Seid Pak Sing v. Barker

10 P.2d 92, 122 Cal. App. 93, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 934
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 23, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4436.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 92 (Seid Pak Sing v. Barker) 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
Seid Pak Sing v. Barker, 10 P.2d 92, 122 Cal. App. 93, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 934 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PRESTON, P. J.

In lieu of any preliminary statement of the case, reference is made to the former hearing in the earlier appeals. (Seid Pak Sing v. Barker, 197 Cal. 321 [240 Pac. 765].) The report fully covers the facts and our discussion will include only such features as are incidental to the contentions here presented.

The original complaint was filed on January 26, 1919, which date, therefore, was that of the commencement of the action. The original defendants were Barker, Miller, Grossman, Chicago Bonding and Surety Company, a corporation, with a number of fictitious defendants.

The action has been characterized as one to establish the right of plaintiffs as the owners and holders of a junior mortgage upon certain premises to redeem said premises from the lien of a prior deed of trust upon the same and fix the basis of such redemption. This is rather a broad characterization and, as it will appear hereinafter, is intended as such. After the decision on the former appeal, the case went back for retrial, at the conclusion of which judgment and decree was entered determining the existence of a lien in favor of plaintiff against the premises, but subjecting the lien to prior liens in favor of the intervener. This appeal is prosecuted by the plaintiffs from that portion of the judgment allowing precedence to these claims of intervener and deferring the lien of plaintiffs thereto.

As stated, the action was commenced on January 26, 1919. In the complaint it was alleged that the premises involved had been impressed with a number of liens arising out of certain mortgages, a deed of trust and the claims of plaintiffs. The complaint, in detail, sets forth the history of the various transactions relating to the property. In due course answers were filed by the various defendants, each answering separately. By these different answers each *96 defendant set up the priority of his or its claims and the priority thereof so that issue was - joined , in the main on the questions of the validity of claimed liens and, if established, then on the order of priority.

In January, 1920, plaintiffs filed a supplemental complaint, not changing the original cause of action, but amplifying the same and including items accrued since the date of the commencement of the action. The same property is involved with the additional allegation that one Lederer had succeeded to certain rights of former defendants and Lederer was made a party defendant. Thereafter Lederer filed his answer joining issue on the allegations of the complaint, but praying no affirmative relief. On May 10, 1926, being of a date subsequent to the determination of the appeal, the action was dismissed as against defendant Lederer. On the same date an order was made permitting A. J. Sabath to file his complaint in intervention, and on said date was filed the said complaint in intervention.

The intervener first alleges, and this fact is admitted by all parties, that he has succeeded to the fee ownership of the premises involved and had also become the owner and holder of the claimed prior encumbrances. This ownership dated from June 12, 1921. He then alleges his ownership of the deed of trust and the promissory note secured thereby. The complaint in intervention proceeds to take up each allegation of the complaint. The general prayer is that intervener be granted such general relief as he may be entitled to under the pleadings and issues presented. Amendments were made to this complaint in intervention, but the main features thereof remain unchanged. Incidentally, the amendments indicate that the ownership of the original deed of trust and the debt secured thereby came into the ownership of the intervener on January 26, 1920.

The first point urged by the appellant that the filing of the complaint in intervention changed the character of the original action, and intervener Sabath became in effect the plaintiff, and the plaintiffs herein became in effect the defendants, exactly as though the intervener had originally commenced this action to determine his rights under the trust deed and for other affirmative relief which he claimed was due him as the owner of the land. This, it is claimed, *97 placed plaintiff in a position where he could urge all possible defenses, including the statute of limitations to the claims advanced by the intervener. And we note how that plaintiff did specifically, on all occasions, both by demurrer and answer, and likewise at the trial, urge the bar of the statute of limitations. Here it might further be conceded that the claims were barred if the main contention of plaintiff in this connection should prevail. It becomes necessary, therefore, to further consider the issues.

The case has run along for some twelve or thirteen years and has been marked by frequent amendments to the pleadings on both sides. The transcript is in two large volumes and the whole thereof, with the exception of the findings and judgment, constitutes the pleadings, original and amended. It will be unnecessary to analytically detail each pleading. Sufficient for our discussion may be presented by a general outline.

The plaintiffs were lessees of the premises involved, under a written lease from the then owner. The lessor had given to the lessees a mortgage covering certain portions of the property by way of security for the performance of specified obligations by the lessor assumed. Plaintiffs alleged the breach of these obligations and sought to foreclose the mortgage for an amount alleged to be due thereunder. In their original complaint the plaintiffs set up the facts as to the existence of a prior deed of trust and likewise the existence of certain mortgages held and owned by the defendants. Also was set up a deed to the premises whereby the same were conveyed to defendant Chicago Bonding Surety Company, which deed was alleged to be in effect a mortgage.

The complaint brought before the court for decision the question of priorities of said encumbrances, the effect, if any, of subsequent transfers thereof, which transfers and assignments were appropriately alleged, and in its nature required the determination of the respective rights of all parties.

The subject matter of the action was the common fund out of which all of these claims, if proved, were to be paid. The original lessor and mortgagor under the lease was not made a party and it is apparent throughout that the purpose of the action was to determine what part of the *98 premises, if any, might respond to plaintiffs’ demand and that if the said demand was junior in right to other found liens, the amount of the latter be determined in order that plaintiffs might discharge or satisfy senior liens and advance their own.

At the time of the commencement of the actions none of the claims now urged by intervener had been outlawed.

In 1926, when intervener appeared, the action was dismissed as to Lederer; speaking accurately, there could be no substitution to replace one not a party to the action. But Sabath, intervener, as the successor of Lederer, was, in effect, nothing more than a substituted defendant, though we do not find it necessary to in anywise rest the decision on that point.

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Bluebook (online)
10 P.2d 92, 122 Cal. App. 93, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seid-pak-sing-v-barker-calctapp-1932.