Thomson v. Mortgage Investment Co.

278 P. 468, 99 Cal. App. 205, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 547
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 29, 1929
DocketDocket No. 6712.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 278 P. 468 (Thomson v. Mortgage Investment Co.) 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
Thomson v. Mortgage Investment Co., 278 P. 468, 99 Cal. App. 205, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 547 (Cal. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

LUCAS, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal following an order sustaining, without leave to amend, the demurrers of defendants Mortgage Investment Company and B. & H. Circuit, Inc., to plaintiffs’ amended complaint. "

Plaintiffs, stockholders in the defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc.,' brought suit on behalf of said corporation and its stockholders, including themselves, seeking generally to establish the corporation’s title to certain properties and to have certain encumbrances thereon declared invalid on account of alleged usurious loans. The amended complaint alleges that B. & H. Circuit, Inc., is the owner of and entitled to the possession of certain real property situate in the city of Los Angeles, and is also, the holder of a *207 leasehold interest in and entitled to the possession of certain other real property situate in said city; that upon the property alleged to be owned by said defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., there has been erected and maintained a certain building for theater purposes known as the Forum. Theater; that prior to December 17, 1924, in building and equipping said theater defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., had incurred and was owing debts in excess of $600,000, and in addition was owing balances upon certain lease contracts for furnishings; that of such indebtedness approximately $522,500 was owing to defendant Mortgage Investment Company, and that $500,000 thereof was secured by a mortgage and three deeds of trust upon said real property. The balance of the indebtedness was unsecured.

It is alleged that when the loan aggregating said sum of $500,000 was made the defendant Mortgage Investment Company “extracted and deducted from the amount paid to defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., or for its benefit” certain bonuses in violation of the usury laws of the state of California; that notwithstanding the usurious character of said encumbrances defendant Mortgage. Investment Company, prior to and upon December 17, 1924, “threatened to foreclose said mortgage and order sales under said trust deeds, well knowing that defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., was unable to pay the same, and by said threats coerced defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., to execute” an agreement dated December 17, 1924, between defendants B. &. H. Circuit, Inc., and Mortgage Investment Company. By the terms of this agreement it was provided that defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., should allow defendant Mortgage Investment Company to take possession of all of its property; that its leasehold contracts for furnishings and equipment and its leaseholds on realty and insurance contracts should be conveyed to said defendant Mortgage Investment Company; and that said last-named defendant would accept said possession and conveyances, operate said theater, have a lien on all the property thereof for money paid on leasehold contracts, retain all its rights unimpaired under said mortgage and trust deeds, and that in the event defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., paid all amounts due under the terms of said mortgage and trust deeds and all further advancements of defendant Mortgage Investment Company, together with *208 the stipulated interest, then defendant Mortgage Investment Company would reconvey to defendant B. &. H. Circuit, Inc., all said real and personal property. In the event of foreclosure defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., was to be given an extension of time within which to redeem its property.

, It is further alleged that by the terms of said agreement defendant Mortgage Investment Company was let into the possession of the real property of defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., and given the management of said theater as trustee for said last-named defendant and its creditors, obligating-itself to operate the same in such manner as would build up a substantial and profitable business, and to redeliver said property to defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., upon October 22, 1925, unless said defendant Mortgage Investment Company sooner acquired superior rights by foreclosure, or unless defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., repaid its indebtedness prior to said date. The property above mentioned constituted the sole assets of the defendant B. &. H. Circuit, Inc., and while in possession thereof and on January 21, 1925, defendant Mortgage Investment Company,“by further threats to foreclose its encumbrances coerced defendant B. &. H. Circuit, Inc., to enter into and execute” another agreement which is set out in full in plaintiff’s complaint. This latter agreement provided a new plan for refinancing the affairs of defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., and provided for the execution of certain notes, mortgages and deeds of trust, the last of which, a note for $400,000, payable to defendant Mortgage Investment Company bearing interest at 7 per cent per annum, was to become due February 18, 1930.

It is further alleged in said amended complaint that the interest upon each of the several notes above referred to is’ payable quarterly, and that the principal sum upon none of them is yet due; that by the terms of said agreement defendant Mortgage Investment Company “exacted” from defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., an agreement to pay as a part of one of the trust deeds the sum of $25,000 as a brokerage fee, and that said agreement in this is contrary to the usury laws of California and violative of the duty owed by said defendant Mortgage Investment Company to defendant B. & TI. Circuit, Inc., because of the fiduciary relationship existing between the two.

*209 Allegation is further made that by the terms of said agreement the payment of the then existing indebtedness of defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., from the proceeds of the new encumbrances was to be handled through an escrow at the Security Trust and Savings Bank, and that defendant Mortgage Investment Company agreed upon the closing of said escrow to redeliver to defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., all the property taken possession of under the agreement of December 17, 1924; that said escrow was closed on or about June 26, 1925, but that said defendant Mortgage Investment Company nevertheless remained in possession of said property except for a period of time during which said properties were in the possession of receivers appointed in a suit brought by defendant B. & H. Circuit, Inc., against several of the defendants herein.

In said last-mentioned action defendant B. &. H. Circuit, Inc., sought to restrain defendant Mortgage Investment Company from causing a foreclosure and sale under one of the trust deeds made and executed by virtue of the agreement of January 21, 1925, on the ground that the notes secured by said trust deed were usurious. The receivers in said action held possession of the properties of defendant B. &. H. Circuit, Inc., from about February 8, 1926, to about September 4, 1926.

It is further alleged that at the time of the making of the contract of January 21, 1925, defendant B. &. H. Circuit, Inc., had no money or property except the real property and theater hereinabove referred to and which was in the hands of the defendant Mortgage Investment Company as mortgagee in possession; that it had no income; that foreclosure was threatened by various holders of liens and encumbrances; that defendant B. & H.

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Bluebook (online)
278 P. 468, 99 Cal. App. 205, 1929 Cal. App. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-mortgage-investment-co-calctapp-1929.