond ran to.the sheriff and respondent bank and .that the amount of its penalty was $2,000. It recited that the estimated value of the cattle to be levied on was $1,000, and that “the plaintiff herein requires of said sheriff that he shall retain said property under levy and sell the same to satisfy said judgment, together with interest and costs”. Upon the filing of the amended complaint the court restrained the threatened sheriff’s sale but appointed a receiver who took possession of the dairy stock. After trial of the cause the court rendered judgment in favor of the bank for $3,826.78 principal, together with various further sums due by way of interest, costs and attorney's fees, foreclosing its mortgage and determining that the same was paramount to Sartori’s execution lien. From that judgment Sartori now appeals.

It is necessary at the threshold of the discussion to deal with the contention advanced in respondent’s behalf that the appellant’s levy was unauthorized and invalid for want of compliance with said section 2969 of the Civil Code. It is claimed that it adequately complies neither with the requirement of that section that the execution creditor shall *412 present to the officer called upon to make' the levy ‘ ‘ a verified statement that the mortgage is void or invalid for reasons therein stated”, nor yet with the requirement that he shall deliver to such officer “a good and sufficient undertaking in double the amount of the mortgage debt or double the value of the mortgaged property . . . As respects the former of these requirements we have seen that the affidavit presented assigns as the reason why the mortgage was claimed to be void merely the circumstances that “more than four years have now elapsed since the filing and recordation of such mortgage”. We think the language so used, though perhaps somewhat inartificial, was sufficient. It seems to us substantially equivalent to a statement that" more than four years had elapsed since any filing and recordation of said mortgage. To be sure the rerecordation may, under the terms of section 2957, be either at large or in the form of a certificate referring to the former record and reciting that the instrument is thereby “re-recorded”. Even this alternative method, however, is recognized by the section as a means of recordation, and we think that the statement in the affidavit would be properly referable to the last recordation made, if there were more than one. As respects the undertaking it is true that it is not either in “double” the amount of the mortgage or in “double” the value of the dairy stock, as the court found such value to be. The statute, however, does not require the execution creditor to anticipate the court’s findings on the subject of value. If the permitted alternative of using double the value of the mortgaged property rather than double the amount of the mortgage, as the criterion in fixing the amount of the undertaking, is valid, then the statutory provision is that such amount shall be “such as the officer may determine and require”.

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Bluebook (online)
93 P.2d 863, 34 Cal. App. 2d 408, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-first-national-bank-v-sartori-calctapp-1939.