Wagner v. Wedell

85 P. 126, 3 Cal. App. 274, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 19, 1906
DocketCiv. No. 177.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 85 P. 126 (Wagner v. Wedell) 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
Wagner v. Wedell, 85 P. 126, 3 Cal. App. 274, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 162 (Cal. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

COOPER, J.

Upon the close of plaintiff’s testimony the •court granted defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, and judgment was accordingly entered. Plaintiff' appeals from the judgment and order denying his motion for a new trial.

The evidence shows substantially the following facts: On July 22, 1903, Lucien Blum and Peter Yerdon executed to de *276 fendant a chattel mortgage on the furniture, household goods and kitchen and dining-room wares, contained in a building known as 41 and 45 Stockton street, to secure the payment of a promissory note for $1,500 and interest to accrue thereon. On the same day the same mortgagors executed and delivered to plaintiff a second chattel mortgage on the same property to- secure a promissory note for $1,000, besides interest. Both mortgages were properly recorded. Afterward, the mortgagors being in default in the payment of interest, the defendant went to the plaintiff and asked him to assign his mortgage to defendant for convenience, so that defendant could foreclose both mortgages in the one action. It was finally agreed that the plaintiff should assign his mortgage to the defendant, and that the defendant should immediately commence foreclosure proceedings, and pay plaintiff out of the proceeds of the sale under foreclosure. The plaintiff told defendant at the time of the assignment that he would bid in the property for enough to cover both mortgages. The assignment was in writing, and contained the following clause: “And hereby appoint the said Theodore Wedell my true and lawful attorney irrevocable, in my name or otherwise, to have, use, and take all lawful means for the recovery of said note, money and interest.” It was duly acknowledged, and was afterward placed upon record at the request of the defendant. At the time of making the assignment the defendant gave to plaintiff the following writing:

“San Francisco, Oct. 8th, 1903.
“One day after date I, Theodore Wedell, promise to pay to David Wagner, the sum up to one thousand dollars in gold coin, out of the sale of the rooming-house known as 41 and 45 Stockton street, San Francisco, Cal., after gaining possession of the same.
“THEODORE WEDELL.
“Witness:
“GEORGE PATTIS ON.”

Plaintiff asked the defendant about the words of the writing “up to one thousand dollars.” Defendant replied: “Well, that is only a matter of form. That is all right. *277 You will get your money as soon as the foreclosure is made.” Plaintiff replied that he would hid in the property to the amount of both mortgages. On the twelfth day of October, 1903, the defendant, being the owner of the first mortgage, and the owner of record of the second mortgage, had both said mortgages satisfied of record. Although the evidence does not show it, the defendant evidently had procured the title from the mortgagors at the time he had the mortgages satisfied, for he afterward sold the property and dealt with it as his own. Defendant sold the property afterward, the date not being shown, to George P. Beck and wife, and received therefor $1,000 in money, and a note for $1,500, in his own favor, secured by a mortgage upon the same property, and also a note for $1,350, executed in favor of A. C. Blum, secured by a second mortgage upon the same property. The defendant, in satisfying the former mortgages of record, in selling the property to Beck and wife, and in taking the second set of mortgages from Beck and wife, acted without the consent or knowledge of the plaintiff. In fact, after plaintiff had heard of the sale' from other sources and asked defendant about it, defendant did not state the facts, but said to plaintiff, “There is a sale on, but it had not been consummated.” Afterward in a conversation with plaintiff as to the mortgage to Blum, defendant said: “There has been a good deal of crooked business done up in the real estate office, and that second mortgage I know nothing about, anything more than it is put there. It is a fictitious name that was put there as a bluff.” When plaintiff asked the defendant as to the money coming to him defendant said: “Everybody in this country has got to look out for himself and do the best he can.” Plaintiff has not been paid.

We are of the opinion that the defendant is liable to the plaintiff for the $1,000, and the interest that was due thereon at the time the property was sold by defendant, less the $10 paid plaintiff when he assigned his mortgage to defendant, and legal interest on such sum since the said sale. The defendant was the agent of plaintiff “to take all lawful means for the recovery of said note, money and interest.” As such agent it was his duty to act in the utmost good faith for the interests of his principal. He had taken the assignment *278 for the purpose of foreclosing both mortgages, and under an express statement by plaintiff that at foreclosure sale he would bid in the property for an amount sufficient to cover both mortgages. He had been made the plaintiff’s agent to foreclose the plaintiff’s mortgage, and to recover the money and interest due thereon. Plaintiff had the right to rely upon defendant, and it was the duty of the defendant to act within the scope of his agency for the interest of his principal, and not adversely to him. If defendant had proceeded to foreclose the mortgages, he would have had the right to a decree that his own mortgage and costs be first paid, and then the balance to be applied to plaintiff’s second mortgage. If defendant had so foreclosed, and the property had only sold for enough at judicial sale to pay the amount due to defendant, he would not have been responsible to plaintiff; but plaintiff had the right to rely upon a judicial sale before he could be deprived of his security without payment of the amount due him. Defendant satisfied and canceled the mortgage held by plaintiff without plaintiff’s consent. He did this to clear his own title to the property. He then sold the property, without consulting the plaintiff, and apparently for a sum more than sufficient to pay both himself and the plaintiff; and, even if he did not, he had no right to satisfy and cancel the mortgage of the plaintiff without becoming liable to plaintiff for the amount due him. When defendant sold the property, and took notes and mortgages for part of the purchase price, he was thereafter estopped as to plaintiff from saying that such notes and mortgages were not money. He sold the property and was paid for it. Whether it was all in money or that which, as to plaintiff, ought to have been money, makes no difference. He is responsible to plaintiff for money had and received, for the reason that he is es-topped from saying that he did not sell for money. Defendant’s main argument is to the effect that plaintiff has mistaken his remedy, and that defendant is not responsible for money had and received under the common counts, but that plaintiff’s only remedy is by pursuit of the mortgages taken by defendant. We are not inclined to look with favor upon such contention. It certainly would not be in furtherance of honesty and fair dealing between man and man. In *279 Moses v. McFarlan, 2 Burr.

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Bluebook (online)
85 P. 126, 3 Cal. App. 274, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-v-wedell-calctapp-1906.