Smith v. McNutt

106 P. 70, 156 Cal. 769, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 389
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
DocketL.A. No. 2363.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 P. 70 (Smith v. McNutt) 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
Smith v. McNutt, 106 P. 70, 156 Cal. 769, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 389 (Cal. 1909).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal from' a judgment entered upon sustaining demurrers to an amended complaint and to a cross-complaint, in an action wherein plaintiffs and cross-complainant McNutt seek the same judgment.

On May 17, 1901, the Lake View Town Company, a corporation, hereinafter designated the “town company,” was. the owner of the lands involved in this proceeding, being lots in Riverside County aggregating one thousand acres Scattered throughout the extent of a larger body of arable lands, comprising some six thousand acres. ■ The land of the town company was subject to a mortgage held by the San Gabriel Valley Bank, hereinafter designated as the “bank,” securing the payment of five thousand dollars, with interest. The town company was also indebted to John "Wolfskill and to L. P. Hansen, and to the law firm of Smith, McNutt & Hannon(composed of the plaintiffs and cross-complainant). To provide for the payment of such indebtedness, it conveyed the-land on May 17; 1901, to McNutt, by deed of grant, bargain, and sale, subject to the mortgage held by the bank, and also-one thousand shares of water stock supposed to be appurtenant to the land. McNutt accepted the conveyance with the understanding in parol between him and the town company that he would take, hold, and dispose of the land on certain-trusts which he should thereafter declare in writing. On October 10, 1903, he made such written declaration. It recited the conveyance to him, and also the adoption of resolutions by the town company intended to fix certain trusts, on the property, being, 1. A trust in favor of John Wolf skill of ten dollars per acre; 2. A trust in favor of L. P. Hansen of ten dollars per acre, and, 3. A trust in favor of Smith, McNutt & Hannon for the whole amount of the residue for *771 which said lands and water stock might be sold by him after paying and discharging from the proceeds of such sales the debt of the bank and interest thereon, the taxes on said lands, the expenses of sale, ten dollars per acre to Wolfskill, and ten dollars per acre to Hansen, and declared that he held the lands subject to said trust. This was followed by this preamble and condition, viz.:—

“But, whereas, the said debt to the said San Gabriel Valley Bank, together with accumulations of interest thereon and certain taxes against the said lands, remain unpaid and are a first lien against the said lands in my hands; and,
“Whereas, The rents and income from the said lands have not hitherto been sufficient to keep down such interest and taxes; and,
“Whereas, The same must be kept down to prevent the foreclosure of the said mortgage and the sale of such lands for such taxes;
“I hereby make it a condition in the declaration of the said trusts in favor of the said Wolfskill, the said Hansen and the said Smith, McNutt & Hannon, that they shall, from time to time as the same is needed for the purpose of keeping down said interests and taxes, pay to me, or to said bank, and upon such taxes, sums of money sufficient to keep the same fully paid, as they shall respectively from time to time, become due and payable, that is to say, the said Wolfskill shall furnish one third of such sums of money, the said Hansen one third and the said Smith, McNutt & Hannon one third, the said sums of money to be reimbursed to the several parties, with interest, next after the payment of said mortgage and of all taxes due, before any of the proceeds of the sales of said lands shall be applied to the other trusts herein declared; and if at any time there is sufficient income from the rents of said lands to pay said taxes and interest and to reimburse the said parties for moneys advanced upon that account, the same shall be used as soon as received for such purposes.”

McNutt delivered this written declaration to Hansen, who received it on behalf of himself and the other beneficiaries, all of whom agreed thereto, and it was duly recorded in the office of the county recorder of Riverside County.

The beneficiaries failed to furnish the trustee with money wherewith to pay the interest on the indebtedness secured *772 by the mortgage held by the bank, and such interest was, therefore, not paid. The mortgage falling due by reason of such non-payment, the bank brought its action to foreclose the same, and this action resulted in a judgment fixing the amount due, directing a sale by defendant Harvey Potter, appointed commissioner for that purpose, and “foreclosing the equity of redemption” of McNutt as successor of the town company. The judgment was affirmed by this court. On April 3, 1907, the commissioner duly sold the mortgaged property, the bank being the purchaser, for the sum of $7806.31, which was the amount then due under the judgment. The commissioner thereupon executed and issued a certificate of ■sale to the bank, as such purchaser.

Thereafter and prior to July 18, 1907, one A. B. Miller, acting for defendant, “The Nuevo Land Company,” a corporation, hereinafter designated as the “land company,” purchased from Wolfskill and Hansen their respective interests in said trust, and on July 18, 1907, for a recited consideration of $9050, obtained from the bank an assignment of the certificate of purchase executed by the commissioner. On July 24, 1907, Miller assigned said certificate and the claims or interests of Wolfskill and Hansen to the land company.

The property is now of such value that it could be sold in parcels, “and as contemplated by the scheme of said trust,” for enough to pay all the “trust debts.”

Plaintiffs Smith and Hannon, who have acquired all of the interest of McNutt, claim the right against the land company, as the successor in interest of their alleged co-beneficiaries, Wolfskill and Hansen, to be admitted to a participation in all rights acquired by such land company by reason of its purchase of the certificate of sale, and insist that upon payment by them to the land company “of their just share to reimburse the said defendant of its necessary outlay to relieve and release the said land and said water stock from the lien and burden of the said mortgage and sale made under the decree foreclosing the same,” the trustee should be required to execute his trust by selling the property free of any claim under the mortgage and sale thereunder, and to distribute the proceeds of such sales in the manner provided by the declaration of trust. They have made no offer to the land company to do anything more than pay one third of the interest that *773 has accrued on the mortgage debt and one third of any taxes “that should have been paid by the debtor in the said mortgage,” and “a fair proportion of the principal.” The land company denies the right of plaintiffs to become entitled to the benefit of its act in taking over the certificate of purchase from the bank, by contribution of any portion of the expenses incurred in so doing, and claims to hold said certificate of purchase just as any purchaser who had no interest in the trust would hold the same.

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17 Cal. App. 4th 234 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 P. 70, 156 Cal. 769, 1909 Cal. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-mcnutt-cal-1909.