Wachner v. Richardson

58 P.2d 714, 14 Cal. App. 2d 422, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 887
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 3, 1936
DocketCiv. 10939
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 714 (Wachner v. Richardson) 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
Wachner v. Richardson, 58 P.2d 714, 14 Cal. App. 2d 422, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 887 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*425 WOOD, J.

In the year 1929 the American Mortgage Company, which will hereinafter be referred to as the Mortgage Company, was a going concern with many financial transactions and at the same time the American Loan Society, which will hereinafter" be referred to as the Loan Society, was a building and loan association. At the time of the inception of this litigation both were insolvent, the assets of the Mortgage Company being under the control of a receiver and the assets of the Loan Society being under the control of the Building and Loan Commissioner of California. The corporations were managed by the same directors with Frank Fish president and general manager and Giles Major title officer of both institutions. Most of the stock of the Loan Society was owned by the Mortgage Company and the balance was owned by officers and directors of the Mortgage Company.

The Mortgage Company became the owner through foreclosure proceedings of the Hacienda Park Apartments. The Mortgage Company had loaned to one Gollos the sum of $200,000 on this property and Gollos had defaulted in his payments. In July, 1929, the Loan Society loaned to the Mortgage Company the sum of $125,000 and received a trust deed upon the property as security. The grantor in this trust deed was Palmer Morris, an employee of the Mortgage Company. At the time of the execution of this trust deed Morris also executed a second trust deed upon the same property in the sum of $75,000 in which the beneficiary was the Mortgage Company. It was stipulated that the Mortgage Company was the real party in interest, the real owner of the property and the real maker of the different instruments which were executed concerning the property and that the grantor Morris, and the grantors, Withers, hereinafter referred to, were employees of the Mortgage Company, were acting for the Mortgage Company and had no personal interest in the transactions.

The title officer, Giles Major, acting on instructions from the president, Frank Fish, on November 1, 1929, prepared various instruments for the purpose 'of issuing a series of notes to be sold to the public, the notes to be secured by a trust deed upon the Hacienda Park Apartments in the names of James H. Withers and his wife. The instruments prepared by Major were: A deed from Morris to Withers and *426 wife, a deed from James H. Withers and Dorothy P. Withers as grantors to the American Mortgage Company, as grantee; a deed of trust in which James H. Withers and Dorothy P. Withers appeared as trustors, the Title Guarantee & Trust Company appeared as trustee, and the American Mortgage Company appeared as beneficiary, purporting to secure an issue of notes of the aggregate principal sum of $200,000 made in the names of James H. Withers and Dorothy P. Withers to the American Mortgage Company as payee; a request for the reconveyance of the $125,000 trust deeds of July, 1929. Morris and Mr. and Mrs. Withers signed the deed in which they were named as grantors or trustors and these instruments were notarized by Major on November 2, 1929. The deed from Morris to Withers was retained in the office of the Mortgage Company until it was recorded on January 29, 1930. The Withers trust deed was held in the office of the Mortgage Company until November 5th or 6th when it was sent to the office of Title Guaranty & Trust Company. The request for the reconveyance of the $125,000 trust deed of July, 1929, was signed later. The officers of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, trustee in the Withers trust deed, having possession of the indenture of trust, signed the instrument and acknowledged their signatures before a notary on November 6, 1929. That part of the instrument by which the trustee accepted the trust provided that the trustee “hereby accepts the trust in this indenture declared and provided and agrees to perform the terms and conditions” set forth. The indenture of trust also provided that the trustee should not be responsible for its recordation and that the trustors “will cause the same to be duly and properly filed for record”. After the indenture of trust was signed by the officers of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company it was returned to the Mortgage Company and retained by the Mortgage Company until it was recorded on January 29, 1930. On December 3, 1929, the Mortgage Company applied to the commissioner of corporations for a permit to issue notes upon the strength of the Withers trust deed and stated that the proceeds of the issue were to be used .“only in the repayment of present encumbrances against the above described property”. The permit was granted. Plaintiffs are the holders of notes issued upon the security of the Withers trust deed. The court found that plaintiffs were “Iona fide purchasers thereof *427 in good faith and for valuable consideration, prior to maturity, and without notice of any defect in said indenture of trust or the notes secured thereby”.

Between November 6 and November 16, 1929, a transaction was arranged between the Mortgage Company and the Loan Society whereby a new trust deed was executed in the name of Palmer Morris as trustor, he still being the record owner of the property. Title Guarantee & Trust Company was made the trustee and the Loan Society the beneficiary. The trust deed was issued upon the Hacienda Park Apartments in the sum of $200,000, was dated November 16, 1929, and was recorded by the Title Guarantee & Trust Company on November 18, 1929. Between November 16 and November 19, 1929, the request for reconveyance under the July trust deed for the sum of $125,000 was made by the Loan Society and the trustee’s reconveyance pursuant to this request was made on November 18, 1929, and recorded the following day. At the same time there was recorded a reconveyance under the $75,000 deed of trust made in July, 1929, in the name of Morris to the Mortgage Company. These two reconveyances were necessary to have the new deed of trust to the Loan Society appear as a first encumbrance, in accordance with the legal requirement for a loan by the Loan Society. The trial court found: ‘ ‘ That the $200,000.00 loan of November 16, 1929, constituted a new loan and that it was not a renewal or merger of the $125,000.00 loan of July 16, 1929, or of the debt evidenced thereby.” The contest before the court is between the Building and Loan Commissioner, who claims priority for the trust deed in favor of the Loan Society dated November 16, 1929, and the plaintiff note holders, who claim priority under the Withers trust deed dated November 2, 1929.

In holding that plaintiffs’ lien was prior to that of the Loan Society the trial court found that the Withers deed was delivered to the trustee therein named concurrently with the execution of the deed from Morris to Withers. The court further found that: “At a time not later than November 6, 1929, said Indenture of Trust wras presented to the Title Guarantee and Trust Company, as trustee, as aforesaid, for its acceptance and approval, and that thereupon and on November 6, 1929, said trustee approved and accepted said Indenture of Trust and the duties imposed by the terms *428 thereof. ” These findings are attacked by appellant. The trust deed was placed in the possession of the trustee, to whom it was sent “for their acceptance of the trust”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 714, 14 Cal. App. 2d 422, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wachner-v-richardson-calctapp-1936.