Verbeck v. Clymer

261 P. 1017, 202 Cal. 557, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 380
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1927
DocketDocket No. L.A. 8876.
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 261 P. 1017 (Verbeck v. Clymer) 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
Verbeck v. Clymer, 261 P. 1017, 202 Cal. 557, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 380 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

This is an ordinary action in ejectment with a prayer for $10,000 in damages for the unlawful withholding of possession of the premises described in the complaint. The foundation of the action is an allegation of title and the right of possession thereunder and the wrongful withholding thereof by defendants. The defendants admit title in plaintiff and also admit their possession of the premises, but they deny that such possession is wrongful. As a special defense the answer sets up a contract of sale and purchase of said premises wherein plaintiffs agreed to sell and defendants agreed to buy the same for $20,000. It alleges also an initial payment of $5,000, with the balance of $15,000 to be spread out over a period of fifteen years, which with the interest added would be discharged in 180 months by the payment of $200 on the first of each and every month, which payments defendants agreed to make. Payment of an installment of $200 on the first day of October, 1924, and of a second one on the first day of November, 1924, is alleged. It is not alleged, nor is it claimed, that any subsequent payments have been made or tendered, nor is it alleged that defendants have performed all or any of the covenants and conditions on their part to be kept and performed under said contract of purchase. In short, the anwser does not show defendants to be free from default under said contract. The answer, however, attempts to allege usury in the transaction by stating that more than twelve per cent per annum as interest on the deferred payments is exacted under said contract and on that account the whole obligation to pay interest is void and the maturity date of the contract is by operation of law deferred until the expiration of said period of fifteen years. The effect of the answer in short is that defendants claim the right to possession of the premises without the payment of any interest and with an obligation to pay the balance of the principal only at the expiration of the fifteen-year period. The answer by no *560 means contains all of the demands of the defendants. They also filed a cross-complaint setting forth said contract of sale and purchase as above alleged and containing the further allegation that $21,000 interest was provided for in said contract; that on account of the existence of usury in the transaction the obligation to pay interest was void and defendants were entitled as a penalty to judgment against plaintiffs for treble said interest item, to wit: the sum of $63,000, and this without the payment of a cent of interest except the undetermined amount in the two payments of $200 each made by defendants before their appetites were sharpened.

The net result of the answer and cross-complaint is that defendants ask to be allowed in effect both the title and the purchase price of said property and in addition thereto that plaintiffs should pay defendants $48,000 for the privilege of donating the property to them. There is anything but modesty in the claim of defendants. So avaricious are they that not only do they ask for all the aforesaid relief but they claim that plaintiffs were in contempt of court in asking for judgment in their favor on the pleadings and in that behalf they said: “ . . . and that said plaintiffs at all times since have been and now are in contempt of court and in express, gross, wilful and flagrant disobedience of the orders of the court. ...” Notwithstanding this challenge of defendants, plaintiffs waived their prayer for damages and pursued their motion for judgment on the pleadings, which after consideration the court granted and thereupon gave its judgment in their favor and against defendants, among other things specifying therein as follows: “ ... it appearing to the satisfaction of the court from said pleadings that the fee simple title to said property is admitted to be in plaintiffs and that defendants are unlawfully in possession of said premises, and said defendants failed to set up in their answer an equity in and to said property hereinafter described or in and to any part thereof, and it being made to appear that defendants and cross-eomplamants are not entitled to plead a cross-complaint for a money judgment in an action of ejectment, and there being no issue to try, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the plaintiffs, as the owners in fee simple and entitled to possession of the premises described in said complaint herein, to wit: *561 (describing the premise) . . . and that said plaintiffs have and recover possession thereof. ...”

The action of the court in granting judgment for plaintiffs on the pleadings is clearly correct. We find no equity on the face of the answer.

It is a presumption of law from the legal title that the holder thereof is entitled to possession of the premises (Willis v. Wozencraft, 22 Cal. 607, 615) and possession by another is deemed to have been under and in subordination to the legal title (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 321).

Where the legal title is admitted to be in plaintiffs, defendants can only prevail against them by setting up an equitable defense, “and the equity presented must be of such a character that it may be ripened by a decree into a legal right to the premises or such as will estop the plaintiff from the prosecution of the action” (9 Cal. Jur., p. 1000).

It is elementary that if a defendant wishes to avail himself of an equitable defense he must set it up in his answer (Dorn v. Baker, 96 Cal. 206 [31 Pac. 37]).

Where a vendee in possession under a contract of purchase has failed to perform his part of the contract and is in default with respect thereto without excuse he cannot maintain an equitable defense in an action of ejectment by the vendor (Connolly v. Hingley, 82 Cal. 642 [23 Pac. 273] ; Howard v. Hewitt, 139 Cal. 614 [73 Pac. 414]). “A purchaser cannot remain in possession of lands under a contract and at the same time refuse to pay the purchase price. . . . ” (Rhorer v. Bila, 83 Cal. 54 [23 Pac. 274]; Gates V. McLean, 70 Cal. 49 [11 Pac. 489]; Gervaise v. Brookins, 156 Cal. 106 [103 Pac. 329]). The essence of the rule is that where the legal title to the property is in the plaintiff and that fact is admitted by the defendants, defendants cannot successfully defend against an action in ejectment unless they make out a complete equitable title in themselves with the right of possession thereunder (Wallace v. Maples, 79 Cal. 433 [21 Pac. 860]; Flint v. Conner, 53 Cal. App. 279 [200 Pac. 37]). The decisions of this court are replete with announcements of the above principles and we need not here pause for further citations.

The answer to the cross-complaint in this action sets out the written contract between the parties as an exhibit *562

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 P. 1017, 202 Cal. 557, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verbeck-v-clymer-cal-1927.